Houston Chronicle Sunday

Rats! But don’t be alarmed: To some in NYC, they’re pets

- By John Surico

NEW YORK — When Breonne Rittinger, 21, and her boyfriend, Taylor Cowan, 27, were looking for a pet last year, they considered their options.

As models who traveled often, the couple wanted a pet that required less oversight. They shared an apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan with two other people, and one of their roommates already had two cats. A dog didn’t seem feasible.

So Rittinger had an idea: rats.

Now they have three.

Few ‘negative things’

“I’ve definitely turned into a crazy rat lady,” Rittinger said while her rat Zelda stashed Cheerios in Cowan’s backpack and another rat, Nibbler, raced through an empty LaCroix box in her cage. “But I’m totally OK with that.”

Nibbler and her sister, Leela, arrived in January, adopted from a Staten Island family who had rescued them from a local pet store. And then, a few weeks later, came another duo, Liliu and Daisy, from a reputable “rattery” on Long Island. When Leela died in April, and Liliu soon afterward, Zelda joined the pack.

Rittinger was familiar with rodents as pets, having grown up with gerbils in Georgia. But Cowan was hesitant. His previous apartment, on the Lower East Side, had been infested with rats, a problem he later attributed to the landlord. After he did some research, Cowan came around to the idea.

“It was really hard to find negative things online about pet rats,” he said.

Initially, Cowan said his sister was “grossed out” by the new pets, as were several of their friends. When Rittinger brought the rats to her modeling agency, two employees refused to meet them.

The couple were met with a handful of baffled stares when they took their new pets to Central Park.

These experience­s, rat owners say, are nothing new. Rats, known for scurrying through trash heaps and nabbing pizza slices at subway stops, have long been the scourge of the city. Recent research suggests that the street rat population could be near 3 million. Grasping why many New Yorkers will not embrace their domesticat­ion is easy.

Rat owners say it is all a big misunderst­anding.

“When you say the word ‘cat,’ people automatica­lly associate that word with a pet at home, not a feral cat on the street,” said Melissa Stewart, 34, who works in TV and film production. “Whereas, when you hear someone say ‘rat,’ they immediatel­y think it’s feral or a street rat.”

Although rare, there are stories of street rat domesticat­ion, but these rats, she said, have a much harder time finding a home. ‘Like little dogs’

Street rats, she explained, are brown rats, which are said to be less civil and healthy, and are different from “fancy” rats, the species that most New Yorkers look to adopt.

Stewart was first introduced to the idea of pet rats eight years ago at a studio party in the Williamsbu­rg neighborho­od of Brooklyn, where someone told her a rat named Minky was up for adoption. Stewart, a native New Yorker who had owned a hedgehog in college, was interested.

“As soon as I got her, I was so amazed by how incredibly cool, smart and sociable they are,” she said.

“They don’t bite. They’re like little dogs, mixed with a cat.”

 ?? Celeste Sloman / The New York Times ?? Breonne Rittinger feeds one of her pet rats in her apartment in New York. Some New Yorkers are adopting rats as pets, saying they are sociable, smart and cuddly. “I’ve definitely turned into a crazy rat lady,” Rittinger said.
Celeste Sloman / The New York Times Breonne Rittinger feeds one of her pet rats in her apartment in New York. Some New Yorkers are adopting rats as pets, saying they are sociable, smart and cuddly. “I’ve definitely turned into a crazy rat lady,” Rittinger said.

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