Last Thursday we trapped five feral kittens living in our backyard. We took them to the vet on Friday morning, where they were neutered and were vaccinated for rabies. We picked them up on Saturday, and kept them inside. On Sunday we let the two males go. Today we let the three females go. Unfortunately, although we trapped the kittens, we weren’t able to trap the mother, who was too wary to spring the trap. We will try again to catch her next week. This was all a somewhat lengthy and messy procedure, helped greatly by a volunteer from a local organization called Fix Our Ferals. Besides the cats, we also managed to catch a skunk; we released the skunk as quickly as we could, but unfortunately not before the whole area got sprayed.
Did we have the right to do this? Clearly the cats did not want to be trapped, and they were quite agitated about it. While the cats do not have any expectations about having kittens of their own, it is part of their natural life cycle, and we have taken that away from them.
What makes the difference for me is that we had been feeding them, and they were happy to take the food. If we had not been feeding them, I think that trapping them would have been questionable. While cats are obviously not native to the area, we live in a city which is in no way a wilderness. If the cats had been fending for themselves, as the deer, racoons, and skunks do, I don’t think we would have been right to interfere in their lives in this way. A rabies vaccination might have been acceptable, but not neutering.
But since we were feeding them, we were domesticating them in a small way, making them stronger and healthier, and in general taking responsibility for them. We therefore had to take responsibility for their actions, including the kittens they would have. We were within our rights to prevent those kittens.
I believe that we did the right thing, but I admit to not feeling entirely easy about it.
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