Got a new batch of six kittens. For the first time, they had a mother. However, she is feral so they couldn’t keep her. Very hard to adopt feral cats. Once she was done feeding them, I got them. New experience, very strange.

We finally got a batch with more boys than girls, so I can use the naming theme I’ve wanted to use since I started! We now have an Amy, Leela, Fry, Farnsworth, Kif and Zapp. I tried to circle them around the two girls, because one is dark, the other is black and white, and there are three in each category. Split down the middle!

This is coming right off a batch of 4, so it’s a lot right now. In fact, I still have the smallest of the previous batch so I could get her to a normal weight. So many cats!

  • QualifiedKitten
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    11 year ago

    OH NOOOO!! I’m so sorry! That must be so exhausting and soul crushing. Biology can be so harsh sometimes. I hate thinking how some of these poor little guys are born, just to suffer for a few days/weeks before dying because something just wasn’t quite right, and there’s nothing we can do to save them.

    Have you been trained on tube feeding? I’ve had quite a few vets hesitant to even suggest it due to the risk of asphyxiation if done incorrectly, but finally got training and had to do it a few times with my current litter. I’m super glad to have that in my “toolkit” now for future kittens that stop eating.

    • @UnicornKittyOPM
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      21 year ago

      Very exhausting. I have not been trained on tube feeding. We don’t really have anything like that here.

      • QualifiedKitten
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        11 year ago

        Ahh man! I’m the dumbass who can’t properly respond in thread. Lol.

        I definitely recommend watching some videos about tube feeding, and if you feel comfortable, ask your foster organization if there’s any one who can give you a hands on demonstration. If they can’t do a demo or provide supplies, but you’re comfortable giving it a shot anyway, I’ve seen some kits on Amazon for $15-20.

        As I mentioned before, asphyxiation is a big risk, along with the potential to puncture a lung or stomach, and if they have teeth, there’s a greater risk of the tube getting stuck in their esophagus, so I probably wouldn’t practice on an otherwise healthy kitten, but if they’re fading and you have no other options, it might be worth the risk.

        After watching a number of videos, I felt confident that if the tube were in their lungs, I would be able to tell while I could still correct, but I was worried that I either wouldn’t be able to get the tube into the stomach at all, or that I just wouldn’t be able to check all the right boxes to feel confident that it was actually in the stomach. Honestly, I learned a whole lot more from the videos vs. the demo, but having watched the videos first meant I was able to ask better questions during the demo.

        Note to anyone reading: I am absolutely not a trained medical professional, just someone very curious with a strong desire to do everything I can to give these little nuggets a happy, healthy life. Please use any and all professional resources available to you before relying on the internet comments of a random stranger.

        • @UnicornKittyOPM
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          21 year ago

          I’m worried enough force feeding this little girl. She’s 5 weeks and dropped from healthy to 186g before her current feeding. She looks like she feels better. It seems like now we are fighting weakness due to attempted starvation. She drinks a very small amount of water but that’s it. She was eating wet food but since I have to force feed her I’m afraid to try forcing wet food since she’s already got issues with her stomach before this whole thing even started. They had worms so bad.

          So I’m still bottle feeding a kitten who can eat wet food. And prying her mouth open for every drop. She obviously wants to live very much, but she seems to be doing everything in her power not to.

          • QualifiedKitten
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            21 year ago

            Oh, sorry if that came across as suggesting you tube feed your current kitten now. I had a few months to learn about it and digest the concept before I had to utilize it, so I was more just suggesting it as an option for the future. Also, definitely much more complicated when you’re dealing with a kitten who should be eating on their own by now.

            Is she really just 186g?? I have no words. That has to be a typo? My current kittens were a bit behind schedule, but even the smallest was over 400g by 5 weeks.

            Any chance you’ve done subcutaneous injections in the past? I wonder if some B-12 might help. Definitely won’t fix anything overnight, but there’s very little risk, so my foster org has given me the okay to give all of my foster kittens weekly B-12 as a preventative measure.

            It’s soooo frustrating when they won’t eat. I really struggle with the patience to feed them drop by drop, especially when they’re actively fighting it. I hope you’re getting some rest and relaxation too.

            • @UnicornKittyOPM
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              11 year ago

              It wasn’t a typo. The whole batch started with bad worms. We got rid of those and they either immediately caught something or had it all along. Whatever the sickness was, it wiped them out. They are all gone.

              She was a healthy weight when she got sick. Then despite feeding her she lost weight till everything shut down is my guess.

              So yeah, I’m getting plenty of rest now. I had to be sedated yesterday. 6 deaths in a row when one is bad enough was too much for me.