New Brunswick

Tiny remembered at celebration of life service

A stream of mourners flowed into a celebration of life service held Saturday for Tiny, the former fat cat that became known to many after he was left in a box at the Fredericton SPCA in December 2011.

Friends, fans and family attended the famous feline's memorial service

Rest in peace Tiny the cat

8 years ago
Duration 0:58
Tiny, the cat who weighed over 30 lbs when dropped off at the Fredericton SPCA will be remembered at a service on Saturday.

A stream of mourners flowed into a celebration of life service held Saturday for Tiny, the former fat cat that became known to many after he was left in a box at the Fredericton SPCA in December 2011. 

He weighed 30 pounds and was placed on a year-long weight-loss program with a target weight of 17 pounds.

The memorial service for Tiny, who died last month of advanced age, was held at the the Pet Funeral Home in the Barker's Point neighbourhood of Fredericton.

The box that Tiny and another cat were dropped of in at Fredericton's SPCA. (Submitted)

Karen McGeean, the marketing and development director for the Fredericton SPCA, said Tiny had a wide reaching fanbase. 

"[He] reached a number of people worldwide as well as locally," said McGeean.

​"We've had a huge outpouring of love for Tiny from everywhere, from San Francisco to San Diego to South Carolina and even some from overseas as well that just wanted to share in his life and his legacy.

Tiny's ties help other furry friends

Some of the ties Tiny wore were on display, along with props he used for his pictures during and after his weight loss and items made to raise money for Tiny's medical fund.

The fund initially supported Tiny's medical needs but was expanded to help many other animals at the FSPCA.

Kingsley, a king shepherd fostered and adopted by Shawna Lowenberg, was one of the abandoned animals given a second chance because of the fund. 

Just some of the animals helped by Tiny's fund. (Jordan Gill/CBC)

Lowenberg said that when the dog was found two years ago, it was in such bad shape a veterinarian recommended it be destroyed. But the FSPCA decided to treat the dog after it was determined it had an autoimmune disease. 

"After trial and error and a whole lot of medication through Tiny's fund, they got him healthy and adoptable." 

Kingsley's owner said she couldn't imagine not having the dog as part of her family's life.

Remembering Tiny

McGeean said Tiny's weight loss journey not only caused pet owners to rethink what they feed their pets, but also inspired humans to lose weight.

"We found a number of people through social media and on [Tiny's] Facebook page saying 'You know what? Tiny can do it, I can do it," said McGeean.

Tiny, pictured in one of his trademark ties. (Fredericton SPCA/Facebook)

​One of McGeean's most treasured memories of Tiny took place at a photo shoot where Tiny was playing.

"All of a sudden Tiny jumped," said McGeean.

"That was the first time Tiny jumped."