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'Boy, did they ever get 'er done': Cats rescued from Little Bay Islands now in N.S.

A coordinated effort by rescue groups in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland saw 37 abandoned and feral cats removed from Little Bay Islands and sent to Halifax. One is being adopted in Newfoundland and four need a ride.

42 cats trapped over three days, 37 are in Halifax, four need a ride

One of 42 cats rescued from Little Bay Islands getting a second chance thanks to a coordinated effort from volunteers. (Submitted by Hugh Chisholm)

Hugh Chisholm says the mission to rescue the abandoned and feral cats on Little Bay Islands was like a military operation.  

Residents are resettling and services to the island in Notre Dame Bay, Newfoundland, are set to be cut off on Dec. 31. When the provincial government proposed euthanizing the cats, concerned groups quickly mobilized.

"When we hear that something can't be done we get out backs up and we decide that we're going to do it," said Chisholm, vice-president of Spay Day HRM Society in Nova Scotia.

Some of the trappers who braved the cold and rough living conditions to save the cats. (Little Bay Islands Cat Rescue Mission/Facebook)

"They just set about to get 'er done, as they say, and boy did they ever get 'er done."

Volunteers with Spay Day and Healing Animal SCARS in Nova Scotia worked with Sunshine Kitty Rescue in Corner Brook and Deer Lake Kitty Rescue to get people to the island to trap as many cats as possible.

The cats are warm and safe in an undisclosed location in Halifax. (Submitted by Hugh Chisholm)

"It was storming when they went over, it was storming when they came back, so it was a harrowing expedition. The trappers when they got back here in Halifax they were exhausted, it was pretty tough."

Thirty-seven cats from Little Bay Islands that were trapped over two days and are now recovering in an old office building provided by the Nova Scotia SPCA. One kitten, nicknamed Little Bae, stayed with local volunteers and is currently is the process of being adopted. 

The next step will be to have the cats already in Halifax assessed, spayed or neutered and sent to good homes. Those that are too feral to be adopted will become barn cats on rodent patrol.

Local rescuers stayed an extra day after the Nova Scotia team left and trapped another adult male and three kittens.

Need to hitch a ride

Sonya Higgins of Healing Animal SCARS Cat Rescue in Dartmouth said air transport for the animals isn't suitable, so they're now trying to find a way to get them to Halifax as well — preferably with someone travelling in a heated vehicle on the Marine Atlantic ferry from Port aux Basques to North Sydney that has room for one or two cat carriers. 

Little Bae was approximately five weeks old when she was trapped, and already has a forever home in Newfoundland ready to take her as soon as she is old enough. (Little Bay Islands Cat Rescue Mission/Facebook)

Rescuers believe there are at least two cats still on the island, and Mike and Georgina Parsons, the only people staying on in Little Bay Islands for the winter, will be monitoring traps and feeding any stragglers until they can be caught.

"We don't want anybody left behind and you know starving or freezing to death or anything," said Chisholm. 

The rescued cat has a serious eye injury, but Chisholm say many of them are in surprising good shape. Ten have already been taken to the vet to be vaccinated and spayed or neutered. (Little Bay Islands Cat Rescue Mission/Facebook)

"That's the kind of thing that makes us worry when there's animals outdoors that should be indoors in a safe place, or in a shelter or someplace where they be looked after properly."

A fundraising campaign to help the Little Bay Islands cats — with the motto, homeless doesn't mean disposable — has surpassed $20,000.

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