Saskatchewan

Regina volunteers turn coolers into cat condos

Volunteers with the Regina Cat Rescue turned about 80 coolers into winter shelters for cats living in colonies around the city.

Rescue aims to keep community cats out of the cold this winter

Volunteers with the Regina Cat Rescue pose in front of a wall of coolers they modified to become winter shelter for community cats in the city. (Regina Cat Rescue/Facebook )

Even with a fur coat, prairie winters can be deadly.

That's why volunteers with a Regina cat rescue are once again creating makeshift shelters for feral cats. 

Volunteers are turning donated medical-grade coolers into cozy cat condos. The coolers are outfitted with fleece and a pillow and then placed at one of 30 cat colonies in the city. 

"We like to joke that these coolers are actually saving lives a few times, because they were also used to transport blood products before they are used to keep our cats warm," says Rachel Molnar, communications and education coordinator with Regina Cat Rescue. 

These foam coolers formerly used to transport blood are repurposed to provide shelter to cats in the winter. (Regina Cat Rescue/Facebook )

Molnar said a thermometer placed inside one of the inhabited coolers during a previous year showed a temperature of 20 C. 

Regina Cat Rescue practises a trap, neuter and return program designed to reduce the population of feral cats in the city. 

The rescue adopts cats where it can and returns others to the colonies where they are fed but cannot continue to breed. It said it cares for as many as 150 cats around the city. 

Molnar said the rescue also hands out about 75 shelter boxes a year to residents who want to help cats in their areas. 

Coolers-turned-cat-condos wait in a stack before being distributed to colonies around Regina by local volunteers. (Regina Cat Rescue/Facebook )