Saturday, December 20, 2014



Here's two of our older cats still available. A short bicolor male and a long female.


Sunday, December 14, 2014

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Kitten videos. As you can see, it's a bit hard to walk with them in the room as they are hanging off our pants and socks. And we have to get dressed fast in the morning or they will start before we have pants on. Kittens are 5 weeks old today, so visits will start in about a week.




Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Kittens are walking out of the bed a bit and starting to interact with us a bit, allowing for good close ups. They go back to the bed often.






Sunday, November 30, 2014

So far here’s how the kittens look (always subject to change as traits become more apparent):

Folded long haired silver and white male - ON HOLD FOR CATTERY
Spotted silver and white short straight female
Dark black and gray striped short straight male
Light gray striped short tabby straight female

White straight short hair female – on medical hold for umbilical hernia







Friday, November 28, 2014

Got a new camera so pics will be better, but now I need to learn how to use it. So far I can only take auto pics. As you can see, the fold is a bit of a ham. A good trait in a show cat.








Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Thursday, November 20, 2014

We lost a white folded longhaired kitten tonight. It was the smallest and we noticed it wasn’t eating well, it would try to nurse but when other kittens came it would just give up. So for the first two weeks I helped it nurse by finding it a spot and blocking off the other kittens. We’ve always had runts but this one was very sluggish. Two days ago it stopped trying to nurse at all. So I started giving it KMR in a syringe and a bottle. It hated it and most went all over the towel. Today I brought it in to the vet to get a feeding tube that was recommended for kittens refusing to eat (a catheter inserted in the throat) as it doesn’t run the risk of pneumonia like force-feeding and you know exactly how much food makes it into the tummy instead of face. I brought some littermates so the vet could see the difference in size. The vet was pretty unconcerned. Said the kitten was dehydrated so they would give it IV fluids and it should start eating on its own. I didn’t think this felt right and told her it had no interest in a bottle and I thought a feeding tube was best. She said it looked healthy otherwise and heart and lungs were good and it sounded like it just had trouble breast-feeding and it would pick up the bottle soon.

The kitten was crying a lot at the vet and on the ride home I noticed it started grunting while breathing. I got home and continued trying a bottle two or three times. At 6pm I could tell the fluids were not helping and it’s grunting was continuing but the vet closed at 5pm. I gave it another feeding at 8pm and decided I was going to take it in at the opening time and insist more strongly that it be fed. By 9 the kitten was crying and grunting more and I started getting ready to take it in to the 24 hour emergency vet, they were better able to handing intensive hospitalization anyways as our vets always recommended them when our shelter cat was dying but we didn’t want to put our old cat through that if she wasn’t going to make it. I woke Andy up to drive while I held the kitten next to me to keep it warm and while he was getting ready I went to gather up the kitten, and it was barley breathing and limp. I screamed at Andy it was time to go now and the kitten was dying. We rushed to the hospital while I did breaths to help it breath and then full cpr once I could tell it was no longer breathing and the eyes weren’t moving anymore. I called the vet on my cell phone too to let them know we had a kitten who just stopped breathing and I was doing cpr so they would be ready.

They were ready when we got there and quickly asked if we wanted CPR which I said yes. I knew it was pretty grim since the kitten didn’t respond to the CPR I had already started. They came out about 5 minutes later saying they tried. I explained it to a tech while the vet worked on her and he said it was probably failure to thrive or fading kitten syndrome. He said it was very small for it’s age and sometime kittens just don’t eat as much as they should. This frustrated me greatly because this is what I was trying to tell the regular vet earlier who said it was nothing. My cat vet book I use recommends hospitalization right away with IV fluids, tube feeding, heating, and blood sugar monitoring. NOT a wait and see in a few days approach. And also to compare small kitten to littermates which the first vet did not do.

So we had a very tearful night and me with much regret for not pushing harder for the feeding tube I asked for twice. This is once again a problem of local vets (who usually only see stray litters that people are not willing to spend money on) not knowing how to handling the raising of kittens by those who love and are willing to spend money and time to save a kitten or two. The emergency vet who handles emergencies for all the vet clinics in the area would have known what to do as they probably get all the overnight breeders in the area coming there. I contemplated going there first but all online resources said a feeding tube if fine to get from a local vet, they show you how to do it in the office, then it’s a home thing. A feeding tube was going to be an on going process needing to be watched over by a local vet, something the emergency vet doesn’t do. Just fixes up your animal or handles things to big for your local vet then hands them back off to the local vet. So now I know, if I think my cat will die within 48 hours and will need intensive medical care, go to the emergency vet.

This baby was adorable. I’ve been watching her closely these two weeks. Her face was very flat and her ears had just started folding. She got tons of oos and aahs at the first vet and they showed her to all the workers and even some of the customers. I became very emotionally invested in her, even more so when the bottle feeding started and when I became her voice trying to explain how sick she really was. I think the first vet visit is what finally did her in. She was meowing so hard there and on the way home is when I noticed her troubled breathing. I think it took too much of the last of her energy. Ironically, if I didn’t bring her she may have had a few hours longer and the after hours nature of the visit would have forced me to bring her to the emergency vet and she may have survived long enough to get her feeding tube. I reacted very quickly to the event, less than 24 hours no feeding, got to vet, 6 hours later at 9pm things no getting better and gut is telling me things are very wrong so go to emergency vet, kitten crying worse 20 min to get ready and get Andy up to find a quickly fading kitten. We were back home before 11. I learned a lot about fading kitten syndrome, including birth weight and difference between litter mates can help detect this, so I will be adding weighting at birth and of the small kittens to my new kitten mommy regimen.

We are taking it pretty hard, but not as hard and the poor baby who went over the rainbow bridge. May you be warm and full over there sweet kitty.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Here's babies a few days old. Their mommy loves them lots and spends all her time in the bed snuggling with them, only comming out to eat and use the litter box and returning to her fluffballs. They eat so much that they're always full and usually never have all 6 nursing at one time. Eyes are still closed.









Friday, November 7, 2014

Here's the babies. If there is a folded shorthaired silver male we will most likely be keeping him as long as he has good roundness for showing. Sex (although there are a few apparent males which is rare at this young, it's usually a guessing game until 8 weeks), ear (usually 3-4 weeks) and fur length is up in the air for now. Straights will start going home at 10 weeks old, and fold will need to be spayed and neutered at 3 pounds or 12 weeks old and recover for a few days.









The two litters were quite the adventure. We had two queens and they delivered at the same time. Everything was fine until each had their first two. Both queens got worried when they heard the other's kittens and we had to separate them meaning I had to have my husband help with which ever queen I wasn't helping. One queen had a kitten with a bulge on the stomach so we had to rush her to the vet with the kitten. We were hoping it was just an umbilical hernia, which it is. It can be hopefully fix when it is time to spay or neutered at 3 pounds or 12 weeks old, possibly 2 pounds something to fix it sooner. This queen had 4 kittens all together. 

The second queen had two kittens, then delayed her labor when she got worried about the other queens kittens. We brought her to the vet and they said no problem, happens all the time. I was skeptical but gave it time. At 10PM we called an after hours vet, they again said not to worry, happens all the time as long as she's not pushing for 2 hours. I was still skeptical. I stayed up the second night in a row with her and fell asleep at around 4am. My husband checked on her in the morning at 6AM on way to work and she was fine. I slept through my alarm at 6:30 to take her in when the vet opens at 7AM and woke up at 8:30 with a cleaned up new dead kitten. We took her to the vet, no if and or buts we wanted an x-ray and the kittens out. It was her last kitten and so there were no stuck ones. 

One of the hassles of breeding purebreds is finding a vet who knows how to handle breeding. With responsible pet owners spaying and neutering their pets, and only irresponsible people breading mixed kittens and who don 't want to spend money on vets, vets are left with little hand on training and usually snotty attitude for breeders that we are betraying cats worldwide by taking up potential cat homes. And I usually feel I know more than the vet as they either are "dog vets" (I’ve had this said to me) or seen only a few stray cat litters. I miss Cats Exclusive in Shoreline and sometimes ponder the over 1 hour drive from Renton to go there. This was the one place I knew the vets knew more than me and were CAT vets.

So to get back to the kittens, we have 6 kittens all together, 4 slivers and 2 white with one of the white with the hernia. We decided to have the queen with 4 kittens adopt the 2 kitten litter so the moms no longer have to fight over the kittens. They kept going to each other’s nest and trying to take the kittens or jumping in with the other queen and no room for the kittens to nurse. The mom with the two kittens also doesn't get empty nest syndrome (and if anything is happy to kick them to the curb at 12 weeks old batting them away when they try to nurse) when her kittens go so she's adapting well to letting her kittens go. The adopting mom LOVES kittens and cries horribly when separated from them and adopts any baby who comes up to her unconditionally. We actually have to use a spray bottle at 4 months to wean the kittens cause she'll never deny them.

So it was a very long two day delivery in which I got 6 hours of sleep over 3 days. It was gloomy and sad like the rain today and tired with so little sleep throughout our vigil, but when I came home from a 3 hour work shift and settled down for first kitten pictures the gloom of a lost kitten started to be replaced by the joy of such a gorgeous litter with so many silver kittens, rare for us as there are two white genes which dominate over all other colors.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Kittens started arriving this morning (Weds 11/5/14) and had a midbirth delay for a vet trip for one kitten. It's been a long night with no sleep so probably no pics until tomorrow or later when I catch up on sleep. So far 3 silvers and a white with a few more on the way, good news for all those waiting for silvers.

Thursday, October 30, 2014

We're expecting kittens on Nov 3. Check here for new pics of them. Here are two of the three young cats we still have.