Adopt

My name is
BELLA Easy Going & Calm!

Posted over 3 years ago | Updated over 2 weeks ago

Adoption process
1

Interview

2

Submit Application

3

Meet the Pet

4

Home Check

5

Take the Pet Home

My basic info

Breed
Norwegian Forest Cat
Color
Black (Mostly)
Age
Adult
Sex
Female
Pet ID
17110149
Hair Length
long

My details

Alert icon Not good with dogs
Checkmark in teal circle Good with cats
Checkmark in teal circle Shots current
Checkmark in teal circle Spayed / Neutered
Checkmark in teal circle Housetrained

My story

Here's what the humans have to say about me:

Friendly, Easy Going and Calm

I'M BELLA THE MOM: My coloring looks like it has been done at an expensive salon using a color technique called Ombre. My fur is darker and then it brightens at the ends to a rich sable reddish brown that glistens in the sunlight.

I’m super relaxed and calm. One of my daughters, Java, is just like me. I love petting and playing with my kittens and lounging on a cat tree. I’m not interested in going outside after being out there already! I was lost and all alone outside except when “the boys” came around…. and you know what that means!  I had kittens!

A very nice person fed me every meal. She was 90 years old and when she died her son moved in to fix up the house to sell and I had to find another place to be.

Community Animal Network made room for me and my family and I am so very grateful.

Community Animal Network didn’t separate me from my kittens like other rescues do. I’ve given my kittens a good upbringing and they have been nurtured and have had a good healthy start because I was never starving when I was pregnant like many other rescued moms.

 

For more info, call or text DiAnna at 949-759-3646 or email at DiAnna@animalnetwork.org. This kitty is being cared for by Community Animal Network, a non-profit organization founded by DiAnna Pfaff-Martin in 1996. C.A.N is a veterinary medical rescue that helps local animals find forever homes. The animals are cared for and raised in private homes.

The founder of Community Animal Network, DiAnna Pfaff-Martin, is very particular about the quality of raising the kittens with vitamins, proper diet. A board-certified feline specialist provides the animals with their veterinary medical care and Community Animal Network offers veterinary internships to young people as young as 15 that have aspirations of becoming a vet. 

Feral kittens are tamed to "pet quality" and rescue cats that are shy are disclosed and termed, "rescue quality" with a lower placement fee. With all adoptions DiAnna Pfaff-Martin gives valuable information about cat care in a "feline pet-parenting consultation" to adopters. The most current information is made available about how to keep your cat healthy, pet foods, litters and how to make your cat more affectionate and her specialty is teaching, “How To Make Cats Happy!” The AVID microchip is implanted in every cat and the chips’ registration fee is included in the adoption and the animals come with a 30-day heath commitment and return policy.

To donate to help local animals, use our PayPal link:

www.PayPal.Me/CommunityAnimal

Or Mail A Check with a Note! We love to get to know our donors:

Community Animal Network

P.O. Box 8662

Newport Beach, CA 92658

www.communityanimalnetwork.org



 

 



October 29, 2024, 7:02 am
Rescue

Contact info

Pet ID
17110149
Contact
Address
P.O. Box 8662, Newport Beach, CA 92658
Donation
We Help Local Animals! Your Donation Makes A Difference! Every Animals Needs Veterinary Medical Treatments.

Their adoption process

1.

Interview

Please share about yourself, work schedule, children and others in the home, current pets and the ones from the past and where they are now.

2.

Submit Application

We accept the application after the interview. Be mindful of sharing personal information with strangers. Scams are even in pet adoption!

3.

Meet the Pet

Our animals live in private homes and you will be introduced to the caregiver first by phone before the application and meeting the pet.

4.

Home Check

We ask that you submit short video clips / photos of the areas around your home and all areas the pet would have access to including outdoor

5.

Take the Pet Home

Feline Pet-Parenting – learn to choose pet foods, common symptoms of diseases, cat litters to avoid, how to choose a vet, cat care.

Additional adoption info

Your adoption comes with a “free” vet exam at The Cat Care Clinic, Orange, CA and includes a two-hour Feline Pet-Parenting Consultation. Your new pet has been blood tested for common disease’s, (feline aids & feline leukemia), vaccinated, dewormed, has no fleas.

An AVID microchip is implanted and the chips registration in the National Pet-Recovery Data Base is included. A 30-day health commitment protects your pet, too.

Go meet their pets

Appointments Made To Meet Our Pets In The Caregiver's Home!

More about this rescue

We adopt kittens in pairs believing all young beings should have a playmate of the same species, similar age.

Our foster parents help match the pairs of "best play buddies)

The animals are in private homes and well-loved.

All the rescue organizations are not the same. We all get them from the same places, but well-socialized kittens are not easy to come by.

We specialize in “pet-quality” cats and kittens. A pet-quality cat has had positive experiences with humans and has felt loved. Many of our kittens like to be carried and held and would make great family members.

Kittens that have not been well-socialized or handled a lot avoid people, hide and are jumpy and are often described as independent and aloof or abused.

Why do we promote our kittens in pairs?

All young animals need a playmate. They learn social skills through play-fighting. Kittens need an “equal energy” playmate to interact with. Just like kids picking friends, they pick someone who likes to do the same things. Biting and attacking ankles may be cute when a kitten is small, but a full grown cat can bite hard. Behaviors that the public dislike are created by not making the best choice for the animals. Adopting a pair of young animals that have the same energy level that were well-socialized is the best choice.

Other pets at this rescue