Adopt

My name is
Foster These Siamese New Kitten Arrivals!

Posted over 2 years ago | Updated over 3 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
Siamese
Color
Cream or Ivory
Age
Kitten
Sex
Pet ID
17390115
Hair Length

My details

Alert icon Not good with kids
Alert icon Not good with dogs
Checkmark in teal circle Good with cats
Checkmark in teal circle Housetrained

My story

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

Bottle Fed & Ready For Foster Family To Enjoy The Easy Work!

This beautiful litter of 3 Siamese and a sweet Calico are ready to move from the woman that bottle-fed them and they will be ready for adoption soon. 

If you know how much work bottle-feeding is you will know how much the caregiver needs a break and some lucky person can do the “light-lifting and enjoy these kittens while they ready for adoption. You must be in Orange County to foster cats for us!!

Just so you know, our kittens are adopted in pairs because every young being needs a friend and an “equal energy playmate” is one that is well match in play energy.

If you have an old cat and want to adopt a kitten always adopt a pair so your old cat can enjoy being a senior and snoozing and but enjoying watching and not being jumped on and chased all day or night. Just think of human grandparents enjoying the time with the children for a time and how they take them back to their parents and then get some rest.  

Adopting a bonded pair of kittens that are well-matched by play energy helps avoid “unhappy” cats that just tolerate each other or terrorize each other. My specialty is, “Make Cats Happy!” It all starts with making the right choice to adopt based on your home, your lifestyle, the family members and other pets in your home.

These kittens are available for adoption, but we are seeking a foster to take them into their home until they are fully vetted and altered prior to going to their new homes. The foster will have first right to choose a pair!

Community Animal Network will be accepting pre-adoption applications and we abide by COVID-19 safety precautions when showing our animals because they live in private homes.

The adoption includes, spay/neuter, viral blood testing for FIV/FELv, vaccinations, two dewormings, nails trimmed and our animals have no fleas.

A 1 ½ hour feline pet-parenting consultation is included and there is a lot of veterinary medical information because a pet-parents largest expense is for sickness and hospitalizations. Much of the focus of the pet-parenting consultation is on symptoms of common diseases and foods to avoid that cause them.

We implant AVID microchips and the registration in the national 24-hour pet recovery data base is included, a 30-day health commitment and a 30-day return policy apply. The adoption papers disclose previous treatments and any disclosures.

Our vet is Dr. Elaine Wexler-Mitchell, an author and a board-certified feline specialist that owns, The Cat Care Clinic in the city of Orange. She is not taking any new patients, but does see those animals adopted from us!

Community Animal Network is a veterinary medical rescue founded in 1996 for abandoned and “at risk” shelter dogs and cats. In 2015 the board unanimously supported the birth of the veterinary internship program designed for aspiring veterinarian’s as young as 15.

When you adopt or donate to Community Animal Network you are helping a young person step into their future! The interns learn from studying vet records, following vet orders and receive hands-on animal handling experience; give medications, injections, draw blood and observe procedures and treatments.

Thank you for considering helping a local animal by fostering or if you can make a donation to help it would be so greatly appreciated! 

 

DiAnna Pfaff-Martin

Founder & Director

P.O. Box 8662

Newport Beach, Ca 92658

949-759-3646

www.communityanimalnetwork.org

www.PayPal.Me/CommunityAnimal

 

 



 

 



October 29, 2024, 7:02 am
Rescue

Contact info

Pet ID
17390115
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