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Kitten & Puppy Season

Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
Kitten & Puppy Season
In the state of Louisiana, we have a lot of seasons. There is the classic spring, summer, winter and fall, but we also have seasons that are unique to Louisiana, like festival season, Mardi Gras and crawfish season. In addition to these non-weather-related seasons, we also have kitten and puppy season, which isn’t very well known outside the animal welfare world.

We like to describe this time of year as the season of soft and warm baby animals. Although the sounds of their yips and meows are music to any animal lovers’ ears, it is a difficult season for animal shelters. Every spring, animal shelters across the country see an increased number of homeless kittens and puppies that arrive at their doors.

In colder climates, kitten and puppy season may be limited to late spring and summer. But here in the Deep South, this season can stretch from early spring (or even late winter) to the end of fall. The Louisiana SPCA took care of hundreds of kittens and puppies in 2022, all of which needed food, shelter, medical care and a full-time staff to provide for them.

Why does puppy and kitten season happen during this time? Warmer temperatures combined with a large population of non-spayed or neutered male and female strays leads to an increase in breeding activity, thus an uptick in puppies and kittens being born. Although puppies and kittens can be seen being born year-round, during the spring, summer and often well into the fall, open-admission shelters are pushed beyond their limits.

If you find a litter of kittens that is not in immediate danger and is warm, watch to make sure the litter is truly orphaned. You may have discovered the nest while the mother was hunting for food or in the process of moving the babies. You will need to watch from a distance so that the mother is not too nervous to return and keep in mind that she may be gone for several hours.

If the litter is truly orphaned, bringing the litter to a shelter or caring for them yourself will give them their best chance at survival. If you decide to raise the litter yourself, your veterinarian or the team at the Louisiana SPCA can help you learn how best to feed and care for them.

Just like humans, if a family does not have a home, it is much more difficult for them to survive. Some of these litters are orphaned or abandoned. Sometimes, a kitten is found alone or injured. Litters of puppies may be rescued from unsafe situations. Other times, nursing mother cats are brought in with their kittens. In the best scenario, the animals are healthy and old enough to be spayed or neutered and put up for adoption.

However, most of these puppies and kittens will require extended stays in the shelter, either because they are too young to be placed for adoption, or because they are ill or injured. Some litters brought in without their mothers will be too young to eat on their own and will require bottle feeding and more intensive care. It is a labor of love to care for and raise the young animals, sometimes only days or hours old, but it can be very stressful once resources such as space, staff, food, medications, and time become stretched thin, and animals continue to enter the shelter.

But the good news is this: It does not have to be this way and communities can do their part to improve kitten and puppy season. So much of the heartbreak of kitten season is preventable through spay and neuter. It is the first step in overcoming pet overpopulation. When even a single cat is spayed or neutered, we are preventing the suffering of thousands of animals. Over a six-year period, an unaltered female dog, her mate, and their offspring can be responsible for the birth of 67,000 puppies. Over the same six-year period, one unaltered female cat, her mate, and their subsequent offspring can produce more than 66,000 kittens.

Another important way you can help animal shelters and the pet population with kitten and puppy season is fostering. Fostering is one of the most rewarding experiences because not only do you get to set that animal up for success for the rest of their life, but once that animal is ready to make their adoption debut you get to help them find their forever family (even if sometimes it turns out to be your own). With fostering kittens and puppies, you are saving a life, you feel good, your shelter or rescue group helps more animals, and your foster pet is happy, healthy, and well-socialized. Talk about a win-win-win!

Fostering increases an animal’s chance of getting adopted. Foster families are usually the first to find out about the pet’s personality. You may even be the first to teach your foster pet basic house manners, making them more appealing to potential adopters Plus, your own pets will learn more social skills. The more animals your pets encounter, the better they are at dealing with stress and getting used to strangers. Your pet might even find a playmate in your foster pet.

You probably already have the space for one more. A spare bedroom, office, or screen porch is the perfect place for a foster pet. Even a bathroom is enough room for a kitten or puppy, and it is much larger than a kennel in a shelter.

Fostering keeps animals out of shelters. As wonderful as animal shelters are, they can be quite stressful. And there is nothing like the love and warmth of a family! When you foster an animal, a space for another homeless animal in need at the shelter is opened.

If you are interested in fostering an animal, contact your area shelter or rescue group for more information. To foster for the Louisiana SPCA, there is an online application at www.louisianaspca.org/foster. There are also many other rescue groups in the area and most will need help during this time. Help give the kittens in our community a break this season by talking to your local shelter about how you can help.

If you would like to help shelters during kitten season but you are unable to foster, items such as kitten and puppy meal replacer formula, bottles, wet and dry kitten and puppy food, kitty litter and heating pads are always in short supply and make excellent donations. We recommend asking if the organization you are interested in helping has a wish list of items they are in need of to ensure they are getting the items they need most.
Tagged in Paws for Cause in our Spring 2023 issue