In May when
my husband and I rescued the newborn kittens from the trash bag lying on the
highway medium I thought that the kittens could have been from two litters
because some were significantly larger and two seemed to be newborns that
needed to be bottled fed and also help to go to the bathroom.
Over the next several weeks I noticed that
all five cats seemed to grow except the two smaller kittens, they were not growing and they seemed to sleep more than the other
kittens.
I feared for
the worst thinking they had Feline Leukemia (FELV) or Feline Immunodeficiency
Virus (FIV). Any kitten with a feline
disease is difficult to adopt because most people want healthy kittens
only. So I was worried about what the
test would show. Three of the kittens
were negative and two of the kittens the smaller ones tested positive for FIV.
To my
surprise, the veterinarian asked us if we wanted to put them down, and both my
husband and I responded no. The
veterinarian told us of the restrictions of owning an FIV cat. Basically, they
are contagious and cannot associate with other normal cats in the household and
they can never go outdoors.
The FIV cats must reside in a positive energy home that is at a comfortable temperature and must eat no soy, corn, or wheat gluten cat food. Quality cat food like Wellness or Blue Buffalo spa selects. Basically, a nurturing lifestyle that is harmonious at all times.
The FIV cats must reside in a positive energy home that is at a comfortable temperature and must eat no soy, corn, or wheat gluten cat food. Quality cat food like Wellness or Blue Buffalo spa selects. Basically, a nurturing lifestyle that is harmonious at all times.
Finding an adopter
that will agree to these terms may be a little hard but since I have four FIV
cats living in my home now I know that life with these cats is normal. The only
thing that I note as different would be that they sleep more.
Note
All five kittens lived together and the two FIV kittens did not make the other
kittens sick. This is because there was no bite wound. They all ate out of the same food bowl and
again the virus was not past to the other, plus they also slept and groomed
each other.
I am certain that if the
cats do not fight and bite then an FIV cat can live with other normal cats as
long as they get along and love each other.
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