Tucson Citizen.com

How Much Would You Pay To Save Your Pet

by on Aug. 14, 2009, under Animal Rescue

I could tell you that I had to put a beloved pet to sleep yesterday but, if I am to be completely honest with my readers, he wasn’t exactly my pet. My actual in-house pet, Bonnie, is a petite calico cat. I rescued her seven years and eleven months ago today. She is a World Trade Center orphan and her owner was killed on September 11. I will share her story with you in September.

My adopted pet was a large, imperious, and somewhat ragged feral black cat with long white whiskers, oval green eyes, and a white patch on his chest. He had been visiting me and my offerings of premium cat food for three or four years, when it was convenient for him. I was always happy when he appeared.

For the first couple of years the midnight-black cat was wary and would watch me cautiously from a safe distance. I had to leave his food far from the house before he would sniff at it but, in time, he came to trust me enough to sidle onto the garden patio. As feral cats do, he would sometimes hang around like he owned the place for days on end, only to vanish for a week or two, or a month, and make me worry that he had been snatched by a coyote, bobcat, or SUV. I named him Big Bill—an obscure reference to Patrick McGoohan’s Prisoner, my all-time favorite television show.

Recently Bill showed up after a long absence. He’d been in some kind of fight, maybe with a coyote. His front left paw was horribly mangled and his head and back were covered in sores. The previously guarded creature lay beside my patio door, crying. I was sure he was in pain, or at least very distressed. I got some antibiotics from the vet and slipped them in his food, but they didn’t seem to help. Then I contacted an animal rescue specialist and borrowed a humane trap. I spent five days trying to catch Big Bill and, after many failures, finally succeeded. Once I got him to the vet, to my great surprise, he was as calm as anything, lying quietly on the examination table, and I was able to pet him for the first time ever.

Big Bill during happier times

Big Bill during happier times

The news was not good. Bill’s foot was very badly injured and would require bathing, tissue removal, and ongoing care. Feral cats don’t do well with bandages. After taking cultures from his wounds they determined that he had massive infections and needed to be tested for Feline Immunodeficiency Virus and that a biopsy should be done as well. His liver was swollen and he was losing weight. We were looking at very high medical costs for initial tests only, with no guarantee that he’d even be treatable. And what if he was? Is it okay to spend $1,000 or $2,000 on a feral cat, only to put him back out in the wild with a bad foot? It was one of the hardest decisions I ever made, but I couldn’t bear to think of Big Bill suffering any more, so we put him to sleep.

I have been involved in animal rescue and animal rights work for many years and have helped find homes for literally hundreds of cats and dogs. I have lost pets to illness and wandering, to old age and road accidents, and I’ve seen elderly suffering animals euthanized out of compassion. But this was the first time I ever ordered the death of a relatively young cat. He was a scruffy guy, but he was my friend.

Big Bill spent most of his life in my garden, so I thought he'd like to be buried there

Big Bill spent most of his life in my garden, so I thought he'd like to be buried there

After I buried him in the garden, I sat down and wrote out a check for what I would have spent on Big Bill’s tests and sent it to my favorite Tucson animal shelter. I figured they could use those funds to help many cats instead of me possibly being able to help one. In those last few moments, Big Bill seemed quiet and calm, and stopped crying. I hope I did what was best for him, but I’ll never really know for sure.

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  • azmouse

    You made me cry!

    I think you did the right thing. That was a touching story.

  • http://tucsoncitizen.com/lizard/ Logical Lizard

    I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to upset anyone  : ( but it was a sad story. If he was a house cat, I would have paid for the tests without hesitation. We had tried earlier to domesticate Big Bill and let him into my friend’s house, but he was wild and didn’t want to be inside. I got some expert advice from local animal rescue people and they said there is little, if any chance of being able to domesticate a grown feral cat. It seemed if we pumped him full of antibiotics and put him back out in the wild he’d just be limping around in pain and I couldn’t allow that. Thank you for the kind words.

    • azmouse

      No need to apologize. They were sad and happy tears.I’m so grateful Big Bill had you there and wasn’t alone.
      I’m a cat fanatic, so I get mushy about them.

  • Jennatoolz

    Terribly sad story, but I agree that you did the right thing.  =)

    This reminds me that I recently had to put to rest a very good pet-friend of mine…a 3 1/2-yr old goldfish I named Buzzkill. I bought him from Walmart and did NOT expect him to live as long as he did, but he was a survivor. He went through a lot of ups and downs with me (surviving an accidentally shattered fish tank and took a rapid water ride to the floor as a result). He was just a fish, but I grew attached, and even have an illustrated version of him tattoo’d on my back!

    Anyway, he fell ill a couple months ago, and after many different attempts to help cure his illness, I decided to end his suffering. It was painful to see him on those last days because he wasn’t his usual lively self. I couldn’t help him, and as much as it hurt my heart, I made the decision. I asked my boyfriend to take him out of the water (as I sat crying in the bathroom with a closed door). When he was gone, we buried him in our backyard. I miss him for sure, but he’s still “got my back.” =P

  • http://www.bridgemarketing.com/blog Karyn Zoldan

    You absolutely did the right thing and then you made it better by sending money to an animal rescue that needs money to help dogs and cats that can be rehomed as pets.

    You put Big Bill out of his misery and sent him to a better place. It was his time.

  • Mark B. Evans

    Geoff,
    Nicely done.
    Mark

  • Carolyn Classen

    Geoff, you showed a lot of compassion for a suffering feral animal. I doubt you could have done more. Years ago my son’s “wildish” guinea pig lived in our back yard, and a cat got in and attacked it badly.  My husband took it to the vet and had to make the same difficult decision to put it down.
    You had to put Big Bill out of his misery as well.

  • Carolyn Classen

    Geoff, you showed a lot of compassion for the suffering of a feral animal whom you had befriended.  I doubt you could have done more.

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  • LuneOwl

    He was lucky to have you to help him through this. It sounds like at best he’d have been crippled if he got over the infections and he’d have been easy prey. At least he had a friend with him when he died.

  • lynD

    You. Rock.
    What a wonderful, humane thing to do.

  • http://tucsoncitizen.com/lizard/ Logical Lizard

    Without getting too mushy I would like to sincerely thank my readers for their generous comments and support. I realized that, every morning, the first thing I would do was open my blinds to see if Big Bill was dozing on the patio, waiting for his breakfast. Instinctively, I still keep on looking out there to see if he needs anything.
     
    Today I was out on a project when I accidentally met a most fascinating man. It was Sunday, I wasn’t planning on doing interviews, didn’t have my notebook, but HAD to get his story down. I looked in my wallet and the only thing usable was the vet receipt for Big Bill’s euthanasia. At first it seemed horribly disrespectful to write interview notes on the back of the closest thing I had to a death certificate for Bill, but then I thought: “Life goes on. Bill is buried in the garden and I have a new and inspiring story to write. He wouldn’t mind.”

    So, anyway, I’m really just saying thank you for caring.

  • 7dog5cat

    I had a very simalar case with a stray cat with the same ending.  You did the right thing.  Thanks for caring.
     

  • 7dog5cat

    I had a simalar case with a stray cat.  You did the right thing.  Thanks for caring.


Logical Lizard illustration by Timothy Arbon
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