Site Updated:7/26/11
Tim Link is an animal communicator with a huge proven success. Tim is local to our area and a huge supporter of this program. Tim has written a book that includes a few of his stories. Check it out. Make sure when you order the book to let Tim know that you ordered it through or because of the FCPGA organization. Just click the book logo below.
You are probably wondering what happened to the other 529 cats who were not adopted into homes. The answer is probably some of these did get into homes instead of having to remain outside and be homeless. We have records for 228 cats adopted into homes, but the number is potentially much higher. The people who feed them, known as caregivers, received assistance with sterilizing the cats and as a result of the cats getting fixed, might have brought them inside or found other homes for them.
Many times these “feral” cats become friendly with the caregiver and decide to come inside after they trust the person. In addition, many cats we help are actually abandoned stray cats who wind up outside through no fault of their own. The cats that are friendly are the ones we put up for adoption and work hard to find them loving homes.
The other truly feral cats are not happy being inside. They prefer to live in their cat colony or environment where they exist. Attached is one such colony who is provided food daily from our Cat Colony Feeding Station Teams. The other pictures are at another feeding station using a feral cat feeder volunteers built.
The 51 cats could not remain where they were living or they would have been killed, so people who had barns agreed to take them and let them live there.
• # Cats adopted from Petco, Milton, GA 57
• # Cats adopted from Petfinder website surfing 72
While we accomplished a tremendous amount in a challenging economy, there is much work still to be done. We appreciate your continued support and donations to make this program possible. Our volunteers have fun and make furry friends, so let us know if you’d like to join in.

Our volunteers spend time using humane traps, building feeding stations, providing food and transporting cats back/forth to veterinarians.
Want to see some of our internal email communication about what we do? Read Our Journey
AND WE NEED
YOU
Program Guidelines
Program Brochure
Feral Cat Colony Tracking Sheet
Volunteer Liability Waiver Form
Property Owner Liability Release Form
Thanks to all of our caregivers for all that they are doing!
At the current time we do not have exact instructions
on building the feeder pictured below
but it is built on the Fuller Feeding Station plan
use the link below to get the specs and just add legs
Tomahawk Live Traps – humane traps made by this company or a trap
that is made in accordance with this type of trap is all we use.
You can visit them at LiveTrap Website or call them at (800) 272-8727
If you do not find an animal to adopt from us please go to the link below and adopt from the Forsyth County Animal Shelter.
Click here to go to the Forsyth County Animal Shelter
Free Kibble
Mimi Ausland, 12, of Bend, Ore., was looking for a way to help the animals at her local animal shelter. She’d been volunteering there since she was 7 years old and knew how great the need was. Then she saw a site her dad, Kelly Ausland, was going to each day. He’d click on it and people half a world away would get a little rice. A light bulb went off and the site, www.freekibble.com, launched April 1. The store donated 10 pieces of kibble every time someone went to the site and answered the daily trivia question. Right or wrong, the cats win! All you have to do is click on an answer, and every day you do, it will provide 10 pieces of kibble to Animal Shelters to help feed their hungry cats.
The Animal Rescue Site
This site focuses the power of the Internet on a specific need — providing food for some of the 27 million unwanted animals given to shelters in the U.S. every year. Over 10 million animals are put to death every year in the U.S. alone because they are abandoned and unwanted. Each click on the purple "Click Here to Give - it's FREE" button at The Animal Rescue Site provides food and care for a rescued animal living in a shelter or sanctuary. By clicking you will have given the value of .6 bowls of food to rescued animals.

