Gidget is a small bundle of love and fun. She is one of the most trusting and lovable kittens we have ever rescued. She likes her kitty friends and follows people around like a puppy. Gidget was probably born around the end of April, 2008 and is a beautiful multicolored tortoiseshell with big double paws. This photo doesn't do her justice; she's really beautiful! She has been wormed, tested, vaccinated, and spayed and is the picture of health. If you are interested in adopting Gidget, please contact Karen at zorissa@cox.net or Jane at 359-5115. Gidget is in the Cranston/Warwick area.
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For general PawsWatch and adoption information, please contact
cats@pawswatch.org or call 401/848-9TNR.
PawsWatch
PawsWatch Rhode Island's volunteer network for the spay/neuter and vaccination of feral cats. PawsWatch works with citizens statewide to assist them in getting their backyard residents the necessary vet care for safe and healthy lives. When we find tame strays among these cats, or kittens which are young enough to become tame, we sometimes help their caretakers locate homes.
If you need assistance in trying to help feral cats, please contact us at
cats@pawswatch.org
For more information about meetings in Warwick, please call Jeanne at 737-4528.
For Bristol meetings, call Gina at 253-0719.
For Narragansett meetings, call Liz at 783-4759.
If you would like to help out, please e-mail us at
cats@pawswatch.org or call 401/848-9TNR!
Who We Are
PawsWatch was started in '97 and was incorporated in '99.
The group first started in the Newport / Aquidneck Island region.
Throughout the United States, cats which are not 100% tame account for the majority of cats who are "put to sleep" in shelters. Stopping the flood of reproduction among these cats can help to reverse this trend as well as helping to relieve some of the crowding so that
shelters have more time and space to resettle other deserving animals.
PawsWatch volunteers help neighbors create healthy, comfortable, non-reproducing habitats for feral cats. Most importantly, we help people get their cat in for affordable spay/neuter, in order to break the cycle of overpopulation and homelessness.
Those cats which are not adoptable are given inoculations and any needed medical care,and are spayed or neutered. They remain at the locations where they feel at home but now as a stable "colony:" healthy, non-reproducing, sheltered, and fed daily.
What You Can Do
FUNDING
Help us help homeless cats. Money raised by PawsWatch goes DIRECTLY to the needs of the cats, spaying-neutering-vaccinating, or building shelters. We are an all-volunteer, non-profit organization with no paid employees and no overhead. Many vets make our work possible by eliminating profits and donating time, but there are still significant expenses involved. We need your help and are very grateful for the generous supporters who make our work possible.