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Solo Domestic Short Hair Mix Poplar Grove, IL

  • Young
  • Female
  • Small
  • Tabby (Brown / Chocolate)

About

Coat length
Short
House-trained
Yes
Health
Vaccinations up to date, spayed / neutered.
Good in a home with
Other cats, dogs, children.
Adoption fee
$100.00

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Meet Solo

Name: Solo
Breed: DSH
DOB: 05/06/2023
Good with kids: YES
Good with dogs: YES
Good with cats: YES
Foster location: Lake in the Hills, IL
Adoption fee: $100 Fun Bio: Solo has spent her whole life in foster care without much interest and we aren't sure why! She's almost a year old, sweet, playful, beautiful, friendly, and SO CUTE with her little white paws! We are really hoping she'll get to spend her first birthday in her forever home this year. Is that you?

We always recommend playtime, positive reinforcement training and a regular schedule for feeding times when bringing a new cat/kitten into your home. Adjustment takes time for both you and your new family member, so remember to be patient and enjoy this new and exciting time!
Included in the adoption fee are age appropriate vaccinations, FeLV/FIV testing, deworming, spay or neuter surgery, and microchip.

Anti-Declawing Policy:
All cats and kittens will have a no declaw policy in their adoption contract with us!

Declawing is a series of bone amputations. Declawing is more accurately described by the term de-knuckling and is not merely the removal of the claws, as the term declawing implies. In humans, fingernails grow from the skin, but in animals that hunt prey, the claws grow from the bone; therefore, the last bone is amputates so the claw cannot re-grow. Declawing is one of the most painful, routinely performed procedures in all of veterinary medicine. Each toe of the cat is amputated at the first joint. Declawing a cat is equivalent in a person to amputating the entire first knuckle of every finger.

Declawing is done strictly for the benefit of the owner. There are NO benefits to the cat and NO good reasons to declaw.

Declawing can lead to behavior changes. A declawed cat has no way to defend itself and may resort to biting more often. Due to pain, they may stop using the litterbox.

There are humane alternatives to declawing. Cats can be trained to use scratching posts. They should have their nails trimmed regularly. There is double sided sticky tape that can be put on furniture to deter a cat from scratching there. There are also nail caps called Soft Paws that are glued onto a cat's nails without harm.

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Solo

Solo

  • Domestic Short Hair
  • Young
  • Female