Treasured Pets

Treasured Pets Happily taking care of furbabies around the Treasure Lake/ Dubois area for over 20 years! 🩷

11/13/2025

PSA: The Audubon Society and wildlife rehabilitation centers often warn that birds like Cedar Waxwings can mistake artificial berries for food — leading to fatal intestinal blockages.
Real or dried berries feed life; plastic ones only imitate it.
This season, decorate with nature, not against it. 🌿❤️
✨ Choose real fruit, pinecones, or seed garlands — safe beauty for all.

11/02/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/1DY83XzrnJ/

First Scoop Always FREE 🐾 (dog waste only • ask us!)
Dog, goose & deer waste pros.
Serving DuBois, Treasure Lake, Punx, Philipsburg & more. Veteran Family-Owned • BBB Accredited • Insured • Discounts: Veterans, Seniors, Nurses & Service Dogs
8145920224

We no longer offer p**p scooping but can give a great reference for a local business!!
11/02/2025

We no longer offer p**p scooping but can give a great reference for a local business!!

11/02/2025
10/17/2025

Happy National Feral Cat Day, 2025! While there will be no parades or celebrations, we at Purrfect Paws are grateful that such a day exists as it offers an opportunity to encourage everyone to make a difference in the lives of the feral cats who live among us. 😺

Whether seen or unseen, many of us share our neighborhoods with the forgotten. Descendants of long discarded house cats, feral kittens are taught from their earliest days to fear people, preferring to remain in the safety of the shadows. Searching for scraps of food and a safe place to rest, they ask for very little. Some are fortunate to find refuge in the form of a “feral feeder”…. a kind soul who routinely provides heaping bowls of food, fresh dishes of water, even straw filled shelters to ease the sting of a frigid winter night. ♥️ Most, just manage life the best they can, asking only for the chance to live without being intentionally injured or killed.

Our rescue is proud that since our founding, we have spent countless years striving to make life better for the feral cat colonies in our area. Focused on TNR, we work to decrease the number of unwanted feral kittens through spaying and neutering, while simultaneously providing preventative vet care in the form of vaccines and medical treatment for every cat we release.♥️ Hundreds and hundreds of feral cats have been helped by our volunteers and there are so many more in need.
In honor of National Feral Cat Day, we wish to acknowledge all the amazing feral feeders out there… those who love from afar… we see you and you are appreciated!

To support our ongoing mission of saving the souls in the shadows, please consider a donation. 🖤

10/01/2025

Heads up! You may see these green, brown, or black pod-like balls on the ground in your neighborhood at this time of the year. They are nuts from black walnut trees. The picture shows black walnuts in various sizes and stages of maturity and decay. Every part of a black walnut tree (nuts, shells, leaves, and wood) is highly toxic to dogs. The initial symptoms of black walnut poisoning include vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, and loss of appetite, followed by tremors, seizures, and jaundice. The toxins in black walnut trees can be fatal to dogs if not treated promptly. Do not attempt to use any home remedies if your dog has ingested black walnut. Time is of the essence--get your dog to a vet immediately. (More info in the comments.)

09/04/2025

September is cat month ♥️ show us your kitties

09/04/2025

She lay quietly by the curbside, head pressed gently against the concrete, her eyes half-closed as if sleep had finally taken her. But she wasn’t asleep. The truth was far more painful — she was exhausted from trying to survive. Her small body, though covered in beautiful patches of black, orange, and white, couldn’t hide the signs of her suffering.
Every car that passed shook the ground beside her, but she didn’t flinch. She had learned long ago that the world doesn’t stop for cats like her. People walked past, glancing briefly, then moving on. To them, she was just another street cat, another shadow melting into the background of a busy, uncaring world.
But something about her made me stop. Maybe it was the way her body curled so tightly — like she was trying to protect something that was no longer there. Or maybe it was the silent way she breathed, as if afraid even her existence was an inconvenience. I knelt beside her, careful not to startle her. She didn’t move.
Her eyes opened just slightly. One of them was crusted over, the other looked at me without fear — not because she trusted me, but because she had nothing left to fear. I whispered softly, asking her if she was okay, knowing full well the answer. She didn’t meow. She didn’t purr. She simply blinked slowly, as if saying, “Where were you when I still had hope?”
A closer look revealed her ribs pressing through her thin fur. Her paw pads were cracked and raw. She had likely gone days without food. But worse than the hunger was the loneliness. This wasn’t just a cat that had been abandoned — this was a soul that had been forgotten. A living creature waiting for a kindness that never came.
I offered her a piece of chicken from my lunch. She sniffed it, then looked up at me. It took a full minute before she reached for it — not out of greed, but out of uncertainty. Did she even remember what kindness felt like? When she finally ate, it was with slow, deliberate bites, as though her body had forgotten how to accept nourishment.
I sat with her for an hour that day. Just sitting, not touching, not forcing trust. And when I stood to leave, she lifted her head. She didn’t follow. She didn’t cry. But her eyes asked me a question I’ll never forget: “Are you leaving too?”
I didn’t sleep well that night. Her image haunted me. So the next morning, I returned. She was still there — in the same spot, curled the same way, head pressed against the cold stone like it was the only thing she had left. But this time, she lifted her head when she saw me. This time, she stood up, though weakly, and took a few wobbly steps forward.
I wrapped her in a towel and took her home. The vet said she was dehydrated and anemic, likely suffering from prolonged exposure and starvation. But she could recover. She would just need time, food, and love — the things she had been denied for so long. I named her Clementine, after the sweetness she’d somehow kept buried under all the pain.
Weeks passed. Her fur grew soft again. Her eyes cleared. And the first time she purred, I cried. She had survived abandonment, cold nights, hunger, and heartbreak. But now she had something she never did before: a reason to keep living.
So if you ever see a cat curled on the street like she was — don’t look away. Because sometimes they’re not sleeping. Sometimes they’re silently asking for someone, anyone, to notice that they’re still alive.
Credit : I Love Animal

Image and content from FB Manny Farm

Address

Du Bois, PA
15801

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 11pm
Tuesday 7am - 11pm
Wednesday 7am - 11pm
Thursday 7am - 11pm
Friday 7am - 11pm
Saturday 7am - 11pm
Sunday 7am - 11pm

Telephone

+18146033969

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Treasured Pets posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Treasured Pets:

Share

Category