The Cat House NPC: 2020 / 588216 / 08

The Cat House NPC: 2020 / 588216 / 08 Caring for an average of 140 abandoned or stray cats, providing shelter, food, love and medical care.

Banking Details>
House Of Cats
FNB account number : 62864672574
Branch :250655
Paypal : [email protected]
https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=UNUJS2UXMV5HS

Wanneer ek verduidelik hoe niks hier aan my behoort nie maar mense Sukkel om te glo 😧😁 Net die toilet en bad as ek geluk...
26/08/2025

Wanneer ek verduidelik hoe niks hier aan my behoort nie maar mense Sukkel om te glo 😧😁

Net die toilet en bad as ek gelukkig is op n dag 🐾🐾🐾🐾🐾🐾

Baie dankie, thank you so much for helping with wages for Mannetjie. The show can go on 😁🌻🫶💐🌸
25/08/2025

Baie dankie, thank you so much for helping with wages for Mannetjie. The show can go on 😁🌻🫶💐🌸

Dear friends, thank you for sending some donations helping me fill the food bucket for the week 💜💞💖Money for wages, for ...
25/08/2025

Dear friends, thank you for sending some donations helping me fill the food bucket for the week 💜💞💖

Money for wages, for the week not there. So will have to either negotiate or work alone. And not finding that so easy anymore. The legs 🦵 not so strong anymore.

Please, R1050 short for wages from today until Saturday. This wind is still going strong and it’s work on top of work. Layers of sand and dust in the enclosures: water to be replaced not even halfway through the day. Dust and sand in bedding. Washing endless. Nope. I can’t do this alone. A new day stretching out before you and all you see is work and more work. Cant control the weather, cant control donations. Can only try and control my emotions.

Banking Details
House Of Cats
FNB
Account number : 62864672574
Branch :250655

24/08/2025

Stray / Feral kuier al vir lank hier in die aande. Maar te slim vir trap hok 😞

❤️‍🩹
24/08/2025

❤️‍🩹

Snowball en Snowy ❤️‍🔥
23/08/2025

Snowball en Snowy ❤️‍🔥

Azizi ❤️‍🔥
23/08/2025

Azizi ❤️‍🔥

Cherish… every purr 😥
23/08/2025

Cherish… every purr 😥

Facts!!! Ek hoop die kat haters lees hier.
23/08/2025

Facts!!! Ek hoop die kat haters lees hier.

Removing cats from an area by killing or relocating them is not only cruel—it’s pointless. Animal control agencies and city governments have blindly perpetuated this futile approach for decades. But scientific research, years of failed attempts, and evidence from animal control personnel prove that catch and kill doesn’t permanently clear an area of cats.

Scientific evidence indicates that removing feral cat populations only opens up the habitat to an influx of new cats, either from neighboring territories or born from survivors. Each time cats are removed, the population will rebound through a natural phenomenon known as the “vacuum effect,” drawing the community into a costly, endless cycle of trapping and killing.

The vacuum effect is a phenomenon scientifically recognized worldwide, across all types of animal species. Well-documented among biologists, the vacuum effect describes what happens when even a portion of an animal population is permanently removed from its home range. Sooner or later, the empty habitat attracts other members of the species from neighboring areas, who move in to take advantage of the same resources that attracted the first group (like shelter and food). Killing or removing the original population does nothing to eliminate these resources; it only creates a “vacuum” that will inevitably draw in other animals living nearby.

Scientific research has observed the vacuum effect across many species—herbivores, carnivores, and omnivores. When studying mountain lions, for example, one researcher noted, “When you remove resident lions that have established home ranges you create a void.” He continues, “Other resident lions that have home ranges that may overlap the individual you removed now find that territory empty. This allows them to expand their range, as well as create openings for transient lions to establish a new home range.”

Simply put, when mountain lions are removed from their habitat, other mountain lions move in. This behavior has also been documented in possums, badgers, and raccoons.

A habitat will support a population of a certain size. No matter how many animals are removed, if the resources remain, the population will eventually recover. Any cats remaining after a catch and kill effort will produce more kittens and at a higher survival rate, filling the habitat to capacity. As one study found, “populations greatly reduced by culling are likely to rebound quickly.”Over time, the number of cats in an area where a feral cat colony has been killed or relocated will simply recover and return to its original size.

Removing cats from an area is a futile effort—one that cannot succeed. The only documented “successful” effort to remove a population of cats occurred in a cruel program on uninhabited, sub-Antarctic Marion Island. It took two decades and ruthless methods—methods that are impossible to replicate in areas inhabited by people including poisoning, hunting with guns, and introducing disease—to clear the island of cats. As scientists tried each method, they noted “the recolonization of preferred habitats, cleared of cats, from neighboring suboptimal areas…” In other words, like the mountain lions, whenever they killed cats in the best habitats, the cats next door simply moved in.

The Marion Island example proves the vacuum effect while it also proves the impossibility of permanently clearing an area of an entire target population. Municipalities engaged in any type of catch and kill efforts are fighting a cruel, endless, losing battle against nature that is a gross waste of taxpayer dollars and ends hundreds of lives.

Years of failed catch and kill policies prove this method’s ineffectiveness
Animal control officers all over the country have observed the ineffectiveness of lethal methods firsthand through years of misguided policy.

Joan Brown, President and CEO of the Humane League of Lancaster County (PA), says that her organization made the switch to Trap-Neuter-Return when they started to realize that they were never making any headway with catch and kill.

“I finally went to the board and said, ‘Where in our mission statement does it say euthanize? Because all we’re doing is taking [feral cats] in to euthanize them…we’re not only doing an inhumane thing, we’re actually contributing to the problem, creating a vacuum effect that will just be filled again—and probably at a faster rate than when we started,’” says Brown.

Brown says that they noticed it was a never-ending and growing problem, draining their resources and their morale: “At the very least, we were standing still. That was clear, and it seemed as if we were running forward, but actually moving backward.”

Other animal control and shelter organizations nationwide have also taken a stand after acknowledging the failed results of their catch and kill efforts. Maricopa County, Arizona’s animal control website says, “We have over 20 years of documented proof that traditional ways of dealing with feral cats don’t work. The catch and kill method of population control (trap a cat, bring it to a shelter, ask that the cat be euthanized), has not reduced the number of feral cats. The cat may be gone, but now there is room for another cat to move in…So, catch and kill actually makes the problem worse.” And the Humane Society of Ochocos (Oregon) agrees: “…[W]e know now, that more than 30 years of trapping and killing cats has done nothing to reduce the feral cat population.”

The National Animal Control Association amended its feral cat policy in 2008 to be more supportive of Trap-Neuter-Return, in part because, as then president Mark Kumpf put it, “[i]t’s recognizing that in some cases, certain jurisdictions and communities are more interested in maintaining a stable cat population than they are in simply bailing the ocean with a thimble.”

He continues: “What we’re saying is the old standard isn’t good enough anymore. As we’ve seen before, there’s no department that I’m aware of that has enough money in their budget to simply practice the old capture and euthanize policy; nature just keeps having more kittens.”

If catch and kill had any long-term effect on cat populations, animal control officers nationwide—and their leadership organizations—would have observed it by now. Instead, they are reading the writing on the wall and switching to the method that works.

Trap-Neuter-Return is the responsible, humane method of care for feral cats
Trap-Neuter-Return stabilizes feral cat populations. The cats are humanely trapped, vaccinated, and neutered, so no more kittens will be born. They are then returned to their original location to live out their lives in their outdoor home. Not only is Trap-Neuter-Return the humane option for feral cats, it also improves cats’ lives by relieving them of the stresses of mating and pregnancy. In the end, unlike catch and kill, TNR works.

IT’S TIME TO STOP THE KILLING
Cities and shelters across America have experienced great success with Trap-Neuter-Return—it is now official policy for feral cats in Washington, DC, Baltimore, and Chicago. It’s time to learn from past mistakes and move forward instead of going around in circles—it’s time to stop fighting the endless battle of catch and kill and protect cats’ lives.

Hulle grassies kom mooi aan. Verder Alles dood, nog grys en grou. Cats need grass. Especially if they are kept indoors. ...
23/08/2025

Hulle grassies kom mooi aan. Verder Alles dood, nog grys en grou. Cats need grass. Especially if they are kept indoors. 🐾 and toys 😁 and human touch and love.

En die enigste blomme wat ek gaan sien die hele jaar is blossoms aan perskebome wat lank niks meer kos gee nie. Bly maar die mooiste mooi buiten die kattie gesiggies, ‘n blom. 🌺🌻💐🌸

Dear friends, ❤️Thank you for kindness from Pam, Anonymous, K and Paul, Chantelle, Naomi,  and always, without fail, Sue...
23/08/2025

Dear friends,

❤️Thank you for kindness from Pam, Anonymous, K and Paul, Chantelle, Naomi, and always, without fail, Sue who helped us through this week.

🐾🐾Apart from daily wages due and owing, I have made use of the Petleys special (2 for R45) currently running at Checkers. The tinned food still a bit of a crisis here. Have to grab every opportunity available to get stock in.

😣With a lot of luck, catnip and patience, managed to get the 2 feral girls trapped and isolated for sterilisation. Not booked yet, have to get them to trust me for that long drive to the vet. 😊

This week has seen winds 💨 of 34kph, loads of work and washing. But otherwise good.

Fleas seem to have moved in full blast. Not good.

😧I receive a lot of questions about how to keep kitties away from spraying on the Same spot. In the picture is a product from Marltons that I’ve HAD to try out because shelter fridge, gas stove, basically anyting steel is starting to rust away after some years of them spraying on the same spot. A little too late for me but this stuff works. Some of these steel cupboards are on the brink of collapsing because the bottom parts are now starting to become brittle.

No wind this morning, YAY 🙌

May you all Have a super special weekend.

Banking Details
House Of Cats
FNB
Account number : 62864672574
Branch :250655

❤️‍🔥
21/08/2025

❤️‍🔥

Address

City Of Matlosana

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when The Cat House NPC: 2020 / 588216 / 08 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 The Cat House NPC: 2020 / 588216 / 08:

Share