LisaLQ
Fish Gatherer
Sorry to hear about your cat Coloradogirl - similar story to my 5 year old neutered tom Smokey. We adopted him from the CPL, within 5 months he'd died of feline leukaemia. Why? Because someone didn't think to vaccinate him before they let him out (in his previous home - and the CPL didn't bother to test him - who's worse I dont know, but they never replied to my letter to their head office asking for an explanation). He was always a much loved house cat with us.
Obviously we didn't have him as long as you had yours, so your pain must have been even worse (((hugs))) - it was really hard for me to get over. He went from fat cuddly happy lad, to skinny, yellow furred/eyed (from liver damage caused), blind, incontinent and with no energy to even lift his body. He had to stay in at the vets for a week, and on the day the tests came back they called me back in - and despite being blind, he rolled on his back for a tickle knowing it was me. And minutes later he was put to sleep. Broke my heart.
Like Bex said - there's arguments for both sides - it depends on the cat. But sometimes there are reasons other than convenience for folks to keep their cats indoors, so not all folks who keep theirs in are doing it out of laziness.
Obviously we didn't have him as long as you had yours, so your pain must have been even worse (((hugs))) - it was really hard for me to get over. He went from fat cuddly happy lad, to skinny, yellow furred/eyed (from liver damage caused), blind, incontinent and with no energy to even lift his body. He had to stay in at the vets for a week, and on the day the tests came back they called me back in - and despite being blind, he rolled on his back for a tickle knowing it was me. And minutes later he was put to sleep. Broke my heart.
Like Bex said - there's arguments for both sides - it depends on the cat. But sometimes there are reasons other than convenience for folks to keep their cats indoors, so not all folks who keep theirs in are doing it out of laziness.