Lost or Found Cats
What do I do if I’ve found a cat or kittens?
*To ensure there is no transmission of illness or parasites we recommend that you keep the cat contained in a separate room, away from other animals.*
If you have found a litter of kittens without a mom and they appear to be healthy and are in a safe place please do not remove them immediately or disturb the area until you determine if the mom is coming back. The best outcome is to take in a family with the mother cat so that the kittens receive the best care and the mother cat can also receive help. If you must remove the kittens please consider using a humane trap in the area to hopefully capture the mother later. Traps can be rented from our office during business hours or from animal control.
Check these Facebook pages for found cats matching the cat description:
Post a found report on kijiji.ca
If you are unable to keep the cat while searching for an owner, call Animal Control at 306 385-7387 and they will pick it up
If you can keep the cat inside while looking for an owner, call the SPCA and file a found report with them.
Prepare and put up flyers in local vet offices and anywhere else that will let you put one up.
Email Street Cat Rescue at contact@streetcat.ca with a photo and description of the cat you have found and your contact information.
If you would like to request SCAT intake the cat, submit a request: Intake Request Form.
In the event where SCAT is too full to intake the cat, consider if yourself or a friend or family member may be able to foster the cat for the SCAT program.
If it is a young kitten that is not yet eating solid food, check out our information on orphan kittens.
If it is a pregnant cat or nursing mom with kittens check out or info on pregnant or nursing moms.
What do I do if I’ve lost my cat?
Losing a pet can be very stressful, but don’t panic. You need to stay calm.
In many cases, pets don’t go very far. House cats, particularly those who are indoor-only, tend to get scared and hide close by. Thoroughly search the immediate area before looking in areas farther away. Call your cat’s name and listen for a response.
Cats are more likely to come out of hiding at dawn and dusk; concentrate your search at those times.
Put a litter box with their scent as well as clothes that have your smell outside where they are accessible and will stay dry.
Create a flyer with your pet’s photo, any specific identifying information, and your contact information, including phone number(s) that are always available and / or where people can leave a message. Check for messages regularly.
Go door-to-door to your neighbors with a flyer and ask if they have seen your pet; ask them to check their garages or sheds where a cat could get trapped.
Take the flyers to local area stores, vet offices, groomers, and anywhere else that will let you put one up.
Ask your mail carrier, newspaper delivery person or anyone who walks in your neighbourhood to keep an eye out. This could include neighbors who walk their dogs regularly.
If your cat is scared consider a humane trap. SCAT Street Cat Rescue offers humane cat traps for a 7-10 day rental period. The total fee is $100; $20 is not refundable for wear and tear on the equipment; $80 is refundable if trap returned by the due back date, cash preferred but e-transfer is also accepted for the total fee
Perhaps most importantly, visit your local shelter as often as possible. Don’t rely on the kennel attendant’s description of an animal; they deal with a large number of animals and don’t always match lost reports with found animals. Check the shelters for yourself and check often.
File lost reports:
Saskatoon Animal Control Agency: call 306 385-7387 or file a report online
SCAT Street Cat Rescue 306-955-7228
Put a lost report on the following Facebook pages:
Put a lost report on kijiji.ca
Additional suggestions.
Preventative measures you can do today that will help should your cat ever be lost:
Keep a collar and tag with your phone number on your cat.
Microchip your cat so that if it is picked up by Animal Control you will be contacted.
Purchase a City license and put it on the cat’s collar; it is one more identifying feature, and you will receive a discount on shelter fees should your cat be picked up.
Be aware that City Sanitation is responsible for picking up deceased animals; you may want to contact them to check if your cat has been hit by a vehicle.