Sanctuary seeking homes for unlucky black cats

A woman with long blonde hair wearing a red jacked with the Woodside logo. She is holding a black kitten and both are looking directly into the camera.
Image caption,

Debbie Haynes said Woodside had been inundated with kittens

  • Published

An animal rescue charity says it has been inundated with kittens this year and has several black cats which need homes.

Woodside Animal Welfare Trust said warm weather, combined with the number of people keeping unneutered pets since the Covid-19 lockdowns, had led to a surge in the number of orphaned cats.

Debbie Haynes, senior manager at the charity, said this year had been the worst ever for the number of kittens needing care. She said black cats, often rejected through superstition, were particularly difficult to rehome.

"Normally kitten season is April to September but it's October and we have young, baby kittens here, this should have stopped by now," she said.

Image caption,

October is very late in the year for kittens this young to arrive at the animal centre.

All the orphaned kittens which arrive at the centre have to be bottle fed which the staff say requires a special commitment.

Kayleigh Heeson, animal care assistant, said: "The hand-rearing means getting up every two hours to feed the kitten and that is day and night".

Although the rush is now over, the charity says it still has lots of kittens, mainly black, and black and white ones, needing homes.

Ms Haynes said: "It's been the same over all the years I have been here, I don't know if it's superstition or what".

"You see the colourful and tabby ones in a litter go, and the black ones get left behind."

The Blue Cross animal charity said the superstition started due to "hysteria surrounding witches, external", but in some parts of the world "they are said to bring good fortune".

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