Does anyone on here have a FelV+ cat?
My two, George and Suzi, are both FeLV+ but *touch wood* still as fit as fleas
We've always fostered the oldies for a local charity (aka running a retirement home for the pensioners
) but after we lost our last oldie, Misty, in August 2012 we lasted three weeks without a cat
Linda who runs the charity we foster for mentioned George and even though we knew he had FeLV it didn't stop us saying yes straight away. Suzi followed six/seven weeks later. Even if we are only fortunate to have him in our lives for, say, a year or two it WILL be a spoilt rotten life full of cuddles and love and if the time comes that the virus begins to affect his quality of life too much then I'll call the vet out and hug my beautiful brave boy till he's gone to The Bridge.....as I did with all my oldies.
It may sound strange but we treasure every moment we get with our oldies and our two current FeLV's and get SO much satisfaction for loving these cats and showing them, perhaps in their few final weeks, that not all humans are horrible
I've actually been tempted, once I get paid, to see if my own vet would do a blood test on them both and send it off to Glasgow to be checked properly. They were both diagnosed by other vets with two separate snap tests each but, perhaps I'm just hoping they are wrong, I'd still like to get Glasgow to check them to make sure
Oh, and Linda who runs PARRT has a few resident cats of her own and, like myself, has no qualms about having FIV cats living with others. One of her boys, Benny, who passed away of old age last September, was with Linda for over 5 years after being handed in to the charity. I adored him but Linda wouldn't rehome him as he had a habit of spraying on the curtains if you turned your back on him
She felt that nobody would 'put up' with that behaviour so he stayed as one of her residents