I posted details of a stray cat which turned up at a house of a friend, and I had literally dozens of messages from random people telling me that this was their cat and asking when they could come and collect it, so it's sadly not necessarily a tiny risk.
Did you post the cat's photo, Fluffy?
So many ads read thusly:
"found black and white moggie, sex unknown, microchip unknown, a bit thin, call if you think this is your cat" with no picture included to help out the many desperate owners who are grasping at straws.
I mean how's anyone supposed to live with themselves if they fail to follow up every possible lead that might just turn out to be their beloved long lost pet? No matter how far away it is?
Many folk found Purrs through having lost their own cat, and I know the awful sinking feeling when hopes are dashed because a "found" ad sounds so much like your pet, you travel for miles to see him but it isn't him, and the world just falls apart all over again.
The kind lady who posted this ad might, as you experienced, have had hundreds of calls by now from sad folk who've lost vaguely brown cats, whom they suspect may have been injured or become ill and blind. So very sad.
Perhaps I've got the wrong end of the stick, but wouldn't it help everyone concerned to have this little fella's picture on? After all, our formal rescues always post pictures of their lost and found, so why is their situation so different to those posting on NPR etc.?
What more could we as responsible individuals do to protect these found animals?
Maybe this is one for one of our Purrs Rescue pals to comment on, they must have had this debate within their circles?
Meanwhile I hope a loving home can be found for our little new friend. What a sad story.