The end of life has come for feral cat Lucy who has been in our care since 2008. This feral cat was born in a limestone opening in a bluff in the woods by my home. In her lifetime she had two small litters before being hunted and attacked by a wild animal who wanted her kittens. Lucy fought off the wild animal that injured her and her one kitten.
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2008 Lucy lying outside the garden shed with one of her kittens |
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2009 2nd litter Lucy injured and brings kittens to my shed |
Injured Lucy
brought her two kittens to my garage where we trapped the nursing mother and
all her kittens for medical care. The
cats needed medical care for 21 days and when they were released from the medical clinic
Lucy had been spayed.
All of Lucy's kittens were trapped, socialized, and adopted. Lucy could not be socialized so she was
released to the colony that my husband and I oversaw.
Lucy the
feral cat lived a very long life as the average age for a feral cat without
human intervention is about two years. Many feral cats that live in colonies that have
human caretakers have lived 7 to 10 years.
My husband
and I take care of the cats in our colony and we watch them daily to make sure
they are not sick or injured. We feed them and provide fresh water twice a
day, in the rain, in the snow, or in the heat.
We also provide well-insulated
cat houses and in the summer months, we have cooling mats for their houses. But despite providing care to the cats
many cats did not survive the feral cat lifestyle.
I think Lucy
the feral cat survived due to her camouflage coat, she could be lying on a rock
and you would not see her. She was very
cautious and an excellent tree climber.
Lucy as a young adult cat lived in the woods adjacent to my home. She took refuge in a thicket den which I
located after a blizzard. She was snowed in and could not come to the feeding
station so we took her food and water to her.
When Lucy
was age 10 a red-tailed hawk airlifted
Lucy and we were certain that her life had come to an end. We did not see Lucy for a week but we had
hope that she was still alive because we found a dead red-tailed hawk on the
side of the hiking trail close to our home.
Then last spring while working in the yard and garden I heard a deer snorting in the front of my yard. It was not a normal snort it was more of a warning. The doe deer had a fawn in hiding a few hundred yards from my side yard and I was worried that the fawn might be in danger. I picked up my string trimmer and walked to where the warning was coming from. On the edge of my property there is a rocky terrain with a steep drop off I saw Lucy the cat sleeping on top of a large rock that was about 6 feet off the ground and 30 feet away was a large adult coyote.
I quickly turned on my string trimmer and waved it above me to make look larger than life with a strange noise the coyote took off. The doe deer behind me took after the coyote and two other deer in the woods followed suit and chased the coyote out of our area. Lucy slept through the entire episode she was age 16 and her response to danger had weakened.
Here are a few photos of Lucy when she lived closer to our home
We respect Lucy the feral cat and prepared her for winter with a wonderful insulated house that was donated by a friend of mine. We set it up close to our side door and also set up a warming water bowl to keep her water from freezing.
Lucy left the woods and did come to live close to our home. She sunned herself on our patio chairs and made friends with a gray cat. The two of them slept together, hung out together and the gray cat groomed Lucy.
Other photos of Lucy
Then in the winter of 2025, the weather was bitterly cold the temperature dipped to below 0 and there was snow. Lucy and the gray cat spent 2 nights in the insulated cat shelter and on the 3rd bitter cold night Lucy the feral cat entered our house through our side door that was opened when my husband was bringing in groceries and she went and sat on the kitchen floor.
My husband
picked Lucy up she did not hiss, she did not snarl and he walked her to our
enclosed side porch. I set it up with a
litter box, food, and water. My husband
brought in her insulated outdoor house. We also added an oil-filled space
heater and a K&H self-warming cat mat.
Lucy lay down on the self-warming mat next to the heater.
The gray cat
that loves Lucy searched for her, he called out to her all night long and I
feared that his distress calls would cause this cat to be hunted by
coyote. So, I trapped him and brought
him into the room where I had Lucy.
The gray cat was distressed but then Lucy picked up her head and he went to her and sniffed the gray cat relaxed. United again, the gray cat groomed Lucy and then laid down next to her. The gray cat will stay with Lucy until it’s her time to pass. Lucy is approximately 4 pounds and is eating and drinking very little.
Lucy enters the caregiver's home for end-of-life care
Lucy passed away on January 28th. at age 17. She had stopped eating and we took her to the veterinarian where we were told that she had cancer. We euthanized her and buried her on the land where she was born.
Lucy is the oldest living Feral Cat in history. I have dedicated this blog to her as she was the first feral cat that we trapped and then cared for throughout her life. Our hearts are broken and we will miss the feral cat that we called Lucy.
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