00:00When we go to pick up these kitties to take in to rescue, they give us a cardboard box.
00:05I don't know what I'm getting. I was pretty surprised because he had a big set of lungs
00:10on him. I could tell he was screaming, get me out of this box. I didn't have a ton of
00:18information
00:18other than he was very tiny and he needed realm of clock care. That's why I ended up naming him
00:25whaling because he was whaling. So kittens that aren't able to eat on their own need 24-hour care.
00:33When I have kittens that need to be fed around the clock, they have to travel with me. The really
00:39important thing about fostering is not only are you caring for them, but you're also able to find
00:46out a lot about their individual personality so that you can help match them into a home that fits
00:51well with them. Yeah, he's wailing, wailing. He stayed loud the entire time. He had big lungs.
01:03It's really important when you take in kittens that you keep them separate from your resident pets for
01:10at least two weeks. So he had to be in his own enclosure and he did not like it. He
01:16didn't like
01:17being alone. He didn't like me not being there. When he was healthy, he started having free reign of the
01:25house.
01:38But I always knew where he was, especially in the bathroom, because I have a toilet paper holder and I
01:46would
01:46find it shredded with little pieces of toilet paper everywhere. I mean, this kid was a wild, wild kid.
01:52So I knew that I had to find him a home that would be okay with his outgoing personality. And
01:59he ended up
02:00going to a home with a cat and two dogs. So it was great. So this was a couple that
02:06had adopted for me
02:07in the past. I couldn't have picked a better home for him.
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