Buster
Domestic Short Hair | Elberton, GA
AdultMaleMediumTabby
About
Characteristics
affectionate ongoingMedical
Coat Length
ShortVaccination
CurrentActivity Level
Moderately ActiveEnergy Level
ModerateHouse Trained
YesGood in Home With
Cats
Meet Buster
Buster is a big teddy bear! He gives hugs and smoochy ear nuzzles! Very loving and affectionate, he has been on the streets a while so takes a moment to trust a new person, but once he trusts you he is all over you. The vet loved him and said he stayed calm even when they shaved around his wounds to clean them. He must have an indoor-only home so that he doesn't try to return to the busy parking deck he was living in (he actually enjoyed it because he flirted with people and begged for food and attention, so he would try to go back, but he was dangerously dodging cars). He seemed to be friends with some cats and fought with others, so if he goes to a home with other cats they should not be aggressive or territorial. He is current on vaccines, flea and worm prevention, had a negative combo test, and is neutered. He's a young adult about 3-4 years old. He does have a potentially chronic granuloma condition which means he always has small wounds that won't heal well. An injection of Convenia every several months has resulted in improvement but it is still present. Can someone give this love bug a forever home? No set adoption fee but a donation helps us help more cats like Buster. Adopter must have a cat carrier for safe transport. We will consider a permanent foster home situation in which Cat Zip/Campus Cats will continue to cover Buster's vet care if you will give him a home!
Adoption Process
We ask that potential adopters fill out a questionnaire asking about their situation, what they are looking for in a cat, existing pets, former pets etc. If they sound like a good match then we arrange a meeting at the foster home. We require adopters to bring a cat carrier in case they decide to take the cat/kitten that day. In GA we can do a foster to adopt agreement for kittens not yet spayed so they sign that agreement and we continue to pay for the kitten's vet care up through the spay/neuter at one of our vets, but if the cat/kitten is already fixed they sign a regular adoption agreement. We do not have a set adoption fee and ask for a donation of the adopter's choice. We start kitten vaccines at 6 weeks, and repeat at 9 weeks, then rabies/neuter/final FVRCP/microchip at 12 weeks, but adopters can adopt at 8 weeks.
Contact
Cat Zip Alliance/Campus Cats
(706) 207-1013
[email protected]
http://www.catzip.org