Good news - RSPCA rescue dog cares for kittens saved from drowning
Last updated 12/13/2011 10:22:10 AM
Good news - RSPCA rescue dog cares for kittens saved from drowning
An RSPCA rescue dog who was hand reared as a puppy is repaying the favour by caring for a litter of kittens saved from being drowned in a drain.
Four shivering week-old kittens were brought into our Hull and East Riding Animal Centre soaking wet and wrapped in a towel by an animal lover who had stopped three youths from dropping them into a drainage ditch.
Staff at the centre leapt into action to save the tiny black kittens giving them intensive round-the-clock care with bottle feeds every three hours.
When animal care assistant, Carina McLean, took the kittens home with her at night her pet dog Missey decided to lend a paw too.Four-year-old Missey, a crossbreed, was bottle-fed by RSPCA staff when her mother rejected her as a puppy. She was taken in by Carina when she was just six weeks old.
Carina said:"Missey has taken a real shine to them. She cleans them, giving them a good lick all over, a nice wash and brush up. She is like a surrogate mum to them. She doesn't mind that they are kittens, she was hand reared herself so she's repaying the favour."
The kittens, two males and two females, were rushed into the animal centre by a man who had spotted three youths about to drop them into a drainage ditch.
Receptionist Amanda Nightingale said: "He walked through the door clutching a bundle. Inside the towel was four kittens.They were wet and quite dirty. They were so small they didn't have their eyes open."
When they were first brought in the kittens weighed just 150g. But thanks to the round-the-clock care from centre staff and Missey the dog, they have doubled their weight over the past five weeks.
Now six weeks old, the gorgeous black kittens have been named after X Factor judges Louis, Gary, Kelly and Tulisa! They will be ready for rehoming soon once they have put on a bit more weight and been vaccinated and neutered.
To support the RSPCA and find out more, go to http://www.rspca.org.uk