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Veterinary teams spent the day spaying and neutering a feral cat colony found on a rural property northeast of Edmonton in order to control the size of the population. About 58 adult cats will then be returned to their habitat after they have healed to live as they are accustomed to. But for the 36 kittens, they will be kept by the humane society in the hopes that they can be socialized and eventually adopted after they can be spayed and neutered.
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Try refreshing your browser, or Feral cat colony collected northeast of Edmonton as part of humane society s first trap-neuter-return clinic to address overpopulation Back to video
Edmonton Humane Society hosts first trap-neuter-return clinic to help address feral cat overpopulation
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Roundup of feral cats within Cypress County - Medicine Hat NewsMedicine Hat News
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CALGARY Two old and grumpy wild dogs will spend the rest of their lives together, with full bellies and a warm place to sleep, thanks to a Lethbridge rescue group. The dogs are nearly blind and mostly deaf, but somehow managed to survive together, living outside, for the past 14 years. Separated by a harrowing experience, the dogs have been reunited thanks to the efforts of police, firefighters, and volunteers with the Prairie Pit Bull Rescue Organization. “Dog resilience always surprises me,” said Prairie Pits founder Natalie Kent. It all began when she received a call from Blood Tribe Police about a dog that had somehow gotten into the basin of a dam structure on the St. Mary Reservoir, northeast of Cardston, Alta.