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- May 31, 2017
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Not sure if this is the right spot to put this post, but there is a lot of fostering discussion on this board so I thought it would be the best place.
First, I've never fostered an animal. We have one cat and have only had her a few months. Fostering is something I would love to do in the future though (when we buy a house and don't rent anymore for one thing). Probably a year or two away for us though, possibly longer if my husband gets a dog (which he wants to when we have a yard for one) cause I'm sure that will take awhile to adjust to.
I was thinking about it and wondering, how do you guys do it? Do your resident cats handle having other cats in and out ok? Are certain personalities of resident cats better for a home that fosters? Do some cats not handle having fosters around well?
Also, my kitty Ivy is declawed (we adopted her declawed, we didn't do it!) If we foster a cat that isn't declawed does that cause issues?
Do you have some sort of foster room to keep them in at first?
I would so love to foster, especially senior cats that never seem to get the love they deserve. But I also don't want my Ivy to be stressed out. When she was at the rescue she didn't handle all the other cats very well, she's very shy. So does that mean I shouldn't foster, and just give all my love to her?
Thoughts? Sorry it got so long.
First, I've never fostered an animal. We have one cat and have only had her a few months. Fostering is something I would love to do in the future though (when we buy a house and don't rent anymore for one thing). Probably a year or two away for us though, possibly longer if my husband gets a dog (which he wants to when we have a yard for one) cause I'm sure that will take awhile to adjust to.
I was thinking about it and wondering, how do you guys do it? Do your resident cats handle having other cats in and out ok? Are certain personalities of resident cats better for a home that fosters? Do some cats not handle having fosters around well?
Also, my kitty Ivy is declawed (we adopted her declawed, we didn't do it!) If we foster a cat that isn't declawed does that cause issues?
Do you have some sort of foster room to keep them in at first?
I would so love to foster, especially senior cats that never seem to get the love they deserve. But I also don't want my Ivy to be stressed out. When she was at the rescue she didn't handle all the other cats very well, she's very shy. So does that mean I shouldn't foster, and just give all my love to her?
Thoughts? Sorry it got so long.