Four Adorable Kittens (3 Months Old) Available for Adoption

F4iChic

Kiss My Arse
Who could resist these little babies?????

We have here little Prince George (the tiniest of the family, orange tabby), Prince Harry (another small orange tabby), Prince William (the larger of the orange tabbies) and Princess Charlotte the beautiful all black girl

They are fixed and up to date on shots (still need to get their ongoing shots that kittens need), have had their rabies vax too :) They have not yet been tested for FELV/FIV nor do they have their microchip.

They will be available for adoption through Community Concern for Cats and the adoption fee is $125 per kitten, with $100 for the second one if you adopt two. With this adoption fee CC4C will get them microchipped, tested and continue with their first year shots (another two rounds if I am not mistaken)

However, these are our personal fosters, so if you would like to adopt them before they officially enter the CC4C program they will come to you with all adoption fees waived. You however would have to pay for the continuing shots and a microchip

They will only be adopted in pairs. Little George needs to go home with his sister Charlotte, and William and Harry are also a pair.

George is the most shy of the bunch, Charlotte is quite outgoing, Harry is a little tyke and William is the most ballsy of the lot.

If you want to adopt them through CC4C they will be attending adoption events on Sundays at Pleasant Hill Pet Food Express on Contra Costa Boulevard 1-4pm. If you would like to meet them in a home setting, let me know and you can come visit here at the house.

If you aren't looking to adopt but know someone who is, please let them know about these babies. They were saved from a high kill shelter, we don't breed cats for profit

Thanks for looking

W
 

Attachments

  • IMG_3894.jpg
    IMG_3894.jpg
    45.4 KB · Views: 13
  • IMG_3895.jpg
    IMG_3895.jpg
    55.1 KB · Views: 14
  • IMG_3896.jpg
    IMG_3896.jpg
    36.7 KB · Views: 14
  • IMG_3897.jpg
    IMG_3897.jpg
    57 KB · Views: 11
  • IMG_3899.jpg
    IMG_3899.jpg
    50.7 KB · Views: 14
  • IMG_3898.jpg
    IMG_3898.jpg
    75.4 KB · Views: 14

F4iChic

Kiss My Arse
:bump

How can you resist these cuties? They are now in Community Concern for Cats program and are looking for their new homes. They went to the adoption event on Sunday, and although they were nervous they did great. They need to be adopted in pairs, and the good news is the adoption fee is only $125 for two :) The adoption fee for the second kitten is being sponsored by me. Please spread the word. They are adorable, friendly, inquisitive and all around wonderful kittens
 

MrIncredible

Is fintastic
I kept misreading this as three adorable kittens, and then saw you were only adopting them out in pairs.

I was like...that poor solo kitten.
 
I don't get the requirement for them to remain as pairs

:dunno

I've had cats and dogs my whole life and it wasn't until recently that this started coming about as a requirement. I think it narrows your available market too significant.
 

F4iChic

Kiss My Arse
I don't get the requirement for them to remain as pairs

:dunno

I've had cats and dogs my whole life and it wasn't until recently that this started coming about as a requirement. I think it narrows your available market too significant.

I don't normally require them to be adopted in pairs. However in this case I know my fosters well enough to know what will make for a successful adoption. And in general, kittens should never be adopted as a solo cat. They get bored, depressed and lonely if they don't have a friend to play with, even if that is a resident cat who is friendly and they go home without a sibling.

Trust me, I put hour upon hour upon hour fostering cats, rehabilitating them, teaching them trust that I know what is going to work for them. And what isn't. I don't make these decisions lightly, I know it cuts down their prospects. If a family were to convince me that they have a really friendly cat at home who needs a friend, I'd be all over it. Otherwise they will be adopted as a pair. I'm making it no more expensive to adopt two than one

Oh, and here, read this

http://www.companionanimalpsychology.com/2012/06/one-kitten-or-two.html
 

Chris_BR

Well-known member
I adopted a pair (they weren't bonded at the time) about 1.5 years ago, and I can't recommend it enough. Our female orange tabby would probably still be living under the couch if it weren't for the other (more playful, not skittish) russian blue being around to show her the finer things in cat-life.
 
Top