- Adoption status
- Sponsored Dog
- Sex
- Female
August 6th, 2025, New Kajun Kitty arrival. Her story? Sadly, not uncommon.
This mama cat showed up at a woman’s house a while ago. She wasn’t “owned,” but the woman fed her. She stuck around. And then, like most un-spayed female cats will do… she started having litter after litter under the house. Her most recent litter of three kittens became sick and developed ringworm. The woman helped the kittens—they received medical care, were fixed, and she gave them a home.
But Asha? No one wanted Asha. She was trapped Wednesday morning, and the vet was called with the question: “What do I do with her?” So we stepped in.
The issue? Asha is scared. She might be feral. And our adoption and transport options are limited to cats deemed adoptable. The feral ones? They stay behind.
The woman won’t take her back, so even though she would be TNRed, that leaves her with nowhere to go.
We see this too often: A stray shows up. A kind human feeds it. Then another cat comes.
Then kittens. Then more.
The humans keep feeding them, because they care, but never they get the cats fixed. Soon they’re overwhelmed, insisting, “They’re not my cats!” But… they are. Because once you feed them consistently, they stay. They trust. They reproduce. And the cycle continues.
If that first cat—if Asha—had been spayed early on, we wouldn’t be here.
Her name means hope and aspiration. Asha reminds us that even in difficult circumstances, there’s always the possibility for a new beginning. A chance for change. A reason to believe.
🐾 Feeding is kind.
🐾 Spaying and neutering is kinder.
We don’t yet know what the future holds for Asha. But we do know this, we’ll give her a chance.
Even when no one else would
For now we are adding Asha to our Kajun Kitty sponsorship in hopes that while she unwinds and learns to trust us, that she can also feel the love and support from our amazing supporters.