THE DAILY CAT:
THE BLISSFUL CAT
HELP HOMELESS SHELTER CATS WITH YOUR
CRAFT SKILLS
From the Editors of The Daily Cat |
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It was 1995 when Rae French, founder of
the Snuggles Project, stepped foot in an
animal shelter for the first time. A
blackboard with statistics hung on the
wall. The data showed some dismal odds:
Only 24 percent of cats that enter an
animal shelter are adopted, and 71
percent are euthanized.
French was there to hand over a local
stray she sometimes fed that was about
to give birth. It was a Siamese cat, so
French figured the feline and its
kittens would be adoptable.
After seeing the statistics, “I turned
to my husband and said, ‘I can't. Let's
just take her home,’” says French. But
saving just a few of the millions of
cats that enter shelters each year
didn’t seem like enough. “That knowledge
was just so overwhelming, and I had to
do something about it,” she says.
The Snuggles Project
Seeing the kittens born reminded French
of the time her first cat, Fuzzy, had
babies. Fuzzy died shortly after
childbirth, and French desperately
wanted to save the babies.
“When Fuzzy died and left those kittens,
I put them in a little box and wrapped
them with scraps of things I was
knitting to keep them warm,” says
French.
Even though French couldn’t save the
kittens, she noticed that the blankets
seemed to comfort them. At the time, she
was running an online crocheting group
with 2,000 members worldwide, so she
logged on and told her story. She asked
if anyone would like to make and donate
a security blanket (what she called a
“snuggle”) for shelter animals. To her
surprise, boxes started arriving from
across the globe, and the Snuggles
Project was born.
The project helps people create and
donate snuggles to local animal shelters
in their area. To date, more than
500,000 snuggles have been donated to
animal shelters worldwide. The blankets
offer cats something soft and warm to
curl up on rather than bare steel,
concrete or plastic. Beyond that, French
believes snuggles provide much needed
psychological comfort that can literally
save cats’ lives.
“Often, when scared cats get a snuggle,
they calm down, stabilize and the
shelter people see that they can be
adoptable,” she says.
How to Help Save Shelter Cats
1. Make a snuggle. You can crochet, knit
or sew the blanket, with as simple or
ornate a pattern as you prefer. Pattern
ideas are available on
snugglesproject.org. Once it’s done,
search the project’s worldwide animal
shelter directory to find a
participating animal shelter near you.
Then, fill out an online donation form
(to update the project’s records and get
a tax-deductible receipt sent to you).
Last, bring the snuggle to the animal
shelter.
2. Donate a store-bought blanket in the
name of the Snuggles Project. You can
donate your time and energy by promoting
the project through grassroots or
word-of-mouth marketing, or by
encouraging non-participating animal
shelters to sign on. If a local animal
shelter won’t sign on because they can’t
afford to regularly clean snuggles, you
could offer to clean them yourself.
You might get involved with Hugs for
Homeless Animals, the nonprofit that
French started to run both the Snuggles
Project and other initiatives that
support shelters and find homes for
animals. Barring all that, you could
donate money.
“With the economic situation, it's
getting worse,” says French. “Shelters
don’t have the budgets, they cut back
and crowding is a big problem because
people lose their houses and abandon
their animals. So money is always a big
help.”
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