If Cats Ruled The World Feline Rescue Inc

If Cats Ruled The World Feline Rescue Inc Glory to God for the ability to do this work!

VOLUNTEER & Barn Cat Program: [email protected]
ADOPTIONS: [email protected]
COMFORT PAWS: [email protected]
SO MUCH gratitude for the community support!!!
🐾💕🐾
Beaver County 501C3

06/23/2026

Foster brother decided he needed some help grooming today 🥰 he’s such a good helper❤️ R***r is a huge lovebug and his long hair is so soft and gorgeous.

R***r is still available! Message the page to secure his future!

06/23/2026

This little guy is chill!
Getting his neuter today. Available for adoption. He'll be ready to come home in a few days. You've watched his videos for weeks!
Let's get this little one a fur-ever home.
👉Message the page.
👉Share PURR-LEASE.

Lifeline financial Support:
💸💲 https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-if-cats-ruled-the-world-rescue-mission

PayPal:
💚 [email protected]

Venmo:
💲

Checks:
🏦 Counter Donation at RS Bellco in New Brighton

Alley Cat Spay Neuter Clinic:
☎️ Calling on surgery days
🐾💕🐾




📣Set 5 here is pending now 🎉 and truly I believe it's a match! Stay tuned for Set 6! 📣❗🐭 Barn Cat Program We are in Beav...
06/23/2026

📣Set 5 here is pending now 🎉 and truly I believe it's a match! Stay tuned for Set 6!
📣❗

🐭 Barn Cat Program

We are in Beaver County Pennsylvania 😸

Presenting set number 5. These 2 year old buddies are looking for a job!! Their current Beaver Falls outdoor colony location does NOT have a bright future.

These two are not currently pet quality, but are absolutely perfect for your property!

Change their futures! We work alongside you! We help you plan for their success!

👉Message the page!
Stay tuned for updates on the Barn girls from sets 2-4. 3 was completed yesterday and protocol is underway. 4 will be TNR'd this week from the Bridge st location, and then to Darlington after their recovery.

❗Here's our available and vetted Set Number Five... waiting for YOU! (This set is now pending. Stay tuned for set 6)🎉
🐾💕🐾

We are Beaver County's boots-on-the-ground TNR group!





❓WHAT SHOULD DISQUALIFY SOMEONE FROM ADOPTING A CAT?This is a hard conversation—but it needs to happen.Responsible adopt...
06/23/2026

❓WHAT SHOULD DISQUALIFY SOMEONE FROM ADOPTING A CAT?

This is a hard conversation—but it needs to happen.

Responsible adoption screening is not about punishing people because they rent, are older, co-habitating with a partner, or do not own a home.

It is about one question:

👉Can this person provide a safe, stable, lifelong plan for this cat—even when life changes?

In 2025, an estimated 3 million cats entered shelters and rescues in the United States. More than 277,000 cats were euthanized.

These numbers are why rescues ask hard questions.

A landlord changes the rules.
A lease ends.
A couple breaks up.
A new partner does not like the cat.
A person becomes ill, enters care, or passes away.
A family moves and decides the cat is “too difficult” to take along.

And too often, the cat is the one who loses.

Renters should not automatically be disqualified. But written landlord approval, a realistic pet-deposit plan, and a plan for a future move should be non-negotiable. Housing problems are a major reason pets are rehomed—and, for renters in one national study, the number-one reason.

Seniors should not automatically be disqualified either. Age is not the problem. But an adopter with no end-of-life plan, no named caregiver, and no clear instruction for what happens to the cat if they become unable to provide care? That deserves a serious pause. A cat should never be left confused, displaced, or surrendered because no one thought ahead.

Boyfriend/girlfriend or cohabitating situations are not automatic disqualifiers. But when a couple cannot clearly answer who will keep the cat, pay for the cat, and make decisions for the cat if the relationship ends—that is a red flag.

Some other less-talked-about concerns for adoption gatekeepers:

• The household is not on the same page about getting a cat.
• The primary caregiver is not involved in the application or refuses to participate.
• The cat is being adopted as a surprise gift or “for the kids.”
• The applicant expects a cat to be an outdoor pet, wants to declaw, or will not commit to basic veterinary care.
• There is a history of repeatedly rehoming animals with no thoughtful explanation or accountability.
• They refuse a return-to-rescue clause and want the freedom to give the cat away, sell it, or “figure it out later.”
• They cannot or will not discuss emergency veterinary care, pet insurance, savings, or a financial plan.
• They need a cat immediately, without caring about temperament, compatibility, or the cat’s individual needs.
• There is no plan for allergies, a move, job loss, illness, a relationship breakup, or a major life change.

The goal is not to make adoption impossible.

The goal is to make “forever” actually mean forever.

Rescuers, fosters, shelter staff, and adoption gatekeepers—chime in!

What are your non-negotiables?
What quieter red flags have experience taught you to take seriously?
Where do you draw the line between offering support and protecting the cat from becoming homeless again?

Fact note: I intentionally used “rehoming” rather than calling all cases “abandonment.” A current nationwide estimate says 3 million cats entered shelters/rescues in 2025 and 277,000 cats were euthanized; owner surrenders accounted for 30% of dog-and-cat community intake. 💔💔💔
📊

The bottom line is that
👉I alone👈
am the current gatekeeper for the adoptables at our tiny rescue, and I will do my best to protect these little lives that we've poured our souls into.

What are your disqualifier points, if you too are doing adoption interviews?

Interested in adopting? Message the page!
🐾💕🐾





📣🆘📣❗We NEED this invaluable equipment ❗I will be using the TNR funds at the end of the month when the GoFundMe is releas...
06/23/2026

📣🆘📣❗
We NEED this invaluable equipment ❗
I will be using the TNR funds at the end of the month when the GoFundMe is released for deposit, if these haven't been donated by then.

The girls just cannot spend up to 8 hours each visit, and multiple days, at these trapping sites like we used to in the past. They just can't! Too many sites and they're each coming after working all day. They MUST get in, set up, get them, and get on to the evening's next site.

Please if you can donate this very NEEDED equipment, please send help.

Message the page. I'm going to cry if we have to use some of the TNR money that we're waiting on from the June GFM donations.
🙏🙏🙏




🚨Now is your time to jump right in and help us!!! I need 2 of these yesterday!🆘
Can anyone help?
PLEASE...our volunteers need to get in and get out... They just cannot spend days and days at the same location.
These will be completely game changing for the Trapping Team!

Message the page please and help us acquire this equipment! Then sit back and watch the page for the videos of the Trapping Team using the equipment that you sent!

Please send us these....we need them today actually, but we know that isn't possible.

I'm praying that these head our way today.

Message the page for the shipping address.

Link 👇

https://livetrap.com/rc100-remote-control-trap-trigger.html

🙏🙏🙏❗

👇👇👇
06/23/2026

👇👇👇

🚨 CAT NOT GOING IN THE TRAP? 🚨
YOU MAY NEED TRAP TRAINING — START NOW!

🐾 Zip tie the trap door OPEN so it cannot close.
🐾 Put food at the entrance — then move it back a little each day.
🐾 Get the cat comfortable walking all the way inside.
🐾 Once they’re going in easily and the night before your scheduled TNVR appointment, REMOVE the ties and set the trap.

👉🏼 CRITICAL: The food near and then inside the trap must be the ONLY food source.

No free feeding. No shortcuts.

With a little patience and consistency, even the most hesitant kitties can learn to trust the trap!

Be patient. Be consistent. It works.

📸 Photo courtesy of Bay Area Cats

Time for a reshare....
06/23/2026

Time for a reshare....

These techniques were founded over 25+ years of not just trapping, but strict observation as to what works best and in a timely manner. It’s understandable to want to skip steps, but certainly not recommended for larger colonies, as doing so can cause the ease of trapping at the end to not go so smoothly. 🤔 A better success rate will come by following these simple guidelines.

🐾

For better results, seek out other possible caretakers for their cooperation.

Confirm clinic availability.

Feed the cats every evening at the same time. Only feed kibble, never feed wet food, sardines, tuna or similar special treats, as this will be used later for bait in the trapping process.

The day before trapping, only give one-third of the regular amount of food, to ensure their eagerness the day of trapping.
ITEMS NEEDED FOR TRAPPING

Trip plate operated humane trap
We only recommend https://www.trucatchtraps.com/t-n-r/30-ltd-light-duty

Newspaper/cardboard or like kind to line the trap floor

Blanket or sheet large enough to cover the ENTIRE trap

Bait: kibble, wet food, seafood, fowl, water

Can opener

Spoon or fork

Binoculars

Flashlight

Exam gloves (preventing contamination)

Antibacterial hand sanitizer

Plastic table cloth/shower curtain (preparation for skunk)

Small garbage bag

Regular food and water for feeding the remainder of the colony after the trapping session

Record keeping materials/It is recommended that you keep track of TNR'd cats. Documenting their S*x, Age, Coloring and fur length (Domestic Short Hair - DSH, Domestic Medium Hair - DMH, Domestic Long Hair - DLH) and date TNR'd.
TRAPPING

Plan your trapping session 15 to 20 minutes prior to the regular feeding time, this will casually trap the cats as they show up for their meal. This also prevents other cats from observing and learning.

Have all traps prepped (except bait) prior to reaching colony location.

There are numerous ways to prep a trap, here are a couple:

Place newspaper/cardboard on the base of the trap, covering up to the trip-plate, then also again from beneath the trip-plate to the end, leaving the trip-plate exposed. This style works very well, but if the cat relieves it self, it can get messy. Placing a hand towel inside may alleviate a mess.
TRAPPING COLONIES

There is a progression for baiting. This progression has proven most successful and should be followed as described below. Only move on to the next option when trapping has slowed down/stopped with the current style of baiting. This progression will take place over multiple trapping events.

1. Starting with kibble. Take a few pieces and create a small trail to the back of the trap. Place trap, set and cover.

2. Next, kibble with wet food. Same directions as above, except at the end of the trap, place a tablespoon of wet food. Heated wet food works best, as its aroma will overwhelm the cats senses. Place trap, set and cover.

3. Then comes a small (half the size of a dime) trail (4-5 placements) of wet food to the back of the trap, as not to get the cat too full before it reaches the end. When covering the entire base, at the end of the set-plate place a teaspoon of food on each side of the trap. This will put the cat in a position of having to go from one side of the trap to the other. The greater majority of the time, it's that movement that will set off the trap. Just in case, put one more nibble at the end of the trap. Place trap, set and cover.

4. Rarely needed, but works well is placing a small amount of food under the trip plate. This causes the cat to paw at the plate, closing the trap. Place trap, set and cover.

5. If the above fails, you can try tuna, salmon, sardines, crab, etc. Don't be discouraged if this doesn't work, many cats don't care for seafood. You can also try chicken, turkey, etc. Warming the bait works well to fill the area with the aroma of the bait.

If your presence has disturbed their timing, ask the caretaker (if available, otherwise you) to pour some kibble in their regular feeding dish for sound effects. Take the bowl with you.

When trapping in pairs/teams, communication should be at a minimum. Although the cats may be familiar with sounds and voices, they're not familiar with your voice, this will raise a flag for them to become cautious.
________

When cat is trapped, log description,
if you feel the need to take a picture, please remember the cat is extremely frightened. Remove the cover as little as possible, have camera ready (preferably without flash) and cover quickly. Rarely does it happen, but the whole experience can cause a heart attack. If you can wait for post-op, this would be better.

NEVER, NEVER, NEVER, NEVER open trap for any reason!

Unless, of course, it has an eartip.
SOME TRICKS TO TRY

~ Start your trail of food outside the trap.

~ Hang a KFC leg (original recipe) close to the top, at the back of the trap. The cats will try to use their paws to take off chunks, setting off the trap. Same idea works if you hang a cat ball covered in wet food. This also sets their sights high, rather than focusing on the trip-plate.

~ When using the recommended style of prepping a trap, aside from the trail, place the food underneath the trip plate, on top of the base. The cats will try to get to the food through the trip plate, setting off the trap.

~ Those of us in the desert have also been successful using water as bait.

~ Take the base and cover and rub them in the dirt. This will cover them with a familiar scent, rather than soap or stinky humans. 😳

~ Some cats are uncomfortable in confined spaces, try a larger trap.

~ Set the trap and wait. Do not leave visual range, but watch at a distance that is not disturbing to the cats. Never leave a trap unattended.

~ Covering all but the door opening to the trap often gets the best results, (make sure that the cover will not obstruct the door closing, also from any debris that may also obstruct its closing). Cats not entering maybe claustrophobic, uncover the backend, as they will see it as an escape. Next step in covering would be to uncover one side of the trap, usually the side next to the building, car, or shrubbery. Lastly, completely uncovered (not recommended until you are down to your last cat), but be close with a cover as to calm and quiet the cat, preventing the cat from hurting itself trying to escape.

~ Traps should be on level ground to assure security when the cat steps inside.

~ Careful not to tip the trap or to allow it to be overturned, as the door may open. Always best to secure doors before moving.
PLACEMENT OF TRAPS

Placement of traps is vitally important. Of course, traps can be set at the feeding station, which will catch some cats. But also watch for trails. This tells you where they are coming from/going to (which can lead you to another caretaker) and another option as where to set traps. These trails will often go from neighbor to neighbor, under fences, around vehicles, under homes, into bushes, etc.

Feral cats don't make it a habit of being out in the open. It's best to take a few minutes to search for trails.

Placing a trap by bushes, allowing some small, soft branches to be inside of the trap, seems to give it a secure feeling.

Be sure trap is level and check the closure of the trap door. Checking for any plants, rocks etc. that might prevent it from closing all the way.

The least amount of commotion will reap the rewards.

Feed, water before leaving trapping area.
THE LAST CAT . . .

This is a very tricky situation. Trying to catch the last cat without re-trapping the others is almost impossible. What we have found to work is to secure the trap open (both ends if an option) and feed ONLY in the trap for a few days. The night of trapping, instead of setting the trap, tie a sturdy twine to the base of a stick that is the appropriate height to prop the trap door open. The twine must be long enough for you to operate the trap from a distance, preferably from inside of a car, where your presence is least likely to be noticed. This is where binoculars come in handy.

Be sure the twine is taut. Wait patiently for the cat to be completely inside. That split second while the door closes is very important. If their backside is even partially able to stop the door from closing all the way, the cat will get out.
WHAT TO DO IF THE CAT WON'T GO IN THE TRAP

Vary the way that you are covering the trap. Some cats prefer to be covered, but some will only go in if they can see out the far end. Other cats prefer to be uncovered, but you'll want to be nearby to cover the trap quickly to calm the trapped cat. The uncovered trap should be a last resort to catch the last cat of the colony.

Try using different bait. If possible, heating the bait will increase the aroma and attract the cat.

Trapping within the same colony, try to use the same base and cover as used on previous cats, provided they're not soiled. When using fresh bases and covers, prior to putting them in the trap, rub them through the dirt in the area to make it smell familiar.

Trapping in a new colony, rinsing down the trap with extremely HOT water 30:1 bleach dilution to disinfect, rinse thoroughly. Since you can't over rinse, please be thorough as to avoid an overwhelming odor to the cats senses and possibly cause nausea. When using fresh bases and covers, prior to putting them in the trap, rub them through the dirt in the area to make it smell familiar.

The size of a trap is very important. The larger the cat, the larger the trap. Also cats can be claustrophobic and will be more apt to go in a larger trap and some just don't care, they want the food.

IF, AND ONLY IF, you are trapping in a secure area (your own backyard, inside a building, etc.), you can rig the trap to have both ends open for a few days with the food in the center of the trap. On the day of trapping, simply set as required for trapping.

There may be times when you are unable to see the trap, by placing a small bell on the trap door, not obstructing the closure, you will be able to hear the door shut.

If you're going after one specific cat and others are entering, prop the door open with a stick and a string attached to pull when the right cat is in. Some use a water bottle instead of a stick, though depending on the size of the cat, can trigger the trap. Just make sure the cat is far enough in for the door to close.

If you're fortunate to have two traps. Open and secure the non-setting doors and secure the traps together. Open both setting doors and secure for daily feeding inside. On day of trapping, set doors as usual, leaving non-setting doors open while non-setting doors are still open and both traps securely attached to each other.

If these tips fail, as a last resort you may want to try a drop trap.

Not recommend until you are down to your last 2-3 that refuse to enter a trap. But again, if the other non-trapped cats see the cat being trapped, they will avoid this trap as well. Don’t be in a hurry! The more cats that go under the trap and back out again, will gain the confidence of those needing trapping.

Why not use drop trap from the beginning? Much like regular traps, if cats are watching and see the trapping experience, they’ll avoid the traps, making it harder to catch the remaining few. Cats are EXTREMELY smart.
RELEASE

In good weather most males and females can be released the following day. As feral cats experience stress while in captivity, they should not be held longer than necessary.

In extreme cold weather or if there have been any surgical complications they may need to be kept for a few days before release. Please note, the longer cats are held in colder tempers, their body will respond by shedding their fur as they do naturally in Spring.

When you're ready to release at the same location as where trapped, face the carrier towards an area recognizable to the cat. Uncover the carrier and point carrier so door opens into a hole in a fence, shelter, bushes, etc. so cat will not "fly" around and possibly run into traffic.

Release the cat gently, giving him or her time to come out without shaking or agitation which causes extra stress and possibly a bad decision. Back up and quietly wait for them to exit. Watch for street traffic.
YOU SHOULD NEVER LEAVE TRAPS UNATTENDED

Unattended trapped cats can injure themselves trying to escape from the trap. Quickly cover the trap.

They may also be injured or traumatized by dogs, raccoons, coyotes or other animals who may be drawn to the smell of food.

There is not only the possibility of cruel humans injuring a trapped cat, someone may also release the cat, which will make it more difficult to re-trap the now trap-shy cat.

Traps may be stolen or vandalized.
SMART, FRIENDLY STRAY

Won't go in a trap. If you can pet it, hold it and love on it, don't take it for granted you can place it in a trap. Depending on the size of the cat, the opening of the trap, your confidence and experience in doing so matter greatly. You'll need to stay calm, pet and scruff for a week and see how the cat reacts to scruffing (have trap nearby). A greater percentage of the time, when the cat is scruffed with nothing holding it but your one hand, they tend to go limp, much like kittens being carried by their mother. If this is the case, great! If not, rethink. Once you're comfortable scruffing, have the trap ready for placing cat inside (On end works best). Place the cat in tail first, as to avoid it seeing what is going on. Do not let go of the cat until the door is as closed as possible to prevent escaping. Let go and QUICKLY slip hand out from trap. Cover trap. Practicing this maneuver is helpful.
TRAPPING A GROUP OF KITTENS

To get multiple kittens at once, or a mom with kittens, you can use a conventional trap like a pull trap. Preferably a larger sized trap to have room for multiple kittens.

Bait the trap as usual, the only difference is that you might want to use a little more food. This will keep the original kittens in longer and give the cautious kittens time to get a sense of safety before entering.

Tie a sturdy string/rope/twine to a stick that is the appropriate height to prop the trap door open. The twine must be long enough for you to operate the trap from a distance, preferably from inside of a car, where your presence is least likely to be noticed. Remember, the kittens (depending on age) eyesight is minimal, but they do detect movement.

Watch patiently until several kittens are inside and pull the twine to close the door. Patience is needed here, wait for the kittens to be fully in the trap. Cover trap quickly.

It may be worthwhile to do a test run to see that you have the stick positioned in such a way that trap will close properly.

What to watch out for . . .

IF a kitten is leaving the trap, LET IT GO. It now knows the trap is a safe place. Setting the trap off may only scare and more possibly injure the kitten. Most likely the kitten will get out anyways, at which point it will be very cautious around traps.

ALSO, if the trap is set in the sight of the remaining kittens, they WILL learn from this.
IF YOU TRAP A RACOON, SKUNK, ETC.

Because most other small animals have hand-like paws, be sure trap is covered completely, preferrably very thick. For the skunk use the plastic shower curtain/plastic tablecloth to hold in front of you as you approach. Slowly cover trap completely, over the material cover already in place. Locate a large enough hole in a fence to release it, allowing safety for yourself. Do not remove trap from hole until it has run off.

Many suggestions were repeated on purpose. 👍🏻

If you have safe tips, do tell.

Never underestimate the intelligence of a cat.

Goood Tuesday morning!Congratulations to our Comfort Paws Program Coordinator Christine Ludwiczak on her very first and ...
06/23/2026

Goood Tuesday morning!
Congratulations to our Comfort Paws Program Coordinator Christine Ludwiczak on her very first and UNtrained cat wrangling with Charlea E Powell 🎉🎉🎉❗

Those girls went out wrangling cats for a high risk situation yesterday! They put up with dropping everything and going. They sat in the rain. They didn't quit when I was melting down and pretty hard on them yesterday. They got it done!!! I'm extremely grateful for our volunteers!

This kitty was not the target... lucky kitty gets to avoid a life of being chained to survival baby making! TNR little buddy... you'll have a better future now.

Ali Atkison got the 3rd barn cats settled in. Set 4 is underway and will have 2 barns on their property! We're pulling 2 females from the bad Bridge Street location. 🎉

Tæÿłør Smïth was out trapping until very very late. She's going to be out after working all day, every evening this week. 😴🥱

We have a load going to Alley Cat Spay Neuter Clinic today!

👉Please don't forget about us Beaver County... we're working very hard to volunteer to do this.
🐾💕🐾

Lifeline financial Support:
💸💲 https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-if-cats-ruled-the-world-rescue-mission

PayPal:
💚 [email protected]

Venmo:
💲

Checks:
🏦 Counter Donation at RS Bellco in New Brighton

Alley Cat Spay Neuter Clinic:
☎️ Calling on surgery days




📣We are still looking for transportation volunteers.📣Message the page! Get involved!NOTE: this is a community service vo...
06/22/2026

📣We are still looking for transportation volunteers.📣

Message the page! Get involved!

NOTE: this is a community service volunteer position to help kitties.
🐾💕🐾

Address

Beaver Falls, PA

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