Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Woman in Shediac River, N.B., opens kitten neonatal unit in her home

A New Brunswick woman has opened a kitten neonatal unit, fully equipped with kitten incubators. Shelley Steeves has more – Jul 22, 2019

A New Brunswick woman who spent decades caring for foster children has yet again opened up her home and her heart to care for newborns. Only this time, she’s looking after ones with four legs.

Story continues below advertisement

Nancy Vanderhorst of Shediac River, N.B., started Whispurring Whiskers Kitten Rescue about a year ago and was once the head of Cat Rescue Maritimes.

“These are the babies that if you don’t have the equipment and you don’t have the knowledge of how to do it they will die,” said Vanderhorst.

READ MORE: Box-load of abandoned kittens found on Maple Ridge median

Tucked away in a back room in her home along Shediac River, Vanderhorst has opened a kitten neonatal unit fully equipped with kitten incubators.

She takes in tiny orphans clinging to life and works wonders nursing them back to health.

The kittens, mostly weighing in at only a few ounces require 24-hour care, each has to be hand-fed using the tiniest of nipples according to Vanderhorst.

READ MORE: ‘Cats’ movie trailer: Internet recoils at teaser for live-action musical

“Their little tummies can only hold so much, so you are feeding every hour on the hour” and just like an infant after their bellies are full she says she burps each of the kittens to release any air they may have swallowed during nursing.

Story continues below advertisement

“They are so much like an infant, it’s crazy,” she said.

A self-proclaimed cat lady, Vanderhorst said that she does this for the love of animals, and often pays for medications out of her own pocket.

READ MORE: Calgary animal shelter drops adoption fee amid cat crisis

She at times spends 24 hours at her neonatal unit.

“Sometimes I forget to eat. I feed everybody else, but then I forget to eat.”

Vanderhorst said the kittens stay with her until they are the right size to get spayed and neutered and once they are, they go for adoption.

But when the kittens come to her as small as a mouse, the fur babies are totally dependent on their human mom.  She even has to rub their bellies to coax them to pee.

Story continues below advertisement

“Just like a baby they don’t like having their bums done,” she laughed.

With her foster kids all grown and moved away, Vanderhorst said that her need to nurture is still strong.

While she knows she can’t save all the kittens, she said “if you can save one it was all worth the efforts”

 

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article