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Re: e article in e Weekend Sun, June 2, 2023 edition, titled ‘Correct categories for cats’ on page 17
As far as it goes, Wild Whiskers Tauranga does good work towards the problem of unowned cats, as they are top predators. (But) It’s a pity the hunting competition mentioned was cancelled; besides being money-spinners these are about reducing predators – and if well-advertised locals can keep their pets home during the few days of competition.
I get a number of cats around my house and orchard, the
and bell all pet cats!
feral ones are fat, sleek and extremely wary, usually too canny to get themselves trapped. e strays are thin and hungry; obviously ‘dumped’. A cardinal sin. I would like the word ‘colony
cat’ explained. If it is a group of strays being fed by some catlover, then that tends to worsen the situation because the whole colony would need to be sterile.
I see no point in neutering trapped cats and releasing them, I don’t believe the vacuum e ect works judging by the number of feral cats I see.
To mitigate this problem it should be compulsory to microchip all pet cats, and preferably bell them. Anyone caught dumping should be heavily ned. Euthanise all those which are handed in to groups such as the WWT if they don’t home them within 10 days.
Ann Mark, Te Puke.
Are we committed to climate change? What the...?
One wonders whether the Government, among others, is really committed to climate change problems.
I have written to the leader of every party informing them of a way to stop sheep and cattle from making methane in the rumen and spoken to the Tauranga MP about it. I also wrote to the head of Federated Farmers. Not a peep from one of them. is is not some crackpot idea it’s a scienti c fact. An investment of about $12,000 in a unit to hydrogenate the water of an entire farm would start a research programme on the system.