A kitten plugged on a telephone pole was rescued and reunited with his worried owner.
The rescue took place in Indio, California on Tuesday. Ruth, a 9-month-old kitten, disappeared from her owner’s home on November 13. Her owner Heather Padilla then spotted her on a tall telephone pole near her home.
According to KNBC-TV, the animal service staff called the power company’s Imperial Irrigation District (IID) for help. An IID work truck lifts an employee to a pole in a bucket. Then the worker hugged the kitten in his arms and took Ruth back safely.
“Thanks to the mayor, IID, news station, animal control and all communities,” Padilla wrote in a letter. Facebook Post after rescue. “Currently, we have her checked at the animal hospital near Jefferson (street). I am checking her to make sure that everything is normal for her and get fluids when she needs it.”
Ruth is just the latest kitten to make headlines last month.
In May, two police officers and Cheektowaga police Department help Rescued a kitten that somehow got stuck under the car After a car wash.
In mid-May, a woman who thought she had a “sick” kitten learned that her pet Actually a rare wolf catShe noticed that the newborn kitten had bald spots and looked very different from her siblings.
A veterinarian assured the owner of the kitten that it was healthy. But when the owner started searching for similar-looking cats on Google, she discovered that her kitten was a special type called Lykoi.
“A Lykoi is an ordinary domestic cat. It comes from a natural genetic mutation in the wildcat population. This is the source of her mother,” the cat owner explained.
According to the Cat Management Committee (GCCF) of the British Cat Registry, the name of the breed is derived from the Greek word wolf. GCCF said that the name describes the cat’s appearance, “many people think it looks like a little werewolf.”
At about the same time, another British cat organization, the Chiltern branch of Cats Protection, posted a story on their Facebook page about Discover the cat family living in the bird’s nest.
The family was found after a local woman found a dead kitten. The woman notified the organization, hoping to find the kitten’s mother and other littermates.
The organization spent several days searching gardens, interviewing residents, installing surveillance cameras and distributing leaflets to the local area. But they can only find the mother cat, not her kitten.
Eventually, someone saw the female cat climb up the trunk of the industrial zone. When the organization investigated, they discovered that the mother had placed her three other kittens in an abandoned bird’s nest.
The organization also found a male cat, which appeared to be associated with the female cat and acted as the kitten’s “daddy”.