How does a responsible cat owner go
from one cat to 20? Without one stray? It is a long tale.  It took a few generations to finally get the
majority of the offspring sterilized, and now we are one happy family.
               MeiLi
was born at a neighbor’s farm.  There was
no attempt made there to limit the propagation of those cats, but attrition
occurs naturally.  They seem to drift
away, be killed, or adopted.  One had
lost a leg in a conflict with a coyote.  Taking
away one kitten would have no impact, one way or the other.  She was old enough to feed herself, so she
came home with me and started her new life, the first kitten on my new farm.
               I
already had one dog, Chula, curly-locked Maltese cross with bangs down to her
snout.  Chula was already living in the
proximity when I arrived, but she seemed abandoned.  She shared her flea infested yard with a black
and white cat, which would prove fecund. 
The bordering neighbor actually lived in town, and only came to the
countryside to cultivate on the family land. 
This friendly little dog had a great bald spot on her neck and
shoulder.  I went online to find out what
it could be, and learned that it was the effect of a flea infestation.  I bathed her and disinfected her, after which
she drifted away from the neighbor’s yard towards my front door.  After some weeks, when the neighbor noticed
her missing he was somewhat annoyed.  But
after a couple of months of feeding and grooming her, when we showed up in our
little village, he was embarrassed to hear folks’ reactions at her transformation.  
“Oh what a cute dog, where did you
get him?”  This followed by raised
eyebrows when I told them who she was.  
I took her to the veterinarian for
spaying.
In time the one cat at the
neighbor’s farm grew to four.  I would
take kibble to mama and kittens, but this required me to cross over the fence
to my neighbor’s yard.  He was not the
friendliest of fellows, and not used to outsiders.  He thought I did not speak Spanish, in spite
of the fact that all communication between us was indeed in Spanish.  Figure that one out.
I started putting kibble out, at a
neutral spot on my land.  It didn’t take
long before I was feeding about six strays. 
They were of all colors, but mostly combinations of black, white and
ginger.  One of these ginger males was
particularly well-tempered and friendly.  Another was large and menacing, and hung back
until I was out of sight.
I kept this up for the better part
of a year.  In March I took a trip north
to a cousin’s funeral, leaving the place in the hands of friends from
town.   When I came back the cats were no
longer coming around.
MeiLi and Chula got along just
fine.  But one day I lost Chula when she
rode with me to the big city.  It was
Valentine’s Day, and someone couldn’t resist taking home this perfect gift,
just sitting in the WalMart parking lot while I was inside shopping. As an
aside, this is a perfect example of the Mexican culture I’ve discovered here,
which I think of as socialist.  The taker
would not think that he stole anything.  The
concept of theft is a vague one, not likely to awaken conscience much less
guilt.
I thought about sterilizing MeiLi,
but she had gone through many cycles in heat and never conceived, so I thought
she was sterile.  Once I closed her in a
room for a few hours with a lovely ginger stray cat, in hopes they would hit it
off and do the Thing.  Instead, they both
were really bored and just waiting for the moment when I opened the door and
let them out.
I kept advertising Chula, and
learned a lot of the private rescue network in Durango, in the form of several
Facebook groups.  I did not think I was
ready for another dog.  However, after a
few months someone brought me a new pup, whom I named Peanut.  She was a short-haired short-legged
nondescript white dog.  
               When
Peanut went into heat for the first time, and a few dogs started coming around
wanting to have at her, I decided to limit her access.  I chose a nice black dog with longer legs,
who belonged to my good neighbor Julian. 
I drove them down the dirt road a couple miles away where they could
have privacy.  They mated, and she
started incubating the pups.  During the
couple months of her gestation, the sire was killed while fighting some wild
boars.  Julian then said he would like
one of Peanut’s offspring, to remember his beloved dog.  That was Peanut’s one and only litter, three
little pups, before she was sterilized. 
Unfortunately, she was hit by a vehicle on our country road, and had to
be put down.  Some months later the same
thing happened to her son.  He was hit in
the head and died instantly, in my arms. 
This left only the one I gave Julian, and his identical twin sister
adopted by Julian’s friend.
               As
Peanut’s belly grew, I began noticing a growing bulge in MeiLi’s abdomen as
well.  Two weeks after the pups were
born, MeiLi dropped five beautiful kittens. 
When they were old enough I started finding homes for them.  The oldest was about three months when I
finally allowed him to go.  Soon I
discovered that MeiLi was pregnant again, and she made it perfectly clear that
our home was not a safe environment for her offspring.  
               One
morning when she was sitting on the kitchen counter, and I noticed her abdomen
was hard. While I was cleaning the house she slipped out, found a safe place
and delivered her babies far from my grasp. 
Search as I may, I could not find her nest.  She would come back for food, I would see the
swollen mammaries, but never got a glimpse of the litter until after about two
months.  Then one day I saw her walking
past the back door with four kittens trailing behind.  This was the fist litter born in the wild,
and I never was able to domesticate them.
               She had
one more litter that year, before I managed to get her to the vet.  Those kittens were born in the house, MeiLi
and I having restored our previous trust. 
Those five were a joy to have in the house, and grew up feeling very
comfortable in the house before I turned them out to live as outside cats on
our three acres.  I put kibble out for
them twice a day, when they would wind in and out of my legs, arch their backs
to be petted, and in general show affection.   We live in the country, after all, with  woods, farms and stream nearby, providing
plenty of prey for them to hunt.  But
then these daughters began having litters. 
               In
MeiLi’s second litter she bore one cat that had Siamese markings.  I was drawn to this cat, and wished for more
offspring like this.  But she was a wild
cat, not willing to come into the house. 
She got pregnant.  I watched her
grow, and she came to feed each day.  One
day she looked ready to deliver, so that evening I placed a cage out back at
the far edge of the farm, under shelter, where she could keep her litter
safe.  Sure enough, the next morning when
I went to fill the kibble bowls, there she was in the cage with her litter!  This was great for her, but not so for the other
cats.  She chased them all away from the
kibble bowls.  Therefore, and to strop
molesting the other cats, I carried the cage into the house so she would have
ready access to food and clean bedding, but after a week she decided she needed
to leave.  She never could get
comfortable.  Starting with MeiLi, the
three-drawer dresser in the bedroom had become a favorite place for mother and
kittens.  This little girl, however, went
to extremes and moved her kittens to behind the drawers.  The slide on these drawers was tricky, and I
could not simply pull out the drawer and release the kittens.  Man alive, had she found a safe hiding
place!  I eventually, with help, freed
the kittens and put them back in the cage and outside. That litter grew
successfully, and produced one cat that had even more clearly Siamese
markings.  It looked promising for
developing a strain of mixed Siamese cats.
               Her
second litter did not fare as well.  She
insisted on hiding them in the woods. 
One day the neighbor dogs came to have sport with the cats.  She saw them coming and must have made
herself a decoy, to keep the kittens safely hidden.  They attacked her, tossed her around like a
toy.  They broke her spine, and left her
for dead.  I found her, but not the
kittens which were a week or two old.  I
took her into the house to clean her and assess the extent of the damage.  I saw she was beyond saving, so I made her
comfortable and calm, so she could pass peacefully, which she did that night.  Those shared hours of agony are unforgettable.
Apparently one, perhaps two, of the kittens survived, because months later I
started seeing another Siamese-like cat. 
It was quite like the one of the earlier litter, for which I mistook it
until I saw a large black spot on its side that the other does not have.  A lot of my cats are ginger coloring.  A little after that siting I started noticing
another odd ginger cat who stood with the other cats at feeding time, mewing
for my attention while also running from me. 
His face had unfamiliar white markings, and so I speculate that he and
the Siamese are brothers.  Amazing to me,
that after losing their mother so young they were able to survive.
               Two of
MeiLi’s third litter got pregnant at the same time.  One of that litter was almost identical to
MeiLi, a calico of black, orange, gray and white markings.  I called her Chloe.  Her sister was, for this group of cats, of
unusual markings.  She tried to be a
light grey tiger stripe, but also had a lot of white and a little ginger.  I called her Willy.  Having been born in the house, they were
content when I welcomed them to give birth inside.  Chloe’s litter did not do so well.  One was still-born, and two others died in
the first week.  Willy had just two
kittens, who thrived.  I decided to
collect some data, and so I weighed all of them regularly and kept close
records on how they grew.  As I
mentioned, two of those died but the four lived.    Of
course they did not know who belonged to whom, and two cousins, both black, became
fast friends.  Willy’s son has white
markings like a tuxedo, a white chest and four white paws, so I call him Tuxedo
shortened to Tuk.  They are inseparable,
except that Tuk decided he wanted to be my inside cat.  He and I have forged that precious bond; he
follows me everywhere.  But he also has
to spend time daily with his brother, so he goes out daily.  Sometimes I don’t notice which cat comes home
at night.  Sometimes in the day they both
slip in and sleep, curled up together on the bord or sofa.  If I leave the front door open and fail to
lock the screen door, my house is totally vulnerable to invasion because they
all have learned how to dig their nails into the screen and pull trh3 door
open.
               At the
same time, maybe two weeks after Tuk was born, one of the pregnant wild ginger
cats  (MeiLi’s second litter) gave
birth.  It took me quite some time to
find out where.  Eventually I followed
her, and saw her climb the outside ladder to the roof.  There, in the small space under the brick
base of the water tank, so deep in the shadows they were hard to see, were
three little kittens.  One of them was a
female who would acquire the name Dolly.
               Then
began the program of sterilization.
               Trapping
the animals and carrying them into town was the goal.  I went to the vet and asked if he had any
traps to lend.  He did, but none were
cat-sized.  He had no nets, nor anything
else to contribute.  I went online, and
for about a hundred bucks I was able to get a trap.  
               The more
domesticated cats were the easiest to catch, though even they were wary of
being picked up and held.  By twos and
threes, each Tuesday I delivered cats to the vet for sterilizing.  This is still rural Mexico, where veterinary
work tends towards large animals.  One of
the first female was delivered back to me so dosed up with anesthesia that she
was drugged until the next dawn.  After
that I reminded the vet to cut back on the drugs.  The vet, the only one in town and having a
reputation for being expensive, got on board with the program.  He gave me amazing deals on the price of the
operations.  Whereas one spay would cost
800 pesos and a neutering 400 pesos, he would do three of mixed gender for 1000
pesos, for example.
               Some of
the wilder cats were more difficult to catch. 
If I set and baited the trap, there was no way I could single out a wild
one to spring the trap.  One of the
rooftop cats, Dolly, was unapproachable. 
Yet we built up a bond of some sort, because when she got pregnant and was
ready to deliver, she came to me.  Not
with the first litter, however.  
There is an unfinished house in the
back of the property, with one window blown out.  For the first litter she chose this
location.  After some weeks I thought I
should bring some food and water to her for them, so I approached the window to
see if she was visible.  Instead, I found
a kitten outside, a few feet from the window, gasping its last breath.  I found another at the foot of a nopal
tree.  He was so frozen with terror that
I was able to pick him up.  Then I
noticed, at eye height, another kitten clinging to the fork of another nopal
tree.  I was able to gather him up, and
these two came to my house for care. 
They didn’t stay many days, but the experience was enough for the
mother, Dolly, to understand.  I was not her
worst danger.
I made an appointment with the vet
to bring Tuk for neutering the following day. 
I brought him in the morning, and picked him up around 5 pm. He was
heavily sedated.  Usually the males need
only mild sedation and a local at the hinder parts.  They rebound quickly by the end of day.  I was concerned when Tuk was still limp and
deeply asleep when I picked him up.  He
stayed that way through the night.  I
looked at the wounds, and discovered that he had a sliced abdomen, as well as
stitches near the anus.  An idiot
apprentice technician had at first thought he was operating on a female.
A few months later, Dolly gave
birth to her second litter I know not where. 
A day or two later I found her and her litter curled up on the dirt of a
fallow clay bowl, in a sheltered corner of my patio.  I lifted the kittens and brought them inside,
and she followed uncomplainingly.  I
installed them in that favorite cage, covered by a sheet for privacy.  Over the next month I was amused by the game
we played. She would carry them outside by the cat door, which is in one of the
bedroom windows.  I would fetch them and
bring them back in.  She never took them
far.  She was fast as lightening.  One time I was in the house, and heard the
noise of the swinging metal cat door.  I
came running, and by then she had the third kitten in her mouth and slipped
through my fingers.  I kept the fourth
kitten with me for another few days, and then she brought them all back
inside.  Eventually, however, they went
outside to stay. By this time they were eating kibble, and ready to start
learning how to live outside and fend for themselves.  Still, it can be brutal out there, and I
remained concerned.  I set up a feeding
station in the empty house, and put their favorite bed there.  I swept up enough dust to make a litter pile
for them.  While they were with me, I
gave them names.  I don’t usually do that
with the undomesticated ones, but these were just so cute and willing to be
held.  They became Joe, Moe and Curly,
and Patches.  The three were ginger cats,
and the female was a mostly black calico. 
Joe and Moe are undistinguishable, being purely ginger with no white
markings.  I carried them to their new
shelter, and mom came on her own steam.
Once Dolly had come into the house
at postpartum, I carried her to the vet. 
I was a little concerned at leaving the two-day old kittens without milk
and warmth for twelve hours, but it had to be done.  It turned out fine.  Mother did not hate me, and that will be her
last litter.  It remains to be seen if I
will be able to capture the four babes a couple of months from now for their
trip to the vet.
At the height of the season of
these tales, I counted 20 cats eating at the trough.  The number gradually diminished, as the older
cats drifted away.  I never forgot MeiLi,
the Matriarch, and wondered how and where she was.  One time, about a year later, I thought I had
double vision.  I was at the feeding
spot, having just filled the bowls.  I
was leaning down, and as I lifted my head I saw Chloe twice. I was actually
seeing mother and daughter.  It was
MeiLi, making a visit.  Maybe she wondered
how I was doing, too.  It was joyful to
see her again, alive and well.  The visit
was brief, momentary, and then she was gone. 
I have not seen her since.
