The Feral Blog

Cats Don’t Care… But We Do! Morgan, Stitch & Valentino Updates + Feb 22 Event

Cats Don’t Care

Nope, they don’t care if we need time off.

On 2/12 we took a previously neutered feral into GEAH for limping. No outside wounds, x-rayed, looked all over and could find nothing. Could be Morgan is just so fat that movement is an issue! Or he likes visiting with us as he was treated for a foot injury in 2023! Morgan went back home and hopefully will cut back on the calories. We do our best to assist the cats in the area beyond spay/neuter. (No injuries — just 15.3 pounds of fabulous feral! Click here to view Morgan’s full medical report and elbow x-rays.)

2/18 a cat was brought in that actually was previously neutered and had a microchip. From Chicago, a former feral, he came out to the ‘burbs to be an inside cat. Landlord had the door open and he and his sister got out. Sister came back inside right away, Stitch decided to roam for more than a month. We trapped him, got his info from his chip and he is now back home – his people were taking him to the vet ASAP as he had upper respiratory and diarrhea from his time outside. We enjoy returning lost cats to their owners – those microchips make a difference!

2/16 1 friendly male to GEAH, received injured foot care and neuter – he was sedated anyway! Valentino is a wonderful boy and will be up for adoption when fully recovered and has learned how great houses are in foster care!

2/19 DCAS – 1 friendly, 1 feral, both females. Hoping this feral decides to become friendly but you never know.

That brings us to February total – 4, 2026 – 11 total, 16,556 since 2007!

As Many As Possible As Soon As Possible

Cat Technology Leads to Car Safety

Cats have benefitted humans in many ways. What you may not know is that cats led to the development of car safety changes almost 100 years ago and have been studied to make current day camera technology improvements.

February 22nd Adoption Event

Right now, we have 13 cats scheduled for an appearance on 2/22 at our building. Some may be adopted before; it is always a good idea to fill out an adoption application in advance. Fosters are often on hand to share information about the cats who have lived with them. Check out our Adoptables on our website and make an appointment to visit with the others who can’t be at this event!

  • Sunday, February 22, 1pm - 4pm, 330 Eisenhower Ln N, Lombard

No Surgeries This Week, But Plenty Still Happening at Feral Fixers

We’ve been trying to take time off as best we can.

We do have a female in TNR who has turned out to be incredibly sweet and hopefully she will get spayed next week.

We have an enormous previously TNR’d feral in the TNR room who was supposed to have an injured leg, finally, yesterday he was favoring the right front leg – now we have a direction to go in. Vet full today, tomorrow, closed Sunday, he will be seen on Monday, and we’ll pop him into a crate for a couple of days even though he is sure to trash it big time!

Volunteers have family emergencies, vets have come down with that nasty new cold, Monday is a holiday, and despite the warmer weather we just can’t process significant numbers of cats 'til our trip the last week of February. There’s only so much we can do.

We have about 100 cats to trap on our list for the end of February and beginning of March, wish us luck!

Donations Greatly Appreciated!

Part of my duties is processing donations. Very grateful at how busy I’ve been the last couple of months. With all of the hardships everyone is experiencing it is always a surprise when I go to the post office or open an email advising us of a donation.

Yesterday a note was with a check: “Thank you for what you do to help the kitties. I’m starting to see more cats in my neighborhood. They look like they were abandoned and for sure males not fixed. I wish I could send more for a donation but its already a bad money year. Thank you again.”

Of course, as soon as possible we’ll be looking at that area. For years and years, this area was one that community service officers fined people feeding cats and therefore they hid what they were doing, the numbers grew and the neighbors complained, round and round it went. Municipalities simply do not have the funds to pay a CSO to do that work, the numbers continue to grow, but they will not endorse TNR officially, they just respond to complaints to this day with threats of fines – at least they don’t go looking for infractions so caretakers are more likely to contact us without that fear hanging over their heads. The officers do not WANT to pursue fines; it’s the ordinances on the books that they need to follow. But there I go on a tangent!

Trap/Neuter/Return is the main purpose of Feral Fixers. A side effect to this process is friendly cats and kittens, therefore we do adoptions. If we do not find homes for those cats on hand, what happens to the kittens and cats who would be very happy in homes but do not get the chance to come inside and change their lives. Please ask where the cat you are adopting came from, shop local to help with the local issues. Share our Adoption page, talk up how wonderful Feral Fixers truly is!

February 22nd Adoption Event

We still have almost 30 cats/kittens on hand for adoption. If you watch Facebook, there are so many cats still awaiting adoption at all of the area shelters. What can we say? You have to find the right feline for you! Check out our Want to Adopt? link at the top of our website. Fosters should be on hand to give you information on these cats who have lived with them. These are not cats that have continued to live in cages, they have experienced real life. If you cannot attend, individual meetups are possible. Fill out an adoption questionnaire in advance to speed up the process but you can stop in at an adoption event to learn more about our cats on hand that day and fill out a form for a future adoption. 

  • Sunday, February 22, 1pm - 4pm, 330 Eisenhower Ln N, Lombard, IL

Events Are for YOU As Much as Feral Fixers!

Great to see the El Famous diners yesterday while I was there. Adopter brought in photos of her two boys adopted last year with updates about them – they came from the Echo Point location – so glad they are doing well! These events are not just fundraisers; they allow us to see familiar faces! Food was great, I could have had yet another order of tacos, but I did bring nachos home to have as leftovers! Our next dining out event will be in April, look for updates!

Thank you for reading this update. Back to trapping in two weeks!

As Many As Possible As Soon As Possible

The Pressure Is On: Help Us TNR More Cats in 2026 – Volunteers, Fundraiser & Kitten Adoptions

Scary!

Looking at the coming year, seeing those months stretching before us, yikes! 

Priority right now is the competition for volunteers -it has never been so intense. There are hundreds of non-profits in DuPage.

Our current volunteers have experienced so many changes in their lives, and we need additional support in many directions. We need: more trappers, more animal care at the building, more transporters, more fosters, more adoption support, you name it.

You may have seen the posts on social media from other animal organizations that are in desperate need of more volunteers and here we are joining with everyone else.

Cats need to be trapped, cared for, transported, cared for again and returned. Kittens and friendlies need to be cared for, to be fostered and adoptions need to take place. 

The consequence of insufficient volunteers would be the inability to reduce the volume of unneutered cats, increased numbers of kittens outside going on to make more, more cats who otherwise could find homes not being able to and on and on.

Make 2026 not so scary – come volunteer!

Burritos For Good!

El Famous is one of the most favorite Mexican restaurants in the area! 

Thursday, February 12 • 10:30am-10pm, Join us for a delicious all-day fundraiser benefiting Feral Fixers! El Famous Burrito (located at 256 W Roosevelt Rd in Lombard, IL) is generously donating 20% of all proceeds from dine-in and to-go orders placed that day straight to Feral Fixers — helping us spay/neuter, vaccinate, and care for local feral cats in need. How to participate? Super simple! Show this flyer (printed or on your phone), OR just mention “Feral Fixers” when you order (630-613-8460) - www.elfamousburrito.net). No minimums, no limits — every burrito, taco, quesadilla, or combo helps make a difference! Satisfy your Mexican food cravings and support a great cause at the same time. Bring your friends, family, coworkers — the more, the merrier! Come hungry, leave happy — and help give local cats a brighter future! We can’t wait to see you there. 

Adoption Events

Next Adoption Events – We still have kittens who are three to four months old available for adoption. Kitten Season is just about year ‘round these days. Visit our Want to Adopt? link at the top of our website. Our adoption events usually have fosters may be on hand to give you information on these cats who have lived with them, learning the ins and outs of home life. If you cannot attend, individual meetups are possible. It is important to fill out an adoption questionnaire in advance to speed up the process, but you can stop in at an adoption event to learn more about our cats on hand that day and fill out a form for a future adoption. 

  • Saturday, February 7th, from 11am -3pm, 330 Eisenhower Ln N, Lombard, IL
  • Sunday, February 22, 1pm - 4pm, 330 Eisenhower Ln N, Lombard, IL

Another Neuter!

Still not starting full on trapping but we had to help a cat with an injured tail. Lizzardo was neutered and his tail repaired, we’ll hold onto him a couple of days to make sure he’ll be okay. Temps may be in the 30’s during the day next week and he has sheltering spaces. Every situation can be different. We will return to trapping soon, the pressure is on and we have a list already!

  • 2/2– DCAS – 1 feral male. 

Total: February 1, year-to-date 8, since 2007 16,553!

Picture name
Lizzardo's untreated tail before he was trapped.

Lizzardo really doesn't want to share his appearance but food wins!

As Many As Possible As Soon As Possible

From The President

2026 - Can You Believe it!

We’re almost thru 2025 as this is written. The year zoomed by!

Volunteers, caretakers, fosters, donors contributed to the spay/neuter of 811 feral and stray cats and kittens. Once again, we have done over 300 adoptions this year with the help of our trappers, fosters, adoption and animal care volunteers with just 10 days to go til the end of the year as I write this. We’ve helped so many cats and humans with the care of cats. Long-lasting effects in the future of cats in the DuPage County area.

Another year where there were limited spay/neuter services, pet owners and feral caretakers impacted by financial and housing issues. This has resulted in increased volume of cats outside and intact, creating more kittens. All shelters in the area are full, constantly.

We started trapping in February at locations with barns and outbuildings and accomplished 117 by the end of March – very early start. The whole year had its ups and downs with surgery and volunteer availability. But this contributed to a total of 16,545 spay/neuters since our start in 2007. Amazing, isn’t it?

Weather is the great unknown, but we hope to hit the ground running once again by the end of February, there are many locations that we need to get back to. Cats move around and just when we think we have resolved an area – a call with 20 more cats from a “finished” location comes in. Feral Fixers is at the top of all the search engines and perhaps someday we can expand our coverage to more than firm DuPage County response. That would take more trappers and more animal care support across the board. Please consider learning to trap and working in your own neighborhood, making a lasting difference! So many cards this year have mentioned how they are not seeing kittens as a result of our efforts.

Each week of trapping can result in kittens or cats that can become adoptable, requiring additional care at the building and then fostering and then adoption. Injured cats needing additional care are held at the building for recovery. Cats that must be relocated are usually held at the building until that can be arranged. This all requires an increased number of volunteers so that we can meet the need.

Our donors have made a huge difference, supporting us with the funds that keep the cats healthy, fed, warm in the Winter, cool in the summer. Imagine the food bill this past year! Skids of cat litter!

We always hope for fewer cats to be trapped, unlimited spay/neuter capacity and the day the phone will stop ringing with more and more cats to be cared for. Please help us make 2026 that year!

Donors, volunteers, caretakers have been doing so much for the past 18 years, and we’ve done so much – 16,545 cats!  Just remember –

As Many As Possible As Soon As Possible

It's 2025!

2025 – Already Here!

2024 has been a very long year, hasn’t it? Yet it seems to have been over in the blink of an eye!

The volunteers, donors, caretakers, fosters, all playing a part in Feral Fixers accomplishing 854 spay/neuters of feral and stray cats and kittens. We have adopted approximately 342 cats and kittens to wonderful homes with the help of our adoption, foster and animal care volunteers and there are two days left in the year as I write this. We have assisted many sick and injured cats. We’ve done so much that is positive and will have long-lasting effects for both cats and humans.

We have to mention the challenges of the year – spay/neuter clinics shut down for reconstruction or permanently, veterinarians leaving the work force, all reducing the number of available surgery slots we could obtain. Pet owners faced housing and financial issues, resulting in more cats being outside and intact. Every shelter is full – we keep saying that and it does not improve.

Judging by the number of phone calls we have received and the locations we just could not get to, 2025 may be an even busier year. We resume trapping when the overnight temperatures are above 30 degrees consistently – that date is anyone’s guess in Chicagoland these days. We have to take the situations on a case- by-case basis. More people are bringing cats into their homes and arranging s/n themselves and we applaud them!

Through it all, our donors have helped so much. While fundraising takes time and there has not been near enough of that this year, we have been able to keep the lights on, the cats fed, the litter boxes scooped and spay/neuter to the capacity of the surgeries available to us.

We are hoping that increased capacity for surgery will increase our yearly s/n numbers in 2025 – the only way we are going to get ahead. We are hoping that more people will be able to volunteer, foster and adopt!

Even though this is hard work, we have to remember the impact we have had, how many cats would be roaming the streets, producing more and more, the suffering that has been alleviated, feline and human alike! We have much more work to do but what a difference has been made so far!

You - donors, volunteers, caretakers, are all responsible for the huge difference Feral Fixers has achieved in the last 17 years! Remember –

As Many As Possible

As Soon As Possible

It's 2024, finally...

2023 – What A Year

Together, volunteers, donors, caretakers, everyone involved with Feral Fixers, we have accomplished 926 spay/neuters of feral and stray cats and kittens. With the help of our dedicated adoption and foster and animal care volunteers, we have found homes for 360 cats and kittens. In just this year, you can see the impact as we reduced the volume of cats outdoors, we reduced the overpopulation crisis from every direction, helping felines and humans alike.

The challenges have been immense. 

Kitten numbers have increased dramatically –societal changes may be the biggest impact: lack of vet access, money, movement of our population – combining households, isolation and hoarding, etc. People are actually paying more attention to the cats outside and are discovering the pregnant cat, the litter of kittens much more readily than in the past which results in overall increased volume that we are contacted about. Every shelter is full. Everyone is doing their best to save every cat they can. Adults and kittens are becoming friendly at an increased pace. Years ago, a feral was a feral was a feral. Not anymore. Kittens sometimes are friendly from the time they are trapped, adults will have a complete turnaround to being friendly. National organizations are seeing this and the only advice they can offer is that even if a cat is friendly, put it back outside – there just aren’t enough homes.

Volunteers. The data can be looked at in many different ways, but finding information that DuPage County ranked 2nd in 102 Illinois Counties of charities per square mile illustrates why it is so difficult finding and maintaining volunteers. No one seems to have as much time as we used to. There are so many choices of where to spend that valuable volunteer time. Our lives can change in an instant and our personal responsibilities must take priority. Feral Fixers has wonderful volunteers, and we treasure them every day. We need more, the volunteer staff is not a constant and can change quickly. From trapping to transport, fostering and shifts of cat care at the building, cleaning – oh my, the cleaning! We do need volunteers who can snuggle kittens just as much as we need those who can sweep floors and do laundry. Social people who can interact with adopters on adoption days, help with events, host events! Everyone has their own strengths and abilities, please share them with us!

Need everywhere. We can average five calls a day for help.

*Discovered kittens under the shed, come help. *My mother let a pregnant cat into her house, come trap and take the kittens. *My cat has lost its mind and is attacking me, help. *I have 15 cats in and around my house (usually results in 60+ cats). *I live outside your area, but I can bring the cats to you. *Been feeding a cat for 2 years, not neutered, now he’s injured from fighting, come help. On social media, you may often see “call Feral Fixers, they will help you” and we do help so many!

With all these challenges we must remember the impact we have had, can you imagine how many cats would be roaming the streets, producing more and more, the suffering we have alleviated, feline and human alike! We have much more work to do but what a difference has been accomplished! 

You - donors, volunteers, caretakers, are all responsible for the huge difference Feral Fixers has achieved in the last 16+ years!

March Madness!

We didn’t set out to break records at the beginning of March, but that is certainly what we have done!

In February, I counted up all the “outstanding” cats that we had on our books. Some new colonies, some from last year, many that had not been TNR’d due to weather, etc. When that number came out to be over 100 cats, we approached PAWS for more slots. They were extremely accommodating and offered us several dates where we could bring in 20+ cats at a time.

Well, in March I had a vacation from my “real” job. That meant that we could do even more cats than normal, without those hours missing from every day!

Usually you say thank you at the end of a piece, but I would like to thank everyone now – please forgive me if I miss anyone!

THANK YOU!!!!

  • to all the caretakers who trapped their own cats, who transported their cats to us, who care for these cats every day, day in and day out, and have taken responsibility for limiting future litters!
  • to all our donors who make it possible to TNR those cats whose caretakers can only afford food but want to do the responsible thing by getting them neutered and vaccinated!
  • to everyone who transported for us, to PAWS and to and from the caretakers: Ted, Jennifer, Amy, Mary, Mary, Becky, Kim, Diane, Chloe. Your help is priceless!
  • to those who trapped when the caretakers could not – Mary, Diane and MJ. So many cats, so little time!
  • to Sue, who loans us her van when we have a big load of cats – this saves us so much time and effort!
  • a special mention for someone who has started a crusade to get us enough newspaper – Laura!
  • to Leo, who helps me transfer cats, repairs our traps and puts up with all of the traffic that this process requires!

March was mad, mad, mad, mad!

Here’s the basics:

  • 123 cats TNR’d from 3/3/09 to 3/26/09
  • Averaging over 5 cats a day
  • 11 trips into PAWS in that time, average 10 cats per trip
  • 50 were males
  • 73 females
  • Microchipped 4 previously TNR’d cats for identification

Assuming approximately 4 kittens per litter, an estimated 300 kittens were prevented just in March!!!

During the same month of March, the PAWS-Chicago Spay / Neuter clinic, where we take the cats to be fixed, set their own record with 1,548 spay/neuter surgeries, of which 443 were ferals!

Our favorite stories include:

  • The caretaker that bought a farm – complete with a colony of cats. So far, we have TNR’d ten, of which nine were females. NINE!
  • There were the 20 cats from Colony A, that took a whole week and was a learning experience for the people involved in trapping – the cats just kept coming and other colonies B and C were discovered one and three blocks away – so far! As Colony C was being worked on, a cat that had already been TNR’d from Colony A was trapped – proving that these cats do roam to other caretakers for snacks.
  • A trucking company thought they had 10 cats, no, maybe only 8, then we proceeded to do 15 in all! Very lucky cats!
  • A situation that has been on my books for three years, things just kept happening to keep us from getting all the cats, has now been resolved! The cats had all come down with URI (upper respiratory infection), so the caretaker supplemented their diets with Vitamin C and L-Lysine to improve their health and then we started TNR. We did 11 cats in all there. There is one trap-wise male left there, we are still holding out hope to get him, too, but, unless he brings in a new girlfriend, this location is stable! We also took in an injured kitten from this neighborhood, Gordy. Each of his paws had been chomped on by something and were abscessing. He also had frostbite on one ear and was dehydrated and malnourished. So far, in two weeks he has gained weight and his wounds are healing slowly, he is on his second round of antibiotics and at the suggestion of the vet, we are trying an old-fashioned cure on his wounds – regular old granular sugar – a little less messy than using honey (honey + cat fur!) but the same premise to draw out the infection. We are extremely happy with Wheaton Animal Hospital in Glen Ellyn. They really seem to care about the cats and to be reasonable in trying alternative treatments. Can’t say enough good things about them!
  • Linda is someone who has been trying to get that last female for two years while she kept producing litters, has now gotten all of the remaining females, just has that one wily, very strong male. Linda was using a drop trap (a wonderful invention for getting cats that are leary of box traps), and this cat managed to bust thru the mesh of the trap in mere seconds! But, again, we are going to consider this location stable!

This is a video showing what a drop-trap is and how it should be used.

There are some individual cats that we encounter who we wish could tell their own story:

  • Sharmin, front declaw, neutered, bad teeth, emaciated, dehydrated, knots 2 inches high on his back. Within 28 hours of being brought in, he started eating. He went to the vet for vaccinations, testing, and deworming, and was placed in a foster home to get healthy. This cat was so lonely and starved for affection, he groaned as he was held.
  • Morrie, completely tame and loveable orange tabby who was living in an abandoned car. He is going for adoption soon.
  • Buddy, who while he was sick with URI acted completely tame. As soon as he was healthy – he donned his feral suit again!
  • Mooch, who hung out at a gas station, but wandered the neighborhood to sow his wild oats. After he was neutered, we received a call from his caretakers, concerned at his complete lack of interest in going out the door these days! I told them he was thinking with his higher brain now and knew that being inside where it was dry and warm was a much better deal!

March has been an incredibly hectic and exhausting month. It may take some time, but we hope to see the results of our hard work by the end of the summer with fewer kittens born all over DuPage County because of our efforts. It would be extremely difficult to keep up this pace, but with your help we have certainly made a huge dent!

(Both picture thumbnails are of Gordy - click on them for a larger version of the picture)