Christopher,
the Miracle Cat
All cats may have nine lives, but Christopher, an orange and white tabby
who lives at a Redwood City veterinary clinic, also has a sixth sense.
Dubbing him a "guardian angel," "wonder cat" and "miracle
kitty," the staff and volunteers at the Nine Lives Foundation's
Feline Well-Care Clinic say Christopher can tell when other cats need
help. He will sit outside the cages of sick felines until someone lets
him in, and last month, the clinic says, he saved the life of a kitten
in need of a blood transfusion.
"It's weird, it's really true that he seems to understand things," said
Monica Thompson, Nine Lives' chief veterinarian and founder. "He knows when
he can help. He alerts us when things aren't right about a cat."
Christopher, who is about 3 or 4 years old, was found on the side of
a road by a group of bicyclists in March. He arrived at the clinic unable
to stand, his pelvis fractured.
He recuperated, and one day simply jumped out of his cage while it was
being cleaned.
Since then, Christopher has lived at the clinic. On Wednesday morning
he snoozed in his favorite cat bed on a desk, ignoring the hustle and
bustle around him.
As is typical for Christopher, he was napping next to a terminally ill
cat.
"He'll often paw at a cage door to be let in so he can clean and comfort
a cat in there," said Robert Lowery, a San Ramon resident and volunteer
at Nine Lives.
He even became known as the "feral kitten tamer"
last month, when he asked to be let into a cage with two feral kittens
that were "untouchable, just hissing and growling," Thompson
said.
Christopher taught the kittens all about being a cat, and within a couple
of weeks they were tame. One has since been adopted, and the other is
still available.
" The kittens were so excited to see (Christopher) that when he left the
cage they would sit and cry," Thompson said.
But Christopher's biggest claim to fame is likely saving the life of
a tiny black kitten that came to the clinic July 11 with severe anemia.
She needed a blood transfusion immediately, and Thompson couldn't draw
enough to even determine her blood type.
" I didn't know what I was going to do," Thompson said.
Christopher kept jumping up on the operating table, rubbing on Thompson
and nuzzling the kitten. So Thompson grabbed Christopher and used his
blood for the transfusion.
Thompson didn't know it at the time, but the kitten had a rare "B" blood
type found in about 20 to 25 percent of the cat population. It's also
a blood type usually found in purebred cats, Thompson said, so she wouldn't
have expected to find it in the black shorthair kitten.
As it turned out, Christopher also has Type B blood. The kitten was standing
up within about four hours of the transfusion, Thompson said, and has
since gone back to Humanimal Connection, the rescue foundation that was
caring for her.
" If I hadn't paid attention to (Christopher) I probably would have lost
the cat," Thompson said.
Though many people have inquired about adopting Christopher, Thompson
said, he "serves a purpose" at the clinic.
" Who knows how many cats he'll save in the years ahead," Lowery said..
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