Help Shelter Cats Feel Safe
“Scratching is an essential element of cats’ communication, problem-solving, health, and security issues.” – Jackson Galaxy
You can help The Jackson Galaxy Project make shelter cats more comfortable and adoptable.
In most shelters, cats live in small, easy-to-clean stainless-steel cages with a metal gate as the entry, a small litter pan, food, water, and a towel or blanket. This meets the most basic of physical needs, but in no way meets behavioral or emotional needs to keep a cat healthy and satisfied.
Cats communicate with scent. They have scent glands on their cheeks, their head, and their paw pads, and when a cat leans up and scratches something, they are effectively announcing, “this is my space, my home.” But in a stainless-steel kennel, there is no place to scratch. Also, every time a worker sanitizes the cage – a necessary process – the cat’s natural scent is washed away, and kitty is left once again in an alien and frightening place.
Providing specially designed cat scratchers helps a shelter cat feel much more secure and confident, like they “own” the space they’re living in. For them, getting to scratch is like choosing your own couch or color of paint – it makes the room feel warmer and more inviting. Providing a scratcher can also help alleviate boredom and reduce behaviors that discourage adoption. When the happy day finally arrives and a shelter cat meets her new family, her scratcher will go home with her, providing a familiar and scented object to help kitty adjust to the new home.
You can help. Your donation can provide a specially designed scratcher for a shelter cat. Just $10 can change the lives of 10 cats waiting for their forever homes!
Greater Good Charities has ultimate authority and discretion with regard to the distribution of its funds. All expenditures made are consistent with the exempt purposes of Greater Good Charities.
The Jackson Galaxy Project is all about teaching people what we already know – that cats make great pets, excellent companions, and are full-fledged family members. We are working to dispel negative stereotypes and make the situation for shelter cats better through public education, shelter outreach, and grants.