from Feral Cat Coalition, http://www.feralcat.com
These
instructions assume that trappers are using traps from the Tomahawk Live Trap Company. Specifics regarding the traps may be
slightly different if you are using another type of trap. Make arrangements
with the vet in advance of trapping. Be sure to tell the vet to use stitches
that will dissolve, or do not need removal, and that the animal is wild. [Note: Operation Catnip uses dissolvable
stitches that do not need to be removed.]
Plan to trap
so that you don’t have to keep the cat too long before surgery. Trapping the
night before is usually the best approach. Cats should not eat 12 hours prior
to surgery. Water should be available if the cat is held in the trap for more
than 4 hours after capture.
Prepare the
area where you will be holding the cats before and after the clinic. A garage
or other sheltered, warm, protected area is best. Lay down newspapers to catch
the inevitable stool, urine and food residue. You may want to use pieces of
wood to elevate the traps off the newspapers. This allows the mess to fall
through the wire away from the cats. Spraying the area ahead of time with a
cat-safe flea spray (like Adams or Ovitrol) will
discourage ants.
Prepare the
vehicle you will use to transport them as well. Plastic may be an additional
precaution. But remember that you will need to use newspapers or some other
absorbent material in addition. (Urine will roll right off of the plastic and
that isn’t what you want.)
Plan your day
of trapping carefully. Remember that if you trap an animal and release it for
some reason, it is unlikely that you will be able to catch it again… they learn
very quickly. If there are young kittens involved, remember that they should
not be weaned from the mother before 4-6 weeks of age. If you are trapping a
lactating female, you may want to wait until you have located the kittens and
they are old enough to wean. If you wish to tame and foster the kittens to
adopt out, they should be taken from the mother at 4-6 weeks. If you wait until
the kittens are older than 4-6 weeks before trying to tame them you will find
the job progressively harder with age.
Plan
placement of traps on a level surface in the area where the cats usually feed
or have been seen. Cats are less likely to enter the trap if it wobbles. If
trapping in a public area, try to place traps where they will not be noticed by
passersby (who may not understand that you are not trying to harm the cat).
Bushes are often places where cats hide and provide good camouflage for the
trap.
Use smelly
food to bait the trap. We find that canned mackerel is very effective and
relatively inexpensive. It is best not to put any bowls inside the trap to hold
food since the animal can easily hurt itself on it in a panic or while
recovering from anesthetic. Spoon a small amount of food onto the soaked
newspaper scrap and place the trap on top of the food so the food is as far
back in the trap as possible while still not accessible from outside the trap.
(You want the cat to go all the way into the trap to avoid being injured when
the trap door closes.) Press the trap down onto the food so that it squishes up
through the wire. The idea is to make the food a little hard to get so that the
cat has to go into the trap as far as possible and has to work at getting it
long enough to trip the trap. (Some cats are very good at getting in and out of
traps without getting caught. We don’t want to make it too easy for them to get
away with that trick. Also, having the food essentially outside of the trap
prevents the cat from eating it in the trap before surgery and is less messy.)
After baiting
the trap, open the trap door by pushing the top of the door in and pulling the
bottom of the door upward. There is a small hook attached to the right side of
the trap top. It hooks onto a tiny metal cylinder on the right side of the
door. The hook holds the door in an open position which also raises the trip
plate. When the cat steps on the plate it will cause the hook to release the
door and close the trap.
After setting
the trap, cover it with a large towel or piece of towel-sized material. Fold
the material at the front end of the trap to expose the opening while still
covering the top, sides and back of the trap. The cover will help to camouflage
the trap and serve to calm the cat after it is caught. Just before you are
ready to leave the trap for the cat to enter, you may want to push the hook
(ever so slightly) a little bit back off the cylinder to create a "hair
trigger". (Don’t get too carried away with this step or the trap will trip
as soon as the cat takes a sniff!)
When you get
the captured cat to a quiet area away from the other traps lift the cover and
check for signs that you have the correct animal and not a pet or previously
neutered feral. [Note: Operation Catnip
clips the tip of the left ear to avoid repeat animals. This type of marking is
the universally accept symbol of a sterilized, vaccinated feral cat.] If
you note that you have captured a lactating female check the area for kittens
and remember that this female must be released 10-12 hours after surgery so she
can care for and nurse her kittens. Cover the cat back up as soon as possible.
Uncovered, the animal may panic and hurt itself thrashing around in the trap.
Of course,
there is always the chance that you will catch some other wild animal attracted
to the food or an unintended cat. Simply release the animal quietly as stated
in the releasing procedures here.