Street cats: a new opportunity

Published in About Animals

Thanks to Jelsa Mayor Nikša Peronja, Jelsa's stray cats have been given a new chance to survive and thrive in peace.

A new facility!. A new facility!. Photo: Debora Bunčuga

The project for cat feeding stations on Hvar Island has taken a big step forward, thanks to the kind cooperation of Mayor Nikša Peronja. The project, which around Jelsa is being conducted in collaboration with the Jelsa Municipal Tourist Board, started two and a half years ago with a public petition which garnered very widespread support. We have progressed slowly but surely.The process is not simple, many factors have to be taken into account. It's not enough just to create the facility without careful planning and subsequent upkeep.

Placing a feeding station. Photo: Debora Bunčuga

What's involved

Suitable locations. Where are the best places for the cat-stations.? The owner of the land has to agree to the placement; we might need permission from a private individual, a company, the local Council or some other institution. Each feeder has to be somewhere where cats can gather safely, without causing disturbance to people in the vicinity.

Regular maintenance has to be organized: the food and water must be replenished, the feeder and cat-house have to be kept clean. It is also necessary to keep the immediate environment clear of dangerous litter, especially broken glass. The feeding station can only function properly when people nearby are willing and able to take on the necessary responsibility.

Clearing potentially dangerous litter from the vicinity. Photo: Debora Bunčuga

Some problems we have encountered

Management difficulties. Despite so many people expressing enthusiasm for the cat-feeding scheme, it has proved extremely difficult to guarantee practical help for maintaining the feeding stations. Sometimes half-used packets of dry food have been left unused, to fill up with rainwater, then becoming infested with grubs; the food and drink bowls have often been left dirty; with the best of intentions, people have left 'bedding' for the cats, but failed to keep them clean; the dry food and drinking water which are the whole point of the feeder have been allowed to run out.

Local rejections. In one case a feeder was placed where local dog owners allow their dogs to run loose, despite the law to the contrary, so the dogs scoffed all the cat food in passing. The feeder was then moved into the nearby hotel grounds, with the blessing of the animal-loving Director. Some months later the Director was replaced by one who banned cats from anywhere around the premises. So of course we removed the feeder to a more appropriate place.

At one location on public land near Jelsa's local shops, we had a complaint from a neighbour in the vicinity that she did not want ANY cats nearby. When people express themselves so forcefully it does not bode well for the cats and their safety. Not long afterwards we found our plastic cat feeder smashed to bits.

Finding solutions

Obviously we had to move the hutch to a more secure location.

A safer location in Jelsa's car park

With permission from the local authorities we moved it away from the cat-haters into a relatively safe place It is now in a corner of the car park where cats tend to gather, where there are no neighbours and where the local cat-lovers can look after it.

A suitably isolated location. Photo: Vivian Grisogono

We have been able to solve some of the problems relating to the few feeding stations in and near Jelsa. However, our core group consists of just five people, four of them working mothers, so clearly we needed to find a way to create a more manageable system to cater for stray cats.

Investigating the new facility. Photo: Debora Bunčuga

An ideal spot?

Jelsa's recycling centre in the middle of woodlands off the road between Jelsa and Svirče could be the ideal spot for a cat sanctuary. The depot is surrounded by woodland and there are no houses nearby, so there are no neighbours who might take offence.. The depot is not functioning fully as yet, but at least the principle has been established. Local people and property-owning foreigners alike have been quick to respond by bringing their recyclable waste to the depot.

Kittie took up residence! 19.09.2023. Photo: Vivian Grisogono

On one of my visits, I saw that a beautiful, healthy-looking little cat had appeared on the premises, who was being fed by the depot manager Nikša during his working week

Kittie's tentative approach. Photo: Vivian Grisogono

She (or he) was wisely cautious in approaching a stranger, but not too scared to give it a go. She (he) has been made welcome, as her / his presence is definitely helping to keep rats and mice under some control.

Making his mark. Photo: Debora Bunčuga

At a meeting on December 16th 2023, Jelsa's Mayor Nikša Peronja gave us permission to place cat feeders at the Recycling Depot. We placed the first feeder shortly afterwards. It was an instant success. A fine ginger cat appeared to check on what we were doing. Was it the same little mite I saw back in September? From the markings, it seemed very possible. Having investigated the feeder carefully, he (or she) settled in for a good feast.

Settling in to a feast. Photo: Vivian Grisogono

So we are very hopeful that the depot's cat sanctuary will provide a safe haven for stray cats. It will serve as a centre from which it will be possible to continue the neutering operations more efficiently. The cats will keep vermin and snakes at bay. A spin-off will be that we will keep the environment around the cat feeders clean and tidy!

 © Vivian Grisogono MA(Oxon) December 2023, updated February 2024.

You are here: Home about animals Street cats: a new opportunity

Eco Environment News feeds

  • Weighed down by underinvestment and uncertainty, staff at Maple Lodge just want to get on with the job

    It is a grey day in a wet weekbut one of Thames Water’s neglected plants is still coping. Wastewater is being pumped into the vast Maple Lodge sewage treatment centre in Rickmansworth, just off the M25, at a rate of about 3,000 litres a second, within capacity.

    The site manager points out the first-line screens that catch everything that will not pass through a 5mm filter. A “sheep” – a bundle of wet wipes, sanitary pads, cotton buds, condoms and indigestible bits of sweetcorn – is rotating at one edge. Credit cards and false teeth have been known to end up here.

    Continue reading...

  • Exclusive: Documents show Andrea Jenkyns asked how she could help firm after major gas find in Lincolnshire

    Lincolnshire’s Reform party mayor, Dame Andrea Jenkyns, has courted the head of an American oil and gas dynasty in the hope of bringing fracking to the county, the Guardian can reveal.

    Egdon Resources, a British subsidiary of the US fracker Heyco Energy, announced a major gas discovery in Lincolnshire’s Gainsborough Trough last year. Jenkyns, who became the first mayor of Greater Lincolnshire in May, reached out personally to the company asking how she “could help with your recent gas find in my county”, according to records released by the mayoral authority in response to a freedom of information request.

    Continue reading...

  • South-western France could hit 25C, while a powerful Nor’easter is forecast to bring blizzards to Boston

    An early taste of spring is on the way for millions across northern and western Europe this week. Temperatures could climb close to a near record-breaking 20C (68F) in parts of Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, with south-western France approaching 25C on Wednesday.

    The warmth is being driven by a highly amplified synoptic pattern, featuring a region of low pressure over the Atlantic and strong high pressure over central Europe. The setup will allow exceptionally mild air to spread across much of the continent, with temperatures in some places rising to 10-15C above the seasonal average.

    Continue reading...

  • Wold Newton, East Yorkshire: On a dreary day in a nondescript field, I visit the site where a 4.56 billion-year-old bit of space rock came to Earth

    On a low rise, beyond a screen of trees, behind a small holiday park in the Yorkshire Wolds, a brick obelisk stands incongruously at the edge of an otherwise nondescript field. It bears a plaque inscribed as follows: “Here, on this spot, Decr. 13th, 1795 / fell from the Atmosphere AN EXTRAORDINARY STONE / In breadth 28 inches / In length 36 inches…”

    The words are carved in a variety of enthusiastic fonts, with the opening “Here” given particularly earnest flourish.The extraordinary, extraterrestrial stone in question is the Wold Cottage meteorite, the first from anywhere to be widely recognised as a rock from outer space. After a 4.56bn-year journey, it now rests in the Treasures Gallery of the Natural History Museum.

    Continue reading...

  • The Belgian ceremony attracts beekeepers from the Netherlands, France and Germany keen to boost dark bee numbers and stop the spread of the hybrid honeybee

    Every summer, 1,000 virgin queens descend on the Belgian town of Chimay. During the “wedding flight”, a male attaches to the female. His endophallus (penis equivalent) is torn off and he falls to the ground and dies. Mission accomplished.

    Beekeepers come and pick up their fertilised queens in small colourful hives, driving them back home, sometimes more than 300km away. They will use the genetic material gathered in south Belgium to build new colonies in the Netherlands, France and Germany.

    Continue reading...

  • Even as weather extremes worsen, the voices calling for the rolling back of environmental rules have grown louder and more influential

    In the timeless week between Christmas and the new year, two Spanish men in their early 50s – friends since childhood, popular around town – went to a restaurant and did not come home.

    Francisco Zea Bravo, a maths teacher active in a book club and rock band, and Antonio Morales Serrano, the owner of a popular cafe and ice-cream parlour, had gone to eat with friends in Málaga on Saturday 27 December. But as the pair drove back to Alhaurín el Grande that night, heavy rains turned the usually tranquil Fahala River into what the mayor would later call an “uncontrollable torrent”. Police found their van overturned the next day. Their bodies followed after an agonising search.

    Continue reading...

  • Rising temperatures are forcing some ski resorts to close, while leaving others at greater risk of extreme weather

    Avalanches kill about 100 people in Europe each year, with vast masses of ice, snow and rock regularly crashing down on hikers and skiers who have been caught unawares.

    The structure of the snow, angle of the slope and variation of the weather can dictate whether a gentle disturbance – like a gust of wind or the glide of a snowboard – can trigger a deadly shift in the mountain.

    Continue reading...

  • In an edited extract from her latest book, Hazel Sheffield sets out a new blueprint for community stewardship

    It was a Saturday in February 2020 when the flood came. It had been a wet winter, so wet it seemed that before the month was out, the brown trout of the River Taff might be washed clean out into Cardiff Bay before the fishing season had even begun. But this is Wales. People are used to a spot of rain. No one realised how bad it would get.

    For two days, it hammered on the windows of the houses at the top of the South Wales Valleys, where people tucked in their children before a sleepless night. It poured into the rivers at the bottom. By the time the rain departed again, many people would be standing in water up to their knees.

    Continue reading...

  • Rivers drained dry to create artificial snow, a forest cut down for the bobsleigh track – IOC’s claims to prioritise sustainability at Milano Cortina exposed

    On the foothills of the mountains, by the banks of the river in Cortina, there was a forest. It was full of tall larch trees. Arborists said the oldest of them had been there for 150 years and dendrologists that it was unique because it was unusual to find a monocultural forest growing at such a low altitude in the southern Alps.

    The locals knew mostly it was the place where the old wooden bobsleigh run was, where you went on your walks in summer or autumn, or when you wanted to play tennis on the small courts built near the bottom. They called it the Bosco di Ronco and it isn’t there any more.

    Continue reading...

  • Animal rights activists disagree with authorities on how best to handle boom in primate population near Table Mountain

    At the edge of Da Gama Park, where the Cape Town suburb meets the mountain, baboons jumped from the road to garden walls to roofs and back again. Children from South African navy families living in the area’s modest houses played in the street. Some were delighted; some wary; most were unfazed by the animals.

    A few miles away, overlooking a soaring peak and sweeping bay, Nicola de Chaud showed photos of food strewn across her kitchen by a baboon. In another incident, a baboon threw one of her dogs across the veranda. In January, a male baboon lunged at her and refused to leave the house for 10 minutes.

    Continue reading...

Eco Health News feeds

Eco Nature News feeds