♥Princess of Lions♥ wrote:Hi everyone!! I was coming home today when I found a stray kitten outside and tried to rescue her. People who live in the area where I found her had said she's been there for a few days now and hides up on the inside of a car, so this indicated to me that she doesn't have a mom cat taking care of her. It took me about two hours to lure her out of the car and to a position where I was able to catch her, but I got her and brought her home in a dog carrier I have! She seems to be about six weeks old. I'm planning to take her to a vet in the morning, and I want to keep and care for her. If anyone has any advice, I would absolutely love to hear! I know keeping her warm is important, giving her soft/watery food, and avoiding cow milk.
Thank you so much!
hi! i work in vet med, thank you for adopting a stray! check for any fleas, dirty ears, and a pot-bellied appearance. these are some common symptoms of parasites street cats have. if you find any of those issues, make sure to bring them up to the vet! if you see a lot of fleas, do a quick warm bath with dish soap. fleas can be fatal in young kittens.
if she's around 6 weeks, feeding kitten (not all life stages) food. if she's feral, make sure she feels comfortable around you before hand feeding. this is an important time to socialize feral kittens for companionship.
if you have any other cats in the house, separate them until this kitten gets FeLV/FIV testing.
monitor for any sneezing, eye discharge, drooling, and inappatence. these are common signs of URI and street/shelter cats are very susceptible to them.
this is a lot of information the vet will go over, but these are things to be aware of

edit:
i wanted to discuss vacciations.
typically we start vaccinating kittens/puppies at 8 weeks and then every 4 weeks until 16 weeks because the antibodies provided by the mother's milk begins to wear off when weaning begins (around 4-6 weeks). sometimes they are vaccinated at 6 weeks and this kitty may need to get vaccines earlier since we don't know exactly when he/she was weaned off. your veterinarian will know how to best assess the vaccination schedule.