Desperate plea sent out for cat who has spent 234 days at a Cambs animal centre

Black and white cat
-Credit: (Image: Reach Publishing Services Limited)


The RSPCA in Cambridgeshire has issued an urgent plea to find a home for a cat who 'needed help' when he was found roaming in the local area. Accirding to the animal charity, a staggering 118 animals at national RSPCA centres have been waiting more than 100 days for a new home, including Fenton from RSPCA Block Fen Animal Centre in Cambridgeshire.

New data released today (Wednesday, October 16) reveals that rescue animals are spending even longer in the charity’s care. Fenton is one of them and has now spent 234 days in RSPCA Block Fen Animal Centre’s care, without being offered a forever home, highlighting the ongoing rehoming crisis across England and Wales.

The RSPCA say they hope their fortunes will soon change, as part of its annual Adoptober October rehoming drive. Fenton is one of 118 dogs, cats and other animals at RSPCA national rehoming centres that have been waiting for a new home for more than 100 days.

The charity said: "Fenton arrived into RSPCA care after he was found straying and needed help. He is a cheeky boy who is full of life. Fenton enjoys spending his time outside watching the world go by on his cat scratcher or having a well deserved snooze in his bed. He is looking for a home where he would be the only pet and staff and volunteers at the centre hope this Adoptober will be the month for him to finally find his forever home.

"Across England and Wales, the average length of time dogs, cats and rabbits are having to wait before someone adopts them has risen by almost one third (31%) over the past five years (from 31.7 days in 2019 to 41.4 days in 2023), according to new data from the RSPCA released today. Consequently, many rehoming centres are bursting at the seams and unable to take in new animals - with many in costly emergency boarding centres while they wait for space."

Karen Colman, who leads the RSPCA team finding places for rescued animals, said: “We are appealing to potential adopters to - where possible - consider rehoming pets which have spent a particularly long time waiting for their forever home at our centres.

“We have so many absolutely wonderful dogs, cats and rabbits who through absolutely no fault of their own are sitting at rescue centres waiting patiently for the next chapter of their lives to begin. That chapter cannot start without the public coming forward to offer them homes.

“As well as the lucky animals who tend to fly out of our centres into new homes, there are others who have more specific rehoming requirements because of the environments and conditions they were subjected to before being rescued. Very sadly, these are the animals we find most challenging to find new homes for.

“We are especially keen for those people with higher levels of pet-owning experience and patience to step forward and consider adopting one of our more ‘hard to rehome’ animals, because the situation has reached a crisis point.

“Spaces at our rehoming centres are like gold dust. The longer rescue animals remain unadopted, the longer others have to wait for a space at our rehoming centres. There’s a log-jam that prevents another newly rescued animal from getting a rehoming place. We currently have hundreds of animals in our care forced to wait in temporary and emergency boarding accommodation because pets already at our rehoming centres are not being adopted fast enough.

“Our rehoming centres are crying out for people who have the desire, dedication, time, facilities and willingness to step forward and offer to adopt our long stay animals. They can do this with the confidence that the RSPCA rehoming team will give them all the help, advice and support they need to make the animals transition from centre to home a positive one.”

Karen hopes the RSPCA’s annual Adoptober rehoming drive could finally provide the “rehoming moment” for the charity’s long-stay animals. She added: “It’s heartbreaking. There are so many pets that have been with us for 100 days or more and have still not been rehomed.

“While animals living in our rehoming centres are loved and cared for, it’s not the life we want to see for pets in the long-term. They all deserve a special home where they can be cherished and be part of someone’s family.”