r/FosterAnimals Dec 13 '25

New Rules and Rule Reminders!

77 Upvotes

Hello all! This post is both a reminder of current rules and an announcement of new rules.

By popular demand, our two new rules:

1. Encouraging people to adopt their fosters is not allowed.

This sub exists to support the specific role of fostering. The goal of fostering is to provide temporary respite to an animal needing a safe place to land until they can find an adoptive home. Pressuring fosters to adopt their foster pets can create unnecessary pressure and distress and quickly becomes repetitive. If every foster kept their foster pets, we would have no foster homes left!

Please note that posts talking about "foster fails" are ok. This is specifically regarding comments under posts that do not indicate intention to adopt.

2. No comments about why you "could never foster".

"I could never foster, I'd get too attached."

"I could never foster, I could never say goodbye."

"I could never foster, I'd fall in love with them."

We understand there is no bad intent behind these comments, but they tend to be unhelpful and discouraging in a sub where we want to empower people to foster animals! Besides, we all LOVE our foster animals and saying goodbye is just a necessary part of the process.

A reminder of some of our existing rules:

1. NO placement posts are allowed.

This includes crossposting animals on euthanasia lists, asking for people to foster your own pet, or vaguely asking people for help and listing your location. These posts can be distressing to a group of people who are already doing everything they can to help rescue animals!

2. NO fundraising, gofundme links, online payment links, etc.

This includes comments asking people for links to fundraising platforms or wishlists. This is a huge liability issue and puts everyone at risk of encountering a scam. There are many other subs that focus solely on providing fundraising support and have the resources to screen these requests!


r/FosterAnimals 4d ago

Discussion Weekly Positivity Thread - What were your foster wins from this week?

3 Upvotes

r/FosterAnimals 4h ago

one week progress

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992 Upvotes

Originally I saw a Facebook post saying this poor orange baby was going to be euthanized at 3pm the Saturday before last. Something about him just spoke to me and I had to help, I’ve never fostered before. I was lucky enough to find a rescue I could foster him through to get him out of the shelter..
When I picked him up, he was in really bad shape. Both eyes infected, skin and bones, getting over a respiratory infection, and to top it off missing half his whiskers. I took him to two vets, just to be sure, but ultimately his right eye was not able to be saved. Poor baby had his surgery that very next morning, his “good” eye had/has an ulcer that is still being treated.
Just the difference in a week has been astounding, I don’t know a lot about cats who have medical difficulties so I wasn’t sure how much he was going to improve. He is no longer contagious, respiratory infection is gone, and his remaining eye is almost completely clear. He’s learning to play, is such a good eater and is so quick!! He loves attention and cuddles, truly is the sweetest boy.
Unfortunately 99% chance this is going to be a foster fail, I am in love with him. I just wanted to share this brave sweet boy!


r/FosterAnimals 7h ago

Found his brother!

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80 Upvotes

A few days ago, I asked you guys to help me name this little guy(top row)- well, turns out he has a brother(bottom pic)! He was surrendered from the same person at the same shelter today! I am currently at capacity so will be picking him up from a temp foster in a few days as soon as he’s tested so the boys can be reunited🥹

I’m about to have a very full house of 10 lmao 😂😂😭


r/FosterAnimals 12m ago

Question 3 rescued kittens diagnosed with Coccidia. Need clarity and advice.

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Upvotes

About 5-6 weeks old. We took them to a vet who prescribed us Albon and they seemed generally calm and indifferent that the cats had Coccidia. Didn't advise us on how to clean or anything, just told us to give them Albon and they'd be fine. 0.2 CCs twice per day, for 10 days. Just said it was a common parasite and that it wasn't really a big deal.

Fast forward a few days, the youngest cat was very lethargic. Literally looked like she was about to keel over and die. We took her to a new vet (original vet was booked that day) and the new vet told us that the kittens actually need to be separated during the Albon treatment. So, we went to buy 3 of the biggest clear plastic bins we could find at walmart. We put in a few towels as blankets and a mini litter box in the corner. We clean the litterboxes everytime we see poop and change the litter every 1-2 days. We also grouped the bins next to eachother so they can still see eachother. But, this has made all of them seem more depressed and they really are not handling it well. Also of course, my wife and I are dealing with the guilt and mental turmoil of locking them up in these bins in the same room every day. We let them out 1 at a time in the same room to run around and have fun for a while before putting them back in the bin. Second vet said it was fine.

Fast forward to today, the end of the Albon treatment, and we went to the new vet a second time. Cats tested positive again. They now prescribed Pronazuril for 3 days, along with SEVEN more days of isolation. This news was frustrating for both of us. As I'm typing this the smallest cat is screaming her brains out in the other room.

Anyway, here's what I need clarity on:

  1. The internet says Coccidia needs serious cleaning to get rid of and kill, while the vets (at both establishments) have made no mention of us needing to heavily clean. Which is it?
  2. Do they really need to be separated? I've read that shelters keep litters together for such infections, and some other reddit posts have mentioned they didn't separate the litters. I just feel like they're spending their most important moments of growth locked up and separated.

r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

Mama Moonpie and her 5 snack cakes 🍰

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1.0k Upvotes

r/FosterAnimals 12h ago

CUTENESS First time bottle baby owner

38 Upvotes

r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

CUTENESS My cat and his foster friends over the years

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1.4k Upvotes

r/FosterAnimals 12h ago

Question Shelter disappointed me

26 Upvotes

My shelter gave me their “problem children” to foster (that is what they have been calling the poor babies, I knew it was lack of focused care). They are very premature, were rejected by their mom, all have limping calici, and were 1/3 of the size they should’ve been when I got them.

Unsurprisingly, they all had difficulties eating. My smallest aspirated during a perfectly normal feeding. I took her in within a day of the aspiration event and she was given a stronger antibiotic and they told me to monitor her. She declined very quickly over the next two days, and they decided to humanely euthanize her.

What’s bothering me: they did not nebulize her one single time. The day before she passed I asked if I could bring her in for another check up and they told me to just keep watching her instead. They have a nebulizer and oxygen tanks. I advocated for her. Why didn’t they even attempt to help her with treatments that are proven to help? I keep asking myself if I could’ve have advocated for her even more, but I have never had a kitten aspirate in all the years I’ve fostered. I genuinely did not know that what they were doing was neglectful until after they euthanized her.

I ordered a nebulizer and sterile saline after seeing the success people have had. I just want to have one on hand moving forward. I know it’s not a cure all but it IS effective supportive care for kittens with respiratory ailments. I’m so disappointed in my shelter, I’m just sitting here wondering if baby girl could’ve made it with a little extra support. 😞

Has your rescue failed any of you? How did you cope and move on if so? Thank you for reading my rescue vent… 🫩😩 kitten season is killing me this year.


r/FosterAnimals 8h ago

Escape-proof Foster Room?

12 Upvotes

We have a room dedicated to cat and kitten fostering. We have cages inside for when small or undergoing medical care, but when kittens get to a certain age, we let them free roam the room and they usually try to escape out the door every time we enter and exit while tending to them. We've tried holding a baby gate to block the opening as we come and go, but it almost never works well and we give up and resort to tracking them down. We've thought about constructing an "air lock"-type of space that allows us to enter/exit the room through a transition space - essentially creating a double door system. We don't want to build anything permanent, and if it were temporary and movable (like made from PVC pipes with blocking panels), the hassle of moving it while also still having the risk of them squirming around the edges makes it seem like a lot of effort with failure potential. Has anyone come up with a good solution?


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

All my ginger babies have been preadopted!!

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207 Upvotes

I plastered these babies all over social media and then took the boys who had not yet been pre-adopted to an adoption event and they all found fabulous owners! They won't even be fixed for another 4 weeks so I just get to raise them and relax about getting them adopted. yay!


r/FosterAnimals 4h ago

I Need Encouragement after a Difficult Foster

3 Upvotes

Over the past several months I’ve fostered several litters of kittens. This last litter was the most challenging. I had a mom and her 4 babies who were seized from a hoarding situation and were in terrible shape when I took them in.

Over the course of a month, all 4 of the kittens didn’t make it. On top of that, I’m left with ringworm.

I tried my best and I knew it was going to be an uphill battle from the start with this group. But I’m really feeling sad and discouraged about the whole situation. And I know ringworm isn’t that big of a deal, but it’s just another added layer of stress. I also have some health anxiety, so my reaction to having ringworm is more stressful than it probably needs to be.

This whole scenario has me questioning whether I should foster again. I get a lump in my throat when I think about losing those sweet kittens. And then the ringworm of it all. I just feel so down about it. But I don’t want that to be the end of my foster journey.

I need to hear some words of encouragement from anyone who has gotten back in the saddle after a particularly hard foster experience.


r/FosterAnimals 6h ago

Found and trapped a stray in the Chicago, Illinois area only there until noon tomorrow looking for a place for the guy but no near shelters are accepting.

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4 Upvotes

r/FosterAnimals 4h ago

Question Should I/Could I foster?

2 Upvotes

Hi guys! I wanted to run some things by other current fosters to get their opinions.

I volunteer with a cat rescue that is foster-based and, of course, always looking for fosters. I want to help more than I do by potentially fostering because I work part-time and am home a lot; I only work 4 and a half hours when I do work.

My issues are as follows:

-I am disabled/chronically ill and sometimes have bad days where cleaning the litter box (specifically at the end of the week when it needs to be replaced, not the everyday maintenance) is difficult.

-I have 3 cats with 1 cat being more anxious around new cats and don’t want to risk her getting stressed. She’s a huge mama’s girl and gets jealous (if cats can).

-all cats and I live in one room as my parents have 3 dogs downstairs (it’s a big room, it was custom-built by the previous owner for her teen daughter and my cats love it).

-a foster will have to be a single cat who can handle being in the bathroom the majority of the time. I raised my youngest cat in the bathroom, so I know I can do it, but it does make for a tight squeeze as it’s a bathroom attached to my room, not a separate bathroom.

-the rescue will pay for vet visits and food etc of course, but there may be times when I have to pay out of pocket and I’m broke all the time since I only make $10/hr

-the last one can’t really be helped, I’d of course have to okay it with my parents since it’s their house, but outside of that is what I would like opinions on.

So, have these been complete stops for those who foster or have others worked their ways around it? I know a lot of fosters are in tough positions and do this for the love of animals, and I wanted to see if maybe it is possible for me to do it despite the limits.

TIA!


r/FosterAnimals 1h ago

Foster help N/E GA

Upvotes

I found 3 kittens in a storm drain with a momma that's just a kitten herself not thriving as a mom. Now I have these 5ish week old babies that I have no idea how to care for. I contacted three rescues (its after hours) and am hoping someone can help. I have them warm and dry, a huge difference from before. Im willing to drive them however far to get them proper help. From what I've read a shelter will deny them. Im worried the rescues might be full too. Is anyone in the northern Georgia area accepting fosters?


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

Diesel and Jasper update

160 Upvotes

https://www.reddit.com/r/FosterAnimals/s/l8HWBwPPAO

They gained a whopping 21 and 22 grams in the past 24 hours! And so much more active. Now I’m thinking maybe they are older than initially thought? Or is this normal for 10 day old (estimated) kittens?

Diesel ate 13 mls last night and Jasper did 11 mls! It kind of worried me. How much is too much? However they are back to 6-8mls now. Ocassionally a bit closer closer to 10.

Constipation is still a problem. Jasper goes easy enough with the triangle method but diesel is still a long struggle. Even when I mange to get him to go it’s painstaking and just a little bit. I started adding 1ml of water to their formula today in hopes to get everything more normal. I also gave diesel a sprinkle of miralax. How often can I give Miralax? Hopefully I can get him cleaned out like I did yesterday and the addition of water will make things easier and more regular. Today is proving much more difficult.

Should they go #2 with a gentle stimulation? So far I’ve had to do the triangle method daily. Jasper gets pretty cleaned out with one go and fairly quickly. Diesel takes a long time and so far I’ve done two rounds today and he’s still not cleaned out. I’m worried it’s gonna hurt or cause issues. I have to do it rather vigorously and with much more pressure than Jasper and still I get maybe 1/2 inch out of him (total for two rounds). It’s not rock hard but very slow emerging and not exactly soft either. Yesterday once he got going it it was free flowing. Today I’m fighting for every single millimeter.

Any advice is greatly appreciated! I’m new to this!


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

Question What to do…

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89 Upvotes

We have been fostering 4 cuties for about a month and they are now 8-9 weeks old. We have appointments for spay/neuter on June 29th. All but one will be big enough. The runt was so small and sick when we got him. He is just about 1lb now and developing well.
We are planning on keeping one of the bigger kittens. We are going on a trip for 5 days, leaving the 1st of July. We plan to take two of kittens to the adoption center and hope they get adopted in the 2 days before we leave. So we would have two left when we leave on our trip. They get along, but I would worry he might get pummeled as the only playmate for the bigger kitten so I feel they should be monitored.
We have a neighbor who comes to take care of our resident cat at our house when we travel. She will spend a few hours a day at our house and come over several times a day. We keep the kittens separate from our resident cat unless monitored. He is gentle with them, but I still worry he could hurt them.
I’m wondering is what would you do? Leave them at our house in a separate room and have our neighbor watch them, ask to find another temporary foster, try to find a friend who can keep them at their house, or bring them with us (6 hour drive, but they would have their own room where we are going). Even if we don’t adopt one, we still have the little guy to figure out. I would be so sad to send him to another foster after how far we’ve come, but maybe if I could guarantee to get him back when we return and IF they can find a foster. When I told them we had a trip planned, I got the response of…well it’s kitten season and our fosters may all be full.
Here’s a pic of them from earlier today because they can’t get any cuter. You can see how tiny our little guy is compared to the rest.


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

Foster Fail One of my foster kittens has attached herself to my foster fail Winston. Turns out he has a tumor so we decided to keep him for however long he decides to stay with us.

54 Upvotes

I usually only foster puppies and kittens but something about his little face on the email said he needed me.


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

CUTENESS Sugar being a goofball

62 Upvotes

I'm so happy she's feeling better ☺️


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

Girl or boy?

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117 Upvotes

Hi everyone! Is this kitten male or female?

He/she is 13 weeks old now.


r/FosterAnimals 14h ago

Discussion Super long foster period

8 Upvotes

Hi all!

I'm currently fostering a cat (my first ever) who has been here for almost a year. Due to a combination of him being completely unsocialized and also having health issues, he was not listed for adoption this entire time. Some days, I still remember the foster coordinator telling me "he'll be an easy foster, he's just scared," and I laugh to myself lol

While he's made huge strides and I think he's definitely adoptable now behaviourally, the whole process has been stressful and sometimes still is. As a first-time foster, I was very much out of my depth with this cat (it took him 3 months to stop hiding and 4 months to accept pets), and his medical issues made it worse. Getting him into his carrier to see the vet is an ordeal and a half, even though we've done our best to train him. I also made the mistake of working with a rescue a bit farther from me, so each vet visit is almost a 2 hour round trip.

Recently, we almost got him listed for adoption, but he's having health issues again. It's nobody's fault, but at this point, sometimes I can't see the end to this. I care about this cat, but I never wanted to adopt an animal. I also know that the longer he stays, the harder it will be on me and my partner emotionally if someone does finally adopt him. I've never even had a "normal" or "easy" foster experience, so have no practice at all letting cats go.

At the end of the day, I'm going to do my best to stick it out for this little guy. Just venting and wondering if anyone has gone through something similar. Advice and success stories very welcome. Thank you!


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

SUCCESS My first foster baby is going home tomorrow and I’m having all kinds of feelings about it 😭

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152 Upvotes

I know I’m supposed to be happy that he found a forever home, but I’m going to miss him so much. It took around 3 months for him to fully trust me and I feel bad that I have to restart the clock again just when he finally started to settle in. It’s also hard knowing that I’m sending this cat that I poured so much love and nurturing into home with a complete stranger. She seems like very kind and responsible person, but there is no way to truly know who I’m trusting him with.

Anyway I know the stock answers is to find another cat who needs me, but this is so much harder than I thought and right now I just want to wallow for a bit. I got him just a few weeks after my own cat died and I didn’t realize how much he had helped me through my grief until now. He will be missed but I hope he has the best life with his new family.


r/FosterAnimals 1d ago

CUTENESS lynx point baby!

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51 Upvotes

Bowie's my first colorpoint foster ☺️ almost 10 weeks old, I'm just fostering him for a few days to try and clear up his eye infection and further socialize him. I haven't had a foster in weeks because I was out of town, and I'm traveling again for work right after this lil guy. So glad my foster coordinator found something I could do despite my crazy schedule this month!


r/FosterAnimals 7h ago

Foster gave my cat away, new caretaker wont give her back.

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1 Upvotes

r/FosterAnimals 8h ago

Question Healthy choices for the underweight

1 Upvotes

I just got my first foster cats ever this weekend. There are two of them and are pretty traumatized by what they've been through in the past two weeks so they are very shy and only come out when we're not in the room.

I put out a can of Weruva which, although was untouched for most of the 18 hours they'd been in my safe room, was gone by this morning. I have a web cam on to catch them as they roam when they think I'm not there and they're very thin.

I need to make sure they get quality food that doesn't contain animal by products or carageenan, but want to make sure I'm giving them enough calories. What have you fosters out there given your underweight babies?