
George the one-eyed cat who came into the care of Cats Protection’s Gildersome Homing Centre has settled into his forever home with his partially-sighted owner.

Many of us are getting used to a ‘new normal’ due to restrictions from the COVID-19 lockdown, and that includes charities like Cats Protection. In order to continue to be #HereForTheCats and find the moggies in our care loving new families, we’ve had to adopt a brand new way of rehoming.

TV critic and garden security cat PK, who was adopted from Cats Protection’s Downham Market Adoption Centre, has proved the perfect quarantine companion to his owner who is on furlough due to lockdown restrictions.

16-year-old tabby Summer arrived at Cats Protection’s Cornwall Adoption Centre as an arthritic and emaciated stray. The mature moggy was so thin that a member of the centre team could fit their thumb and first finger in a circle around her abdomen.

Ginger cat Harrison was rescued in a dreadful state from a multi-cat household. The scrawny moggy was brought in to Cats Protection’s Wrexham Adoption Centre following a plea for help from a vet who was dealing with a case of a house full of 29 cats.

Great Aunt Ethel, the mature moggy who was found sleeping rough in a Norfolk car park, has found a loving forever home in which to live out her twilight years.

Two kittens just old enough to leave their mother were found tied in a plastic bag, suffering from eye damage likely to be deliberate wounding.

When the COVID-19 lockdown began in March 2020, Cats Protection sadly had to put adoptions on hold to keep our teams, the public and the cats safe.

Many of you were moved by the plight of Scrappy, Dusty and Rusty – three tiny kittens found at a landfill site last November.Our Ipswich Branch took in the five-week-old kittens after they were

The kittens rescued from under a bush in May and cared for by Cats Protection's Dereham Adoption Centre are now three months old and have been happily rehomed.