Originally published May 13, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified May 13, 2007 at 2:02 AM
No food or water, but North Carolina cat survives 35 days in crate
After Eric Congdon opened a crate from China and discovered a cat inside, coming up with a name for the furry stowaway was easy. China the cat had...
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. — After Eric Congdon opened a crate from China and discovered a cat inside, coming up with a name for the furry stowaway was easy.
China the cat had chewed through one of the boxes before it left Shanghai on April 3 and spent at least 35 days on a ship inside the container filled with motorcycle gear.
"I saw something in the container move," Congdon said. "I turned up the headlights on the forklift to get a better look."
He saw the cat cowering in a corner, weak but alive. Congdon, owner of Olympia Moto Sports in Hendersonville, said he and a co-worker called the county's animal services when the cat would not let them near.
A co-worker of Congdon's plans to adopt China if she checks out with a veterinarian. North Carolina law says any animal coming into the country must be vaccinated and quarantined for six months.
"We have to take precautions," animal-services manager Brenda Miller said.
How could China survive for so long on no food and water?
"Usually we say that animals can only survive a few weeks without food and only a few days without water," Raleigh veterinarian Michelle Misavage said. "The theory is that cats have such good kidneys their bodies adjust to the lack of water and somehow they received small amounts of moisture from condensation."
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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