Megyn Scott-Hintz saw Garfield for the first time at her local animal hospital a few weeks ago. After finding the 5-week-old stray outdoors alone, a Good Samaritan left him off.
Scott-Hintz realized she h
Garfield was remarkably peaceful and laid back when she took him home. “He was obviously quite friendly with humans,” Scott-Hintz said, noting that most outdoor kittens at that age are still hissy and wild. “At that moment, he seemed to have no trouble with humans — no fear of anything.”
ad to take in the frail orange cat that needed a foster home. “He was flea-infested, ear mite-infested, and skin and bones,” Scott-Hintz told The Dodo.
Garfield found solace wherever he could find it, and he quickly became friends with Captain Pickles, Scott-senior Hintz’s semi-feral porch cat. “One night, Pickles came in for some dinner and observed [Garfield],” Scott-Hintz explained. “As soon as Pickles sat down on the couch, Garfield ran up to him and smelled his nose, and that was the end of it.”
Pickles had shown little interest in any of Scott-other Hintz’s foster children, but he swiftly established himself as Garfield’s most devoted guardian. “It takes a lot for [Pickles] to want to come inside, so it was unexpected that he wanted to hang out with Garfield,” Scott-Hintz said. “It’s particularly nice that he’s looking for Garfield.”
Pickles was adopted by Scott-Hintz nine years ago. She knew he’d been raised in a cat colony since he’d been ear-tipped and neutered. Pickles had been trying to become a house cat for years, but Scott-Hintz could see he wasn’t happy.
Scott-Hintz stated, “He hid all the time, he’d never come out.” “Once he had access to the outside and could spend as much time on our porch as he wanted, he transformed into an entirely new cat.”
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