Found Kittens? Read This First.

Every spring, well-meaning people scoop up weeks-old kittens, thinking they've been abandoned. Most of the time, mom is just a few yards away foraging — and the best thing you can do for those kittens is leave them with her.

When You Should Step In

Cold to the touch

Kittens can't regulate their own body temperature for the first 3 weeks. A cold kitten is in immediate danger.

Visible injuries or distress

Bleeding, struggling to breathe, eyes glued shut, or constant crying — these need help right now.

Mom hasn't returned in 8+ hours

Watch from a safe distance (mom won't return if she sees you). If a full work-day passes with no sign of mom, step in.

Immediate environmental danger

Predators, traffic, extreme weather, or a location that's about to be disturbed — relocate (don't remove) only if mom is around, otherwise rescue.

Trusted Kitten Care Resources

When kittens really do need rescue, these are the resources we lean on too. Bookmark them.

Kitten Lady

Hannah Shaw's videos and guides are the gold standard for neonatal kitten care — bottle feeding, stimulating them to potty, weaning, and the whole timeline.

Visit Kitten Lady

Kitten Lady on YouTube

Step-by-step videos for every age and emergency. Start with "How to bottle feed a kitten" if you've got neonates in your hands.

Watch on YouTube

Kitten Lady on Facebook

Active community where fosterers share situations and get fast answers. Tag her account when you're stuck.

Visit Facebook

Ready to Help? You Don't Have to Do It Alone.

If you've decided the kittens really do need rescue, our Finder-to-Foster program provides food, supplies, and vaccinations so you can foster them in your home while we work on a permanent outcome.