Cat sealed up in box survives 8-day journey by mail - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:15 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
News

Cat sealed up in box survives 8-day journey by mail

The recipient of a shipment of DVDs was "somewhat startled" when a Siamese cat jumped out of the large box that had arrived in the mail.

Owner turned her back and didn't notice her cat had hopped in before she sealed box

Cupcake, a Siamese cat, was accidentally mailed by her owner to a company in West Sussex in a box along with her old DVDs. (Grove Lodge Veterinary Group/Facebook)

The recipient of a shipment of DVDs was "somewhat startled" when a Siamese cat jumped out of the large box that had arrived in the mail.

Julie Baggott, the cat's owner, had not intended to send her cat on an eight-day journey from her home county in Cornwall, England, to West Sussex, more than 400 kilometres away.

Baggott had been packing up DVDs to send to a buyer on the other side of the southern English coast when her cat, Cupcake, dove into the large box for nap. Without realizing her cat was inside, she sealed the box and then sent it on its way.

"When I realized she was missing, it was the most horrible, scary feeling," Baggott told the BBC. Thinkingher cat had run away, she gatheredfamily and neighbours to look for Cupcake.

"We made posters and walked miles across fields, forests and woods looking for her," she said.

The next week, Ziffit, a service that trades used goods for cash, opened the box and found the cat, whichappearedquite unhealthy, they wrote in blog post on their website.

"We're used to opening our customers' boxes and finding all kinds of books, CDs and DVDs, but this is a new one for us," said Paul Treanor, one of Ziffit'sdirectors.

The company reached out to the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, acharity that picked up the cat and handed her to the Grove Lodge Vets, according to a post on their blog.

"She was quite dehydrated and obviously really quite scared, quite nervous," Ben Colwell, a vet who treated Cupcake, told the Guardian. "She's done really, really well, she's responded to fluids really well."

Cupcake had been implanted with a microchip, which the veterinarian scanned to identifyherowner.

Baggottwashappy to have her cat back more or less unscathed.

"It was a miracle she was alive, she's managed to survive that awful ordeal,"Baggottsaid to the BBC.

The Royal Mail prohibits sending live animals through the mail. aside from insects, fish eggs, worms and spiders.