Trash to treasure: Adorable kittens found in rubbish bin are tiny but can fill your heart

From trash to treasure: ‘We may be little but we sure can fill up your heart.’ / Photo: Chanel Comis
by Katerina Lorenzatos Makris
If you love animals, you might be afraid to take out your trash. Especially during kitten and puppy seasons, it is not uncommon to find live, half-dead, or worse babies in rubbish bins here on the island of Kefalonia, elsewhere in Greece, in the United States, and in many other places around the world.
Three of the many rescued pooches with whom my husband and I share our home in California are from the garbage bins just down the road from our house here in Kefalonia. Ironically, I had gone to the bins so as to throw away the poop produced by the litter of five other puppies who I was fostering in that spring of 2008.
Now those three “trash puppies” of ours are healthily grown up and spend most of their time vying over who gets to sit in my husband’s lap. So there are occasional happy endings to the abominable dumping episodes.
Still, those of us who have seen too much of this cruel and cowardly custom cringe when we’re near trash receptacles of all shapes and sizes, fervently praying we won’t hear whimpering or mewing.
Unfortunately that’s what happened to my new friend Chanel Comis last weekend.
Do you have a soft spot in your home and your heart for one of her adorable trash babies? Or can you help find great families for them?
Here’s the message Comis sent me…
Dear Katerina,
My name is Chanel and I’m a local here in Kefalonia. My friends and I were cycling in Lixouri this past weekend and we found two kittens thrown away in the dumpster. They are four weeks old and so very sweet.
I know you have a lot of experience finding homes and I wondered if you could post this and advise me where else we could post.
Thank you,
Chanel
Further, she added…
These two lovely sibling kittens (left girl, right boy) are looking for a qualified, responsible family to give them love. They were found in a trash can and now they are in a temporarily home in Mavrata (Kefalonia, Greece). They are approximately 3-4 weeks old, they are clean, flea-free, and already friendly with other cats and dogs.
If you are interested please call (00 30) 694 9941 409 [Greek mobile number].
Please share to find loving homes for these cute babies.
International adoptions to qualified homes are pawssible.
Please FOLLOW Spicy Stories Save Lives by clicking the ‘SUBSCRIBE’ button above. You’ll receive email notifications of our new articles, we will NEVER give your email address to anyone else, and it’s free!
Please note: Spicy Stories Save Lives is proudly providing part sponsorship for several Kefalonian animals including Viktor and Violetta and their mom Vaso (if/when we find her).
Meanwhile, Kefalonia Animal Trust (KATs) provides free spay/neuter for hundreds of animals per year here. Please give to KATs via PayPal or bank transfer. Spay/neuter and education are the animals’ best hope for a better future.
Also please consider Animal Rescue Kefalonia (ARK), another group on the island that runs a shelter and works miracles with terribly few resources.
Spicy Stories Save Lives and the author of this article have no affiliation with KATs and ARK other than as a friend, volunteer, and donor.
Seen our book? Your Adopted Dog: Everything You Need to Know About Rescuing and Caring for a Best Friend in Need, by Shelley Frost and Katerina Lorenzatos Makris, available through Amazon.com.
The Alphabet Puppies: Abandoned in supermarket parking lot on Greek island
Rescued dogs Jorja and Ipo headed to bright new lives in Holland tonight
‘Don’t leave without me!’: Puppy Ipo will follow foster sister Jorja to a new life
Have tiara, will travel: Greek (canine) princess to emigrate for new throne
Heart marking on puppy’s face symbolizes her loving nature, waiting to give it all to you
Puppy on a chain will never be chained again
Traumatized puppy Violetta now safe thanks to Greek islanders’ teamwork
Terrified feral puppy, please let me catch and save you
Small but spunky animal rescue group on Greek island launches push to spay/neuter 100 dogs
Katerina Lorenzatos Makris is a career journalist, author, and editor. Her fiction includes 17 novels for Simon and Schuster, E.P. Dutton, Avon, and other major publishers (under the name Kathryn Makris), as well as a teleplay for CBS-TV, and a short story for The Bark magazine. She has written hundreds of articles for regional wire services and for outlets such as National Geographic Traveler, The San Francisco Chronicle, Travelers’ Tales, NBC’s Petside.com, Animal Issues Reporter.org, and Examiner.com (Animal Policy Examiner).


