And Boris lived happily ever after

Faithful menandcats.com readers may recall some time ago that I put out a call to Save Boris – the famous cat who’d been featured in the New York Times – and that my friend Dave happily took Boris in. In today’s NY Times “The Hunt” column “Where are they now?” the fate of Boris is revealed to the world (although there is no mention of menandcats.com’s role in securing a new home for Boris, perhaps because the Times has already covered the Men and Cats phenomenon):

[Boris] landed in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, with Dave Sargent, 34, an art handler who wanted a playmate for his cat, Shouyu. Like Boris, Shouyu has cowlike black-and-white markings, though his nose has a blaze, not a heart.

Boris, all 20 shy pounds of him, spent his first weeks cowering beneath the sheets, Mr. Sargent said. But now, the cats happily play and wrestle. Boris spoons with Mr. Sargent at night.

Ms. Davis intended to reclaim Boris after the six-month wait, but realized that another move would be tough on such a creature of habit. After Maxine’s birth, she feared that Boris, unintentionally provoked, might swat at the baby. Meanwhile, Mr. Sargent grew increasingly attached to the cat.

Ms. Davis and Mr. Sargent were reluctant to divulge their sentiments to each other. But now that they have, they’ve agreed that Boris will remain in his Greenpoint home.

“It made me teary” to know Boris is so happily settled, Ms. Davis said.

“I couldn’t imagine him not being here,” Mr. Sargent said. “He is such an important part of my family now.”

In NYC cat news…

A cat survived a 27-story fall from a high-rise building in Manhattan, while a man with a tree service used his harness equipment to rescue a cat stuck in a tree on Staten Island – the cat had been up for four days while his desperate family tried to get him down, calling upon all kinds of city agencies who weren’t able to coax the feline down. The cat’s owner, Richard, told the Staten Island advance “sleeping the last four nights hadn’t been the same with out his feline companion around to wake him up.”

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Greg & Mr. Micawber

This is Greg, taking a nap with his feline friend Mr. Micawber. Greg’s wife, Tasha, says  “Mr. Micawber was a rescued cat in foster care. He stayed in foster care for 4 years; no one wanted him. He had skin allergies and was missing fur and had scabs on his back. When he came to live with us, we changed his diet and gave him a herbal allergy remedy, and now he is doing much better.” She reports that Mr. Micawber is very cute and playful. Greg refers to Mr. Micawber as a “fine fellow” and Mr. M. sleeps with them both every night but really favors Greg!

Isn’t it amazing how a little TLC can often transform an animal that no one wanted – and who might have otherwise been euthanized – into a faithful companion providing many years of joy?

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