
Juno did not have any soft stools all day since the morning round yesterday. I think I should give her the Feline Gut Soothe for at least a week or so now.

It’s so good of her to willingly lick up the probiotic mixed with Ciao treats. I don’t have to force feed her.

Planning her escape through the front door by pretending to play at the cat tree. It’s a plan, because she knows Gerald has come for his morning post-breakfast snack of kibble.

Gerald ate Equilibrio today at a rating of 4, as I had expected. He did not walk away. I’ve already fed him a full plate of breakfast consisting of a can of food, raw gizzards and raw chicken breast meat at 3.00am. He will come for a post-breakfast snack, then he’s off until the afternoon. So I think our cats rate Equilibrio a 4.3. Monge still wins paws down.

“I didn’t get to escape, Riley. I failed.”
Dua kali lima engkau berdua ni, Riley and Juno.
By the way, Juno weighed 2.04kg today. Finally, crossed the 2kg mark. Her weight gain is pretty slow. I think Juno has underlying healthy issues. Rather “toh see” as the Cantonese would say, ie. “comes with baggage”. Medical baggage, that is. Luckily I rescued her. Otherwise, how would she survive on the street? She had a collapsed lung, then suspected mycoplasma infection, and the worst, coccidia infection. She still has soft stools every now and then which has to be treated with probiotics.
I will not rehome rescues who have medical baggage. Like Indy, he had so much medical baggage. I did not rehome him at all. Didn’t even try. I only rehomed perfectly healthy rescues. But then again, the Monsters all had a clean bill of health and I rehomed them, but see what happened? I had to take them back. Rio was already gone. Robin was on the way, actually, so underweight with chronic diarrhoea and the adopter said it was because of the change of environment or me converting him back to raw food, but actually, he had had the chronic diarrhoea for “a long time”, says the vet. It took Robin months to heal and bounce back, now he’s super solid. Saved his life, otherwise he would have not made it. Rey also had skin problems and urinary issues when I took him back. Nursing them back cost me thousands.
No more rehoming unless it’s to trusted friends. Furby is doing so well under my dear friend, Maslinda.

Juno, you’re staying with us. Let’s hope I live on for another 20 years or so.
