View Lost Cats Near Greater Manchester, England M9

Luigi is Missing in Greater Manchester, England

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Status

LOST

Date Last Seen

June 15, 2026

Location Last Seen

Greater Manchester, England M9 6PH

Nearest Landmark

Rochdale road Blackley

Name

Luigi

Sex

Male

PawBoost ID

73033625

Species

Cat

Description

Blue British shorthair

Message from Owner

He is very anxious and scared of everything and everyone. He’s a hse cat and in 6 years has only stepped out once!

Facebook Community Response

A.E. B.
4 days ago
Shared with ❀️ and pray πŸ™ πŸ™
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Janet T.
4 days ago
Shared
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Rebecca W.
5 days ago
Shared
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Jenny R.
5 days ago
Hang items of your unwashed clothing outside your home so he can pick up your scent Repeat every 2days.Call late at night and early mornings shaking the treats.Go out in the garden between 2am and 4am call listen and wait.Put posters up especially on your outdoor bin and in car window.Leaflet drop in your area and physically ask and go with neighbours to check their sheds and garages.Phone local vets.Good luck
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Emma C.
5 days ago
Shared x
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Janine M.
5 days ago
It's worth joining Cats/Kittens FOUND In Greater Manchester They post found cats only and there are new posts on every day.
Reply
Janine M.
5 days ago
*Advice for missing house cats* An escaped house cat will behave very differently from an outdoor cat. For the first 3 days it will likely stay within a 5 house radius. They tend to run out and very quickly become afraid and freeze (the exception would be an unneutered cat who could be chased away fighting or mating). These first 3 days it is vital to follow this advice. Normal advice from lost and found is to put out used litter tray. PLEASE IGNORE THIS ADVICE - I shall explain why... Now your housecat is out of the house, he/she is out of their territory and in others cats territory. Your cat will be afraid and hiding very close. By putting out litter with their pheromones in, you are alerting other cats (maybe feral, aggressive un-neutered toms, or just dominant cats) to your cats presence in their turf. They will automatically react with prepared aggression to see it off. This is the last thing your hiding cat needs. Instead use your own scent or the scent of the home. Something like a pair of owner’s worn socks and used bedding or towels. You want the scent to draw/guide them home. It may sound distasteful but ..pee in a bottle and pour/spray it at cat spray height INSIDE your garden boundary. This is a scent cats know well and, again, can draw them home, it has the added bonus of repelling other cats. The contents of your vacuum are also very good scattered in the garden. When searching, it is useless to call your cat. Your voice will be full of anxiety and they will not recognise it. Besides, a frightened cat could have you stood next to them and not respond due to fear. Instead, grab a mobile and walk round making boring telephone calls or chat with a friend while searching. This normalises your voice to one your cat will recognise. Listen carefully for faint meows all the time. When searching, go out late at night when traffic noise has subsided. This is when they are most likely to calm a little and respond. Take a torch and search under hedges, in little gaps, anywhere a cat can squeeze to hide. Also look high, trees, garage roofs etc. Cats can go high when threatened or frightened. The torch light will reflect in their eyes making it easy for you to see them. Ask all neighbours to check sheds, garages, outbuildings and greenhouses. Do not be shy, offer to wait while they check! Even better, offer to check for yourself with their supervision. The most important advice is this...In the evening and through the night, leave a door open (of course for security be in the next room). Keep the entrance as quiet and dark as possible. Make their path home the least frightening as you can. Only when they are in the home and familiar with the surroundings again will they relax. The majority of missing house cats make their way home in the early hours of the morning when they feel it is safest. Do not be surprised if your cat comes in the garden but still will not come to you. This is fear and nothing personal. Back away and leave an entrance to the house clear. If this happens try to have the loan of a trap on standby from a local recue or the RSPCA but please NEVER leave a trap unattended. Inform your chip company if chipped and email a picture and description to all local rescue centres and vets (including out of hours). Most of all try to stay calm and follow this advice x
Reply
Susan O.
5 days ago
Shared do,hope back home soon πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ€žπŸ€žπŸ€žπŸ€žπŸ’•
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Dee L.
5 days ago
πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»πŸ™πŸ»
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