View Lost Cats Near St Helens, England WA10

Blossom is Missing in St Helens, England

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Status

LOST

Date Last Seen

May 24, 2026

Location Last Seen

St Helens, England WA10 4BH

Nearest Landmark

Constance street, Taylor park area and surrounding areas

Name

Blossom

Sex

Female

PawBoost ID

72931724

Species

Cat

Description

Grey and white striped cat

Message from Owner

Blossom is an inside cat, we think she escaped through an open window around 2am-5am Sunday morning. She is 1 years old, is the sweetest soul and we are missing her dearly. Her brother Kevin (bonded) will not settle and is now refusing food including treats. We have put up posters, posted flyers, knocked on neighbours doors, have been looking throughout the day/night/early hours of the morning and we still can’t find her. She is spayed and microchipped, we have alerted all local vets and charities if she is brought in. Blossom is very scared and likely hiding, with the hot weather we are now increasing worried and just her want home and treated at the vets. If you see her please try and secure her and ring this number -7 Thank you

Facebook Community Response

Eileen D.
4 days ago
Shared
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Ava B.
1 week ago
Jenny Ratcliff thank you x
Reply
Ava B.
1 week ago
Saz Hockey Hi, we’ve done everything we can do. We’ve put up flyers, posted flyers, knocked on doors and spoke to neighbours, left out clothing, food, water, posted on numerous social media, contacted vets and charities and asked if we can search gardens unfortunately no one will let us look in their gardens and during early hours/morning/late afternoon/evening etc we’ve been searching and calling for her. It’ll be 4 days tomorrow and we haven’t seen or heard anything
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Ava B.
1 week ago
Sharon Heydon Hi, yes we’ve been doing this and are continuing to do this until she’s home
Reply
Sharon H.
1 week ago
It’s absolutely Vital if you haven’t already to do this ASAP! Especially with the hot weather now! Also check behind fences, outhouses, in bushes etc in case he is injured or become unwell and are hiding somewhere!! Most cats are found by doing this!! 🙏🏼
Reply
San P.
1 week ago
This is a long read but worth following to get your cat back. Missing cat tips 🚫🚫It is important that you advise the chip company that your cat is lost/stolen. If it’s chip checked and it’s not logged as lost/stolen the finder will be told to return it to where it was found and that will not help to get your cat home 🚫🚫 Firstly, check your own home, garden, and the immediate vicinity THOROUGHLY. Cats seldom stray far, but some of them have a positive genius for getting shut in sheds, garages, cars, greenhouses. Check also any standing water-butts, ponds or similiar. Check under all bushes, decking and in gardens, using a long stick and a torch if necessary. Knock on neighbours doors and ask them to check sheds/garages/outhouses WHILE YOU WAIT in case your cat has got shut in (cats are incredibly inquisitive!). Ask neighbours to prop open doors so if your cat is scared and hiding she/he doesn't miss the opportunity to get out if the door is only opened briefly. ‼️‼️ This may sound bizarre but IT WORKS. Your cat recognises the smell of home. Spread hoover contents around the outside of your house. Hang dirty washing on your line, put smelly trainers in your garden with any cat bedding. Anything that smells familiar will help guide your cat home if s/he has lost their scent ‼️‼️ Go out looking at night to check, when it is quiet and there is less traffic. Work your way back towards home as you call them, so not to inadvertently lead them further away from home. Take a powerful torch and leave out food. If possible, make sure there is a way for your cat to get back in the house even if you are asleep (eg, wedge open the cat flap). Next check all the surrounding streets, again checking under bushes and in undergrowth. If there are fields/woods nearby, thoroughly search these too.Check any empty houses as cats can get through the smallest of spaces. KEEP doing all these things as when scared cats go into survival mode and may not even respond to their owner at first. Make posters/fliers and put them up anywhere and everywhere (eg stuck to telegraph poles and similar). Stick one in the back window of your car. Local shops, post office, pub, local primary schools (small children are incredibly observant) anywhere really. Ask local vets to display a copy. Speak to local postman and dog walkers to ask them to TELL you if they see your cat. Consider printing off enough fliers to put them through people’s letterboxes down your street and in the area. Not everybody is on social media. If there are any distinctive physical conditions or characteristics about your cat, make sure you feature them prominently in any fliers, online appeals, etc. Alert all vets in the area and give them a description of your cat. Ask local vets to display a poster of your missing cat. Even if your cat is chipped, not all vets routine scan for a chip!!! Chips can also fail or migrate to anywhere in your cat. Ring the RSPCA/cats protection and any rescues in the area as any of these places may end up with him so best to give them a description too. Again, not all rescue centres routinely scan a cat for a chip See if the local paper runs free lost and found pets ads. Check the found and make sure your pet is listed as lost. Again, not everybody is on Facebook. Use Facebook (set to public and tag yourself in your kitty’s photo so you can follow up any leads from subsequent shares) to share your missing cat. It is ESSENTIAL to include a clear photo, colour/breed/distinguishing features, where s/he has gone missing from (district, town and county) and when your cat was last seen. Say if your cat is chipped and neutered or not. Ask people to share/retweet. Share your cat to any local lost and found pets’pages, on national lost cat pages, on the Facebook pages of any local cat rescue groups, on local vets and larger community groups. The bigger the audience of the groups you share to the better. Always include your post code and a mobile contact number. Ask everyone to share. If you are not on social media, ask a family member or friendly neighbour to do this for you. Follow up any and every lead you get until you have absolutely discounted 100% that this is your cat. Remember that most people are spectacularly unobservant and quite capable of identifying a tom as a queen and vice versa. Contact all the local vets by phone to see if your cat has been brought in injured. KEEP DOING THIS at weekly intervals, as you may not speak to the same person every time, plus your cat may have been brought in the day after you phoned the last time. Contact all the local cat rescues by phone to see if your cat has been brought in injured. KEEP DOING THIS at weekly intervals, as you may not speak to the same person every time, plus your cat may have been brought in the day after you phoned the last time. If your cat is chipped, contact the chip company to ensure they have your correct and up to date contact details, especially your telephone numbers. Don’t wait for them to come to you. Alert the chip company that he's missing, put him on animal search and missing pet register as both are free After a few days, contact the cleansing department of your local council. They often record when the street cleaning services picked up deceased animals in the road. While this may not give you the answer that you want, if they have no record, that is hopeful, and if the worst comes to the worst, at least you will finally know what happened. Keep checking, keep looking, check and re-check, and keep contacting the vets and the shelters. If you make yourself enough of a pain in the arse, they’ll remember you. Also check local re-homing and rescue sites in case your cat has been found and is now being offered for re-homing. If your cat is pedigree (or looks like one!!), check Gumtree and other ‘free’ selling sites just in case your cat has been stolen. Consider offering a reward, as a last resort, but make sure if you do that you set out the conditions under which it will be paid very clearly. The last thing you need is to get into some sort of Mexican standoff with some meathead who has found your cat and thinks he can screw an extra £100 out of you over and above what you have offered before he even tells you if it’s alive or dead... Finally, keep a record of everywhere you have advertised your cat so that you can take down posters and update all social media posts with the good news. If your cat wasn’t chipped and neutered, please do both when they return home.
Reply
Jenny R.
1 week ago
Hang items of your unwashed clothing outside your home so she can pick up your scent Repeat every 2days.Call late at night and early mornings shaking the treats.Go out in your 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
Reply
Saz H.
1 week ago
Please always check neighbours sheds and gardens yourself. Your cat will be scared and more likely to respond to you. Be patient, it may take them time to come out of hiding. Go out late at night or early hours of morning when it's quiet and safer for cats to cross roads and come out of hiding. Try to search by thinking of your home as centre of a circle. Go to edge of circle, then start calling, stop, listen hard, repeat slowly all the way back home. Repeat from different points on circle. If your cat hears you they will follow your voice in the right direction. Do same when door knocking. Your cat could be laying low to feel safe.
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