View Lost Cats Near Pendleton, SC

Ivy (Bitty) is Missing in Pendleton, SC

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Status

LOST

Date Last Seen

March 26, 2026

Location Last Seen

Pendleton, SC 29670

Nearest Landmark

Whispering Oaks Neighborhood

Name

Ivy (Bitty)

Sex

Female

PawBoost ID

72732778

Microchip #

981020055059847

Species

Cat

Description

Light orange brown tabby cat. Light green eyes. Doesn’t like to be held and is skittish. Almost 2 years old. Spayed and chipped. Freckle on top of nose and orange streak on forehead.

Message from Owner

Please help us find our Bitty. She disappeared the day before we left for vacay and hasn’t been seen since. She’s a small, skinny tabby with a long tail. We miss her and are so worried. Any info would be helpful.

Facebook Community Response

Amber C.
2 months ago
Thank you
Reply
Suzy C.
2 months ago
Amber Chasteen thank you for having her spayed and microchipped ❤️ Be sure to contact the chip company and tell them that she's missing. Also make sure your contact info is up-to-date on their website. If you haven't already, put up flyers everywhere as many people aren't on social media. Give flyers to every vet clinic, rescue, and shelter in the area in case she turns up. Ask your neighbors to check their cameras, garages, sheds, and crawlspaces. Ask them all if they had any visitors or contractors doing work on their houses around the time she went missing. If so, call the visitors and businesses and ask them if they had an accidental stowaway. Walk the entire neighborhood in the wee hours with a flashlight and look for glowing eyes. Look up in trees in case she was chased coming home. Call her in a regular voice (not panicked) and gently shake a treat bag if she likes that kind of stuff. If she's injured or scared, she's probably hunkered down and hiding. She may not answer you when you call, but that's just instinctual as a vocal cat gives away their location to predators, and an injured cat is prey. Put her beds/blankets and some of your dirty clothes on your porches and around the perimeter of your yard. When she comes home, you might consider building or buying a catio (some people have bought pre-made chicken coops and "attached" them to their houses with kitty access through a window); or, if you have a fenced-in yard, consider putting up cat-fencing or coyote rollers on top of the fence to keep her safely in your yard (both can be DIY). Good luck ❤️
Reply
Delores C.
2 months ago
I am so sorry she hasn’t shown back up. I know how much y’all miss and love her. Animals become family
Reply
Amber C.
2 months ago
Suzy Creamcheese She’s spayed and chipped. Indoor/outdoor
Reply
Kay B.
2 months ago
Shared
Reply
Suzy C.
2 months ago
Is she spayed? Microchipped? Outdoor only, or indoor/outdoor?
Reply
Janene P.
2 months ago
Please check out this article I copied from a person’s page: Helpful Tips for Finding a Missing Cat From my experience of Coaching/Recovering over 2000 cats as a Lost Pet Professional, I have found that Escaped Indoor Cats are extremely predictable and are not lost per se- just displaced from their inside territory and hiding close by- Waiting to get back in but can't open the door. Right after dark search with a flashlight looking for eyeshine in all the hiding places around the outside of your house and garage - starting at the escape point working out to a 3-5 house radius where the cat could hide including up a tree or on a roof- especially if there are dogs around. Let the flashlight do the work- don't invade hiding places or the cat may move or run. Always leave the escape door open during this search because if the cat runs- it will likely be to that door. Search any bat opening that may be accessible thru a broken window or open door etc. If seen, sit and calmly coax- let the cat come to you- DO NOT approach - be patient. If it has rained -the cat would move to a completely dry hiding place which may include open garages and sheds where they may also get closed in. If not found in the searches- speak calmly to the kitty near the escape door -NOT frantic stressful calling - and make the noises you do at feeding time- crinkle treat bag - open a can etc . It's not about food- it's about a familiar sound. If no meowing answers or no kitty appears after a while- go inside and leave the way in open. Repeat talking before you go to bed. Leave the door the cat escaped thru ajar from late night to dawn and it will likely return- no lights inside or out. No food in the first 5 days as the cat knows there is food in its territory. NO LITTER ever -that's a dangerous myth and clothes do not help- cats do not navigate by smell - they have internal gps. If the door the cat left from can't be left open- leave the garage door up cat height and an inside door open or a place to wait up high like a cat tree.. Most will show themselves when you open the door early morning with the same feeding time noises and talk Also all of this is step for step in my expanded article in the "files" section here on Recovering an Escaped Indoor Cat along with the next steps to take along the way as you may eventually need to feed/film/trap after the first 5 days and put out signs. Cats have no system to recognize their owner's scent... - in fact in a study to see if cats recognzied the owner's scent or sought comfort from it...Cats ignored the Owner's scent as expected. Cats mark human friends and cat friends.... with their own pheromones..in a system called "bunting"because they have no system to recognize an Owner...Cats evolved for thousands of years without owners....- they rely on scent only within their species to communicate and to mark their territory and friendly safe items in their territory..Cats are very, very predictable if you understand their physical and mental systems. Cats use GPS/magnetoreception to navigate to their territory anyway- not scent. They will move toward an Owner's calm voice but have no way to identify a human's scent.....Those are dog ss and behaviors. Cats use scent primarily to differentiate - not to navigate and their scent range is very limited...in the 15-20 ft range unless a scent is on the wind. In cats, scent determines ual status and is used to communicate, to interact socially, and to identify territory - not to navigate or find home or owners... Please do try putting clothes out with your scent on them. It does work!! Praying you find I y soon and safe and sound.
Reply
Sheri D.
2 months ago
Post on Nextdoor and look at night with a flashlight. Her eyes will glow. Please do not take advice to put her litter box outside. Litter attracts coyotes. They are huge threat to outdoor cats in this area. If found, please consider indoors-only.
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