View Reunited Cats Near Greater Manchester, England M33

Reunited Cat in Greater Manchester, England M33

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Status

REUNITED - reunited after 248 days, 23 hours

Date Last Seen

September 19, 2025

Name

Winnie

Sex

Female

PawBoost ID

72081054

Species

Cat

Description

Black and white - white line on face

Winnie's Owner Says

Winnie is home after 9 months missing! Thank you to everyone who helped look for Winnie and kept sharing her posts!

Facebook Community Response

Mary H.
4 hours ago
Fantastic news
Reply
Andre M.
12 hours ago
You should never allow your cat to roam free outdoors. Free-roaming cats face drastically shortened lifespans (2–5 years versus 12–18 years indoors) due to cars, predators, poisons, and infectious diseases like FIV and feline leukemia. They also devastate local wildlife, ing billions of birds and small mammals annually, and can become neighborhood nuisances by yowling, spraying, or digging in gardens. Instead of free roaming, provide safe outdoor access via a catio, leash training, or supervised walks—paired with plenty of indoor enrichment like climbing trees, puzzle feeders, and window perches. However, even the most careful cat owner faces the risk of an accidental escape—a door left ajar, a torn screen, or a sudden dash past your feet. That’s why every cat should have both a microchip and a GPS tracker as a critical backup. · Microchip (permanent ID): A rice-sized implant under the skin, registered to your contact info. It has no battery and never fails. If your lost cat is found by a stranger or picked up by animal control, a vet or shelter will scan it to reunite you. Without a chip, your cat is legally a stray and could be rehomed or euthanized. Crucially, it is not a tracker—you cannot "ping" a chip. · GPS tracker (active locator): Attaches to your cat’s collar. If your cat slips out, you open an app and see their real-time location within feet. This turns hours of frantic searching into minutes of direct recovery, especially when the cat hides under a porch, in bushes, or inside a neighbor’s shed. Limitations: requires recharging every few days, needs a subscription, and falls off if the collar breaks. Used together, they cover both immediate escape and long-term worst-case scenarios. The GPS tracker helps you catch the escape within minutes; the microchip ensures you’ll be contacted if the collar is lost and your cat turns up days or miles away. Final advice: Never let your cat roam unsupervised. Instead, build a catio or train them on a leash. And for inevitable accidents, microchip today (keep the registration updated!) and add a GPS collar for any cat that shows interest in doors or windows. That’s how you give your cat a long, safe life—without shutting them off from the world entirely.
Reply
Andre M.
12 hours ago
Please get her a gps tracker!
Reply
Suzanne G.
13 hours ago
I am so pleased your cat is home safe and sound
Reply
A.E. B.
15 hours ago
Brilliant ❤️
Reply
Carol B.
16 hours ago
Great news x
Reply
Louise R.
17 hours ago
Great news
Reply
Jennie W.
19 hours ago
Fantastic news❤️
Reply
Susan O.
19 hours ago
Good news 👍🏻👍🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Reply
KJ B.
4 months ago
Still missing.
Reply

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