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Animal Friends: The kitten that won them over


By Linda Goldston


Mercury News

Rho was just a handful of dirty fur when Randy Thompson of Livermore found... ( Randy Thompson )«1»Some people spend days, even weeks, trying to decide on their next pet. Some people just luck into one.

Randy Thompson was sitting at his desk in Milpitas working away in August when a co-worker said she saw a tiny cat outside the window.

Randy ran outside and saw "a little fluff of fur in the bushes." The kitten was terrified and would hiss and growl when Randy tried to get close.

After several trips outside to talk to the cat, Randy and another co-worker were able to corral the kitten, throw a towel over him and quickly place him inside a cardboard box. Randy still had several more hours of work before he could take the kitten home, and the scared animal "was very noisy and hostile. Any noise or movement around him would set him off on a hissing, meowing fit."

When the towel was taken off, "we found a tiny little dirty, white, furred ball of teeth and claws," Randy said. The kitten appeared to be 4 to 5 weeks old and obviously had been on his own for several days.

Randy put water in the box and soaked some dry food he had in the car in water so the kitten could eat it. After the food disappeared, Randy wrapped his hand in the towel and picked up the kitten: "He became a totally different kitten. He was shaking and meowing incredibly loud — he was no longer the tiny scared kitten; he was wanting his mommy!"

The Livermore resident knew he couldn't keep the little critter because his housemate, Larry Pelz, is allergic to cats. But home he went with the kitten in the box.

They made it through the first night, with a make-do litter box and kitty litter borrowed from a neighbor, but first on their to-do list for the next day was take the kitten to the local animal shelter. They were getting ready to go to the shelter when the phone rang. Larry's new Toyota Prius had come in; could he come pick it up?

Well, you know what happened after that. By the time the two housemates got back that night, the kitten had become pretty adorable. Randy had given him a Beanie Baby teddy bear to sleep and play with the night before, and the mini tiger loved taking a running lunge at the bear, tackling it and then embedding his claws and teeth into it.

The next day, on Sunday, both men helped give the kitten a bath. As soon as they started drying off the kitten, "Larry said that he looked like a drowned rodent," Randy said in an e-mailed story. Larry started calling the kitten Rodent and the name stuck, though it was refined to Rho Dent or Rho for short.

About eight months later, all is well. The dirty kitten has grown into a beautiful cat, as you can see from the photo of Rho; Larry is taking allergy shots; the cat's teddy bears are piling up; and both Larry and Randy are taking the two daily alarms set by Rho in stride.

"Rho has two alarm settings — 4:15 a.m. and 6:30 a.m.," Randy said. "No one gets to sleep past those two times, and anyone who tries gets to feel the feline alarm go off: jumping, licking, more jumping, banging the window blinds and general obnoxious cat behavior until everyone is up and showering."

Go, Rho!

And never doubt the potential of a rescued pet. They don't come with papers — they come with love and joy. Still, if Larry's Prius hadn't arrived when it did, would Randy and Larry have missed out? Nah, they were hooked by then.

Doggy drive-in

A new dog group in the Santa Cruz area — called Woofers and Walkers — has some fun things lined up for dog owners there. There's an "adventure walk" every Sunday and planned movies for dog owners and their canine friends. This Sunday, it's "Best in Show" on the patio of the Crepe Place in Santa Cruz. For more information, check out www.woofersandwalkers.com or call 831-427-0350