How to turn your home into a shelter for 300 cats

58-year-old Chris found a new life purpose in rescuing and caring for cats after his son died. It helps him cope with his grief, and it gives him something to do.  

Chris Arsenault left his whole house and garden to abandoned cats, except one small bedroom where he sleeps and eats. He created a shelter for 300 homeless cats, providing complete care. He spends his days taking out their potties,  mopping the floor, refilling their water bowls, and baking chicken for dinner for his four-legged residents. His day starts at 7 am, and he doesn't do weekends.

Chris really loves his new life's mission, and he says that if you are really excited about something, you can overcome any obstacles, like accommodating 300 cats in your house in Medford, New York, for example. He designed and implemented all the changes to his house by himself, his priority being the safety and hygiene of the cats. All surfaces are adapted to this both inside and in the garden. Everything is easily accessible and washable.

While a lot of people living in a house leave the boiler room as a shelter for their outdoor cat friends in our country, Chris is doing the opposite. He built a place for himself in the boiler room, where he has a small bathroom and kitchen. It is unbelievable to what extent some of us will give up our comforts to help animals.

He decided to open his house to cats, now known as the Happy Cat Sanctuary shelter, in 2006, several months after his son's fatal motorcycle accident. He did so after finding a colony of thirty sick kittens by the railway. He knew they would die if he left them there, and since he was an animal lover from a young age, he knew what he had to do.

He soon realized that the cats gave him something to do again after his son's death. In the following years, he began to contact shelters and local charities to provide his home for more and more cats, until he had three hundred of them living with him.

Chris finances the project on his own and with the help of public donations. The annual cost of running the shelter is more than $ 100,000. He spends more than $ 20,000 on vets alone, even though he treats simple cases himself. He says that giving a home to abandoned cats is rewarding in itself, and he is proud of his work. I think he is rightfully proud, don't you?

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