With inflation taking a major toll on families over the last few years, one of the most frequently cited reasons for surrendering pets is that their people can’t afford them anymore.
A vet tech in Ohio is trying to prevent that from happening to people in her area with The Little Black Cat Collective, a pet food pantry she founded in honor of her late rescue cat, Lila, who died at 16 years old.
Laura Zavadil founded the pantry — which also helps people with dogs, guinea pigs, ferrets and rabbits — in 2021, and since then it’s grown, serving “30 to 40 families and more than 200 animals each month,” she told her hometown newspaper, the Vindicator of Warren, Ohio.
“I wanted to do my part to help the community through struggles,” Zavadil told the paper. “The pantry’s main goal is to get the needs of these animals met and help the people, but also — considering the limited amount of shelter space in the area — if it means the animals can stay in the home, that’s just icing on the cake.”
Remembering Misty the Cat, whose death “drained all the colour from the world”
Speaking of honoring deceased pets, Keith Miller has a heck of a tribute to his cat, Misty, in The Guardian.
It’s been six months since Keith Miller’s beloved cat (pictured above), came up to him “with a series of unusual cries, stretched his mouth wide like a yawning lion, shivered, collapsed and died.” Misty, Miller wrote, “was a fortnight shy of his ninth birthday,” and his absence has been keenly felt.
Tributes are difficult to write, and tributes to pets may be harder still. It’s tough to feel you’re doing justice to an animal you loved while conveying their personality, and in the back of your mind you’re thinking of the people who don’t get it, who don’t have pets and might find your tribute saccharine or melodramatic.
Miller strikes just the right notes and makes the reader feel Misty’s loss without knowing the little guy.
“I have thought a lot about this particular cat and this particular loss. I think what most pains and enrages me about it has something to do with the role Misty played in our life: a larger-than-life vibe, faux-heroic and mock-epic (and so often richly comic). He used to skid on the floor when he came into a room, like Kramer in Seinfeld. He was an agent of chaos and misrule, knocking objects off surfaces with gallumphing carelessness one day, dead-eyed precision the next. He was gormless yet prodigious, a fluffier cousin of Homer Simpson. He didn’t shyly solicit affection, as his sister does; he demanded it by right, thrusting his jaw up and out like Mussolini to accept strokes on his throat and chest.
All in all, he didn’t really have the makings of a tragic character. And he wasn’t a will-o’-the-wisp, either, on loan from another world, as most cats are. His unscheduled exit wasn’t just an emotional body blow; it was a violation of the rules of genre.”
The Mussolini bit resonated with me, since I’ve referred to Bud as “a furry little Genghis Khan” on occasion, and often joke that he’s a tyrant ruling over the place with an iron paw. Miller’s homage to his pal isn’t overly long, and I recommend reading the whole thing.

Pain in the Bud often (like today) reminds me of the iconic quote from Forrest Gump: “My mama always said life was like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get.”
Great post, as always!
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Thanks for the kind words, Ann. The King has reminded me he’s the focus of only two posts over the past two months, so that will probably be the next one, although I have a half-written review of the new Quiet Place and there’s a new indie film about a cat I’d like to review as well.
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Beautiful story about the Pet pantry. That’s made my day to know this is happening so far away from here but driven by a human with the same kindness and feelings as me ( and you and his Buddiness I am sure!) makes me think of Jonathan Rosenberg at tabbys place who was moved by a small tabby cat to do something for the less fortunate felines. The Keith Miller piece is also moving, that loss is a pain of immeasuarable weight. My Tabby Basil has a memorial at Tabbys place and his place in my heart is forever, the same is true with all the felines who lorded it over my life for way too short a time.
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I thought the tribute was great. Miller got the point across with a limited word count, something I need to improve on.
Indeed, TP does amazing work.
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That was a nice tribute indeed to Rusty the cat. And the pet pantry is indeed a wonderful way to remember Lila. I’ve noticed that lots of pet pantries and rescues do get a good response when they appeal to the public for pet food, both here and nationwide. And yikes, the food is getting expensive.
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I knew shelters sometimes help people with pet food but I didn’t realize dedicated pet pantries existed. That’s a great idea to keep people from surrendering pets.
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Yikes, I felt something was wrong and just realized autocorrect changed Misty to Rusty …
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