Friday, May 25, 2012

Good Morning Good News !!!! May 25, 2012


We are Vincent D. Cat and adopted sons Opie and Timmy and we are here to make you happy! You are HEROES! You work hard every day and you deserve to smile every day! Those of you working to save us animals hear so very many very sad things. And there’s lots of very glad things too and that’s what we talk about here! All pawsitive all the time! We want our friends to be happy and smile and know there’s a lot of good - including YOU - in this world!! Be kind and pass it on! Please send us your Good New and Fun Stuff to share, personal or global. Let’s keep it fun and interactive!! After all, if we couldn’t laugh, we would all go insane! Vincent@RikkisRefuge.org
Every ting be fine here at Rikki's - grandma been teaching me about paper work ..... I think I no like paper work ... it be icky and boring ...   I rather be writing to you everyday and telling you all bout me and my friends!!!   But grandma says da paperwork has to be done or dar be no Rikki’s. 

Today I am learning about sticky tape. I don't like this sticky tape. I've been trying for almost an hour to get one piece off that stupid roll. It keeps sticking to my fingers. This is gross. I don't see why this has to be part of "paperwork".

She who abuses cat labor laws says I have to learn sticky tape to "fix" paperwork. Well maybe that be good, cus dis paperwork sure seems to keep multiplying. There be paperwork here and paperwork there and even more over there. If it go to speuter clinic and then there be less, that be good, so I work on fixing it.

She who promises to open another can of Fancy Feast when I can learn to get sticky tape off roll without it stuck all over my fingers, says my scratching paperwork to shreds in my frustration is why I have to have sticky tape lesson now. I don't know what I gonna do with all this gunk if I ever can get it off the roll with out my fur stuck all in it. She say that be next lesson.  How many lessons can there be to run da refuge!!  Vincent sure made it all look easy!

I hope my fingers don't get all bald from sticky tape. Do you think this be kittah abuse? Maybe I want a new home. Will you take me? Any my brofur Timmy. And my biological mom Nellie. And my friends Sunset, Mr. Elliot, Velcro .... oh and I can't leave Snickers behind, even if she is a b... (opps she who washes kittah's mouth with soap when they say bad words is right there) .. brown tabby with orange, that making her be a torby, and sometimes a mean kitty, but she's kind of my friend too.

Uh Oh ... too bad I all finish with sticky tape. No more on roll !!!!! I go tell grandma ........

Oh, this not be good. She say store that trade green stuff for cat food will trade for sticky tape too and my saved up green stuff for cat food has to go to buy more sticky tape cuz I got my fur all stuck in it! Oh this so no fair !!!!   What you think???


Oh my!!
Did you know that there's a hospital for tractors?
Our tractor had to get "fixed" and was in the hospital for a week. A whole week. I don't know why Grandmom wanted to fix tractor? She always saying we need more than one tractor to do all the work here, so why she don't want it to have baby tractors? If they don't got no tractors at the pound we can take home, then it be ok to have baby tractors, no? I don't get it.

And now she who thinks kitties can do everything walk in and throw this bill on my desk, $662 for tractor to be fixed, and she say, Hey ya Opie, here's something for you to take care of.  Can you get that taken care of while I’m off spending your cat food money on sticky tape?

That's more expensive than the speuter clinic. And what's I spposed to do to "take care of it"?


Can you help me maybe? 
And you can get double your value.  I learned about double your value from my dad Vincent!!  He always gotted the biggest bang for his buck!!! 

SO here’s a deal you can’t resist !!!!!

Did I say that right?  You can VOTE for ME in Cats vs Dogs AND I can pay the tractor get fix bill!!  How’s that sound?  Can you help me?

What?  Oh KiKi says I always have to do fair representation.  So I have to give you the choice to VOTE for DUKE, and he said if you do he’ll help and use that money to fix tractor too.  He be nice doggie.

Thank you, it’d be so cool if tractor be all paid for fixing a for grandma get home with more sticky tape.  Maybe then she let me have some time off and not make be work so hard in this office!!! 

Thank you for helping me to prove I am a good hard working kittah !!!!



Tell dat Vista to come down here
and help me wif dis paperwork!!!!


Now, are you ready for some Good News?

YOU voted for Rikki’s Refuge in the Shelter Challenge AND you got the mostest votes for Rikki’s, more than any other shelter on the whole big planet for the whole week.  So we win a prize for the week.  

YOU won the week !!!!!!   Yippee YOU are my HERO !!!!!

But don’t stop voting now!!!!    Do it, vote now, and then I tell you great big cool secret!!  OK??

VOTE Rikkis Refuge, VA, USA in the SHELTER CHALLENGE

Did you vote??  Ok, thank you!!!  

Now if you keep voting real hard, just like you did all week so we won a week .....  we can move to number 3 on the planet and that will win us THREE TIMES as much money to buy nums!!!

Isn’t that cool???  Swill you keep voting real hard every day?  And tell everybody you know to VOTE VOTE VOTE !!!!

Thank you!!!  Purrrzzzzzz


And MORE Good News
Our World’s Best Kitty Litter that YOU won for us will be arriving on June 6th. Almost 5,000 pounds of the World’s Best Kitty Litter.  We won a pound for every vote.  You see YOUR votes are so important!!!!  

June 6th, that’s the same day to vote for me in Toyota's 100 Cars for Good contest!!!

On June 6th, from 10 am to one minute before midnight, eastern USA time, you can vote for Rikki’s Refuge to win a brand new Toyota!!!   Please help us.  You HAVE to vote thru facebook - so even if you’ve never looked at facebook - it’s worth setting up an account for the day !!!! 

Sign up now to get a reminder on the 6th - only 14 hours to vote so we all gotta remember.  YOUR vote on June 6th will help Rikki's Refuge win a new vehicle for the animals.

I’ve got my reminder coming - do YOU?

Go to https://apps.facebook.com/carsforgood/day_view.php?id=986&d=24
then click on REMIND ME under the BIG ORANGE DOG
to get a reminder on June 6th to
vote for Rikki's Refuge in
Toyota's 100 Cars for Good contest.


Did you see the Spectacular Autograph Quilt?
Got your raffle tickets????    HURRY !!!!!!
Click for more info!  http://blog.rikkisrefuge.org/


Dawgs writing Pawetry ???
Hey!!!! Check out Horace the poetry writing dawgie !!!!! He writes to help support animals!!!! His next royalty check is coming to Rikki's Refuge!!! Check out his books !!!! This is one cool Dawgie, if I do say so my kitty self!!


Memorial Day Tour
May 28th, at noon, one tour only.  Gates open at 11:30 and will be relocked at 12:15 so please be prompt.  Be prepared for a two+ hour tour, all outside, so dress for the weather.  Don’t forget sunscreen, hats and water. 

And remember to dress for the animals!! 

NO bare legs - please wear long pants to avoid scratches. 
Pigs and goats have rough course hair and bristles and will rub on you and scratch bare legs.

NO bare toes - wear closed shoes or boots. 
Hooves will squish bare toes!!!!  

NO earrings or jewelry - come as you are, no dress up! 
Emus reach out for and grab shiny objects and can be damaged by eating your earrings - and it might hurt your ears too!  

Remember ....  it’s wild out here ......

Please call 540-854-0870 x3 in the morning before heading out to Rikki’s on May 28th - if there’s been rain - the tour may be cancelled due to muddy roads!!  Weather patterns vary and can be quite different here than where you are starting out from.


Lots of love,
     Opie !!

PPS You tell me what you want! Email me at Vincent@RikkisRefuge.org with instructions to change your subscription: additions, deletions or modifications! Subscriptions:  Vincent’s VIPs - up to the second alerts about issues at Rikki’s Refuge for those who care and want to be intimately involved. Scheduled as needed. Good Morning Good News - a little something to get you going in the mornings, for those of you who want to keep smiling with us! Scheduled daily. Hairballs - so you know what’s coming up at Rikki’s! Scheduled weekly.

Rikki's Refuge, supported solely by private donations, houses over 1200 animals of 22 species. On line at http://bit.ly/Give-a-gift-to-Rikkis Checks, money orders, cash, items at Rikki's Refuge, PO Box 1357, Orange VA 22960

Rikki's Refuge is owned and operated by Life Unlimited of Virginia, Inc., an IRS 501(c)(3) not-for-profit Virginia Corporation, tax-id 54-1911042. Combined Federal Campaigns #77674, Commonwealth of Virginia Campaign #3163, PetsMart Charities #1377. A financial statement is available upon written request from the State Office of Consumer Affairs.

Learn more www.RikkisRefuge.org and help spread the good word, tell everyone you know about Rikki’s Refuge




Monday, May 21, 2012

Good Morning Good News !!!! May 21, 2012

We are Vincent D. Cat and adopted sons Opie and Timmy and we are here to make you happy! You are HEROES! You work hard every day and you deserve to smile every day! Those of you working to save us animals hear so very many very sad things. And there’s lots of very glad things too and that’s what we talk about here! All pawsitive all the time! We want our friends to be happy and smile and know there’s a lot of good - including YOU - in this world!! Be kind and pass it on! Please send us your Good New and Fun Stuff to share, personal or global. Let’s keep it fun and interactive!! After all, if we couldn’t laugh, we would all go insane! Vincent@RikkisRefuge.org

It’s been pretty sad here at Rikki’s Refuge while we’ve been getting used to Vincent being at Rainbow Bridge.  The Good News is that he can still talk to us and shows up to guide us!!


He asked me to carry on in his footstep.  But I don’t have any feet, so I’m doing the best I can.  You see, I was born without back feet.
This is a picture of Me and Vincent the first time we met.  Barbara White from Waynesboro is the nice lady holding us both.  She got a call one day from a lady who said she had a litter of kittens and the mom was eating their legs off.  Barbara came to our rescue and found out that it wasn’t our mom’s fault, it was birth defects.  There were nine of us kittens.  This was back last August. 

I’m not even a whole year old yet.

Barbara took my whole family home and took care of us.  Cuz of genetic problems I ended up being the only kitten to survive.  Barbara tried and tried, she took care of us all day and all night.  But one by one, all my brothers and sisters died.  Even the nice doctors couldn’t save them.  But they did save me!!!  

Barbara thought I’d be real good to work with Vincent and to help him spread the word about being nice to the differently abled.  And so she brought me to live at Rikki’s Refuge.  And this picture is when I met Vincent!!

My mom and me was real attached.  What with me being her only surviving kid and all.  Mom was going to go away and be adopted to another home.  I looked at mom, and mom looked at me and thank goodness, da hoomans decided to let mom stay with me at Rikki’s too.

I’m so glad my biological mom gets to be here!!!

This is Timmy
He came to Rikki’s a few months before me.  He was born a “normal” kitten.  He had a terrible accident.  He fell out the window of a moving car.  And his hind legs were badly damaged.  He kind of scoots most of the time.  Sometimes he can stand up a bit and take a few steps that way. 

He came to Rikki’s to see if physical therapy could help him walk.  It helped a little, but he still scoots most of the time. 

I’m very happy to have Timmy for my brofur!

Vincent and his facebook partner Polly who lives in England adopted me and Timmy to be their sons and to help teach the world to be nice to kitties and all animals.
That’s daddy Vincent and mom Polly on top, and me on the bottom left and Timmy to my right!!!  We love our tree house!

My biological mom, Nellie, and adoptive mom, Polly, are friends and are happy to share me.  They say that’s just more love for me!  I like that!

And so I will do my best to keep in touch with you and let you know what’s coming up at Rikki’s Refuge.  Thank you for being my friend and helping me to learn how to be a Spokes Kitty.  Timmy is learning too, he’s shy and gets scared easy, but you’ll get to hear from him sometimes too.  Come on out from under the desk and talk to the nice people, Timmy.


Vincent D. Cat
From Alley Cat to World Renown Spokes Cat
April 30, 1998 - April 30, 2012
Vincent was the inspiration and the evolution of Rikki's Refuge
Read the story of how his life brought so many together in good


Important Things I have to tell you today !!!
Please VOTE for us in the Shelter Contest.
click here http://tinyurl.com/VoteRikkis and Enter USA, VA, Rikkis Refuge to vote for us in the Shelter Challenge and win $1,000 !!!!

We’ve been moving up and might even win more if you’d vote every day and get all your friends to vote every day!!!  Thank you !!!!







BIG EXCITING NEWS !!!!!
PLEDGE: to help Taco win new wheels !!!

On June 6th, from 10 am to one minute before midnight, eastern USA time, you can vote for Rikki’s Refuge to win a brand new Toyota!!!   Please help us.  You HAVE to vote thru facebook - so even if you’ve never looked at facebook - it’s worth setting up an account for the day !!!!  PLEASE, I wanna a new vehicle all my own by my first birthday!!!!

We will be competing against four other organizations to win that day.  (AIDS Resource Group, Wolf Performing Arts Center, American Red Cross - Black Hills Area Chapter, The Johnnycake Center of Westerly) 

They’re all good people.  But they’re HOOMANS and hooman groups get so much more money and more help!!!  Please vote for us and the ANIMALS on June 6th !!

YOUR vote on June 6th will help Rikki's Refuge win a new vehicle for the animals.

Toyota's 100 Cars for Good - VOTE Rikki's Refuge, June 6th

then click on REMIND ME under the BIG ORANGE DOG
to get a reminder on June 6th to
vote for Rikki's Refuge in

Toyota's 100 Cars for Good contest.
Be sure to watch our video so you will know why the animals need your vote.
Watch the whole video so you don't miss Taco the Cat driving.

then click on REMIND ME under the BIG ORANGE DOG
to get a reminder on June 6th to
vote for Rikki's Refuge in



You can win this Spectacular Autograph Quilt!

Made by Melissa Felts of Fredericksburg, Virginia, and quilted by Jo Ann Cooper of South Carolina, this spectacular quilt measures 73 1/2″ wide and 76″ long.  Made from 100% cotton fabrics, and 100% wool quilt batting.  It features the autographs of 20 well-known animal lovers:
Anjelica Houston
Cloris Leachman
Raymond Usher
Betty White
Raquel Welch
Ryan Newman
Martin Sheen
Dolly Parton
Johnny Depp
Maya Angelou
Matt Damon
Tim Allen
Sally Struthers
Victoria Stilwell
Kiefer Sutherland
Bill Cosby
Whoopi Goldberg
Bob Barker
Jack Hanna
Elizabeth Taylor — she signed this just 2 months before she died.

The drawing for the quilt will be held on Labor Day, September 3, 2012, at Rikki’s Refuge.  The winner does not need to be present to win.

So, get your tickets now!  For every dollar that you donate to Rikki’s Refuge, you will get a chance to win this quilt!  Look for the quilt around town in Orange, Va., and Fredericksburg, Va.  We will be at businesses and stores accepting donations. Or, you can donate online at http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/Rikkis/food

Be sure to leave a comment with your contact information on the FirstGiving page (name, address, and e-mail address).  If you would like your ticket stubs/receipts mailed to you, please add 45-cents for U.S. address, or $1.05 for other country addresses.  Please note that your contact information will not be made public. If you do not want the stubs mailed to you, then please give us your e-mail address, and I will send you an e-mail confirmation that your donations have been added for the drawing.

Or, you can contact Melissa at: autographquilt@gmail.com to get information about mailing in your payment.

Read about how it took the year and a half this quit was in the making and see more photos and up close shots of signatures here http://blog.rikkisrefuge.org/

 

Read how it took Valen, pictured above, a year and a half to make this quilt happen!!!
And more photos and up close shots of signatures here http://blog.rikkisrefuge.org/







Memorial Day Tour
May 28th, at noon, one tour only.  Gates open at 11:30.  Be prepared for a two+ hour tour, all outside, so dress for the weather.  Don’t forget sunscreen, hats and water.  And remember to dress for the animals!!  NO bare legs - please wear long pants to avoid scratches.  NO bare toes - wear closed shoes or boots.  NO earrings or jewelry - come as you are, no dress up!  Pigs and goats have rough course hair and bristles and will rub on you and scratch bare legs.  Hooves will squish bare toes!!!!   Emus reach out for and grab shiny objects and can be damaged by eating your earrings - and it might hurt your ears too!   Remember ....  it’s wild out here ......

Please call 540-854-0870 x3 in the morning before heading out to Rikki’s on May 28th - if there’s been rain the tour may be cancelled due to muddy roads!!  Weather patterns vary and can be quite different here than where you are starting out from.


Vincent had a wonderful Birthday Party
Vincent had a wonderful birthday party and thanks all who came and who sent gifts and cards!!!  He sends his love from Rainbow Bridge.  Here’s his birthday pictures from his party!!



CATS vs DOGS












2012
has been extended !
So you can still vote for the candidates of your choice -- cats or dogs ----  WHO will you vote to Rule the Refuge.  Click on your candidate’s photo above to vote for them, or read all the campaign details here: http://rikkisrefuge.blogspot.com/2012/04/cats-vs-dogs.html

Please, please vote for cats and give me a chance to be ruler !!!!!


I love you sooooo much,
Opie

PPS You tell me what you want! Email me at Vincent@RikkisRefuge.org with instructions to change your subscription: additions, deletions or modifications! Subscriptions:  Vincent’s VIPs - up to the second alerts about issues at Rikki’s Refuge for those who care and want to be intimately involved. Scheduled as needed. Good Morning Good News - a little something to get you going in the mornings, for those of you who want to keep smiling with us! Scheduled daily. Hairballs - so you know what’s coming up at Rikki’s! Scheduled weekly.

Rikki's Refuge, supported solely by private donations, houses over 1200 animals of 22 species. On line at http://bit.ly/Give-a-gift-to-Rikkis Checks, money orders, cash, items at Rikki's Refuge, PO Box 1357, Orange VA 22960

Rikki's Refuge is owned and operated by Life Unlimited of Virginia, Inc., an IRS 501(c)(3) not-for-profit Virginia Corporation, tax-id 54-1911042. Combined Federal Campaigns #77674, Commonwealth of Virginia Campaign #3163, PetsMart Charities #1377. A financial statement is available upon written request from the State Office of Consumer Affairs.

Learn more www.RikkisRefuge.org and help spread the good word, tell everyone you know about Rikki’s Refuge




Sunday, May 20, 2012

Vincent D. Cat


Vincent D. Cat
From Alley Cat to World Renown Spokes Cat
April 30, 1998 - April 30, 2012


It all started in the usual way on April 30, 1998, in Richmond, Virginia when a mommy kitty gave birth to yet another litter of kittens.  Mommy Kitty didn’t know it then, but Vincent, her frolicking little round faced black and white kitten, was destined to be a great teacher.  From a very young age he began to accumulate the knowledge that he would one day share with the world. 

Vincent was chosen by a family and taken home.  He grew and he loved life and he loved running and roaming free to play.  As he matured, his owners didn’t take him to the speuter (spay / neuter) clinic to be “fixed”; and this left him with the urge to run and roam even further looking for cute young kitties.  We don’t know why they didn’t “fix” Vincent.  Perhaps they were simply ignorant of the benefits to their cat.  Perhaps they didn’t know how many unwanted kittens are killed every year in shelters.  Perhaps they didn’t know of the dangers to their own “unfixed” pet.  Perhaps they just didn’t know better.  Or perhaps they thought it would cost a great deal of money.  Maybe more money than they could afford.  Perhaps they didn’t know about the Speuter Clinics cropping up all over where kitties and doggies can get speutered very affordably.  Perhaps they didn’t know about the programs most counties and rescue organizations have to give vouchers to those unable to afford even the low cost surgery.  Perhaps they didn’t know to call their local county shelter and ask about available options.

VINCENT LEARNED - People need to know how important the Speuter Clinic is.

This was the first lesson Vincent was to learn.  When you don’t go to the Speuter Clinic, bad things are going to happen.  Either to you, or to your offspring.  No ifs ands or buts: no speuter = bad outcome.  Little Vincent began to store away the valuable things he was learning so later in life he could share these tidbits with the world.

Vincent lived in a neighborhood with regular sized lots and with typical neighborhood traffic on the roads. Usually he could dart across the road before being struck.  Usually.  But one day he wasn’t so lucky.  Across the street pranced a cute young kitty, waggling her tail high and calling out to Vincent.  When he headed across the road to meet this enticing young girl kitty, who also hadn’t been to the Speuter Clinic, Vincent was hit by a car.

This was Vincent’s next lesson.  If you wouldn’t trust your two year old human child to play out in the yard unsupervised because you know they haven’t developed the judgment to avoid traffic --- why would you allow your cat or dog to take that risk?  Their knowledge of traffic and the consequence of being in the road is about the same as that of a two year old child.  We don’t know why his people let him run free so close to a road.  Perhaps they didn’t understand the danger to their pet.  Perhaps they didn’t understand their responsibility to protect their pet. 

VINCENT LEARNED - People need to understand their responsibility to protect their pet.

Vincent was scooped up, hurt and bleeding, and rushed to the vet.  There his owners found out he’d lose a hind leg and need surgery for extensive internal injuries.  Their choice was to put him to sleep instead of opting to pay for his medical care.  Vincent was shocked that his life meant so little to the people he’d lived with and who he loved, and who he though loved him.  His family.  And they were leaving him behind to be killed.  He was only one year old.

VINCENT LEARNED - People need to have compassion for their pets and to provide them with needed medical care.

Thankfully Helen, who ran a Richmond based rescue organization, told the vet that she’d accept Vincent into her rescue program, to do the needed surgery and he could come home with her to recuperate.   She was a wonderful mom to Vincent while he recouped from losing his right hind leg, losing part of his tail, healed from breaks in the left hind leg, and began to heal from internal injuries.



Young Vincent

VINCENT LEARNED - There are really good people out there, people who devote their lives to animal rescue.

Helen provided the best care possible to Vincent for many months.  His leg healed, the stitches came out, the scars faded.  The incontinence remained a problem for dear Vincent.  Helen had heard of Rikki’s Refuge, a place where the handicapped could live full and productive lives and be given the care they needed every day. 

And so when Vincent was about a year and a half old, he came to live at Rikki’s Refuge.

Word of this poor kitty who’d been thru so much, who’d lost a leg, who was undergoing physical therapy to be able to walk on three legs, spread, and people came to love him and to feel sorry for him and to offer him hope and to make him feel better. 

They expected a sad, bedraggled, suffering little kitty.   Instead they found a joyful kitty who’s eyes lit up when he saw them and who scooted over and reached a paw up to their knee, begging, “pick me up, pick me up”.  Once in their arms he snuggled their necks, nuzzled their ears and purred and purred and purred.  He could never get enough love.  And he just loved giving it to others.

Vincent always gave more then he received

His new friends would go away feeling happy and hopeful and brighter about the whole world.  He always had that effect on every one who ever met him.  I never saw eyes light up the way his did when he saw someone to snuggle with.  No one was immune from his adorable shuffle over to them and his placing a paw up on their knee and his Meow of pick me up!

A friend wrote in when she learned of his passing, “Vincent was such a wonderful being.  He inspired us all to hang in there despite whatever life dished out to us. He was remarkable and will be missed by us all.  I know when I was spending time out there during my treatments...watching him gave me hope that if he could survive all the things he had...maybe I could too.  He will always remain a strong influence in how we humans should live our lives.”  The treatments she speaks of were very debilitating while she was fighting a second round of cancer, which thankfully she survived and is now healed.

VINCENT LEARNED - It’s better to comfort others and give them hope, than to be depressed about your own problems.


One day a group of girl scouts came out to visit and to volunteer.  One little girl was very sad and unhappy.  She didn’t want to work with the other kids.  She kept crying and saying she just wanted to go home.  She was miserable and refused to participate.  She sat on the steps, looking sad, and watching the other kids having fun with the animals.  Vincent, always knowing who needed him, scooted over to her, crawled up in her lap, and wrapped his arms around her neck and started to purr.  She hugged Vincent and sobbed into his fur for a while.  His lulling happy purr got to her after awhile and she began to nuzzle and pat him.  Soon she was laughing and talking to him and playing with him.

VINCENT LEARNED - Sometimes just listening is the most important thing.

When it was time to go she protested loudly that she didn’t want to leave her new best friend Vincent, “He cares about me, he listened to me, he really cares!”


We’d seen that kind of reaction from many volunteers and visitors.  They’d arrive sad about some life event; the loss of a loved one, a serious disappointment, the loss of a job, a deep hurt.  After “comforting poor little Vincent” for a while, they’d leave with a happy contented smile on their face.  Vincent was always there to put his arms around their neck, purr and listen to all their problems.  And he never once gave them mounds of well intentioned advice they didn’t want to hear!

Not long after that girl scout had made friends with Vincent, we were invited to teach a humane education class at a school.  What about taking Vincent?  He loved everybody. 


Maybe the kids would really listen to an animal talking to them!  So often we’d go into an auditorium with row after row of kids, all rowdy, chatting to themselves, teasing each other, acting up, and we’d never get the attention of even half of the kids while we talked about kindness, caring, compassion, proper treatment of animals and the benefits of speutering.  They’d half glance at the pictures of cats, dogs, rabbits .....  But we rarely really had the attention of more than a few of the kids. 


And so Vincent went to his first Humane Education Class.  The kids lined up in the auditorium, row after row, sitting on the floor, all the usual chatter and pushing and shoving.  When I held Vincent up and told them he was here to teach them about what it was like to be an animal, showed them how he only had three legs and told them he wanted to talk to them ... there was silence. 

When I set Vincent down, he scooted to the first child in the first row, climbed on her lap and snuggled.  After a few moments, he left, and scooted to the next child to snuggle.  Child after child.  Row after row.  He knew exactly what to do and wanted to make sure everyone got his love and attention. 

This time, as Vincent told about kindness, caring, compassion, proper treatment of animals and the benefits of speutering the kids were enthralled and kept raising hands to ask questions or ask for a second snuggling session.  The classes were no longer something to have to sit thru, but something to participate in.

VINCENT LEARNED - Humans prefer to learn from animals!

After seeing the reaction to Vincent at class after class and event after event, we began to take other animals with us on Educational Visits; dogs, rabbits, chickens, goats, iguanas, baby pigs .....  the kids loved it and they always had very intelligent inquisitive questions to ask.


So many questions!  Doesn’t it hurt to not have that leg?  Is your physical pain like ours?  Do you feel emotional pain?  Like we do?  What happens to too many animals in shelters?  How can we help save lives?  Why is speutering so important?  How can I get my parents to speuter our cat or dog?

Many of the kids who were in one of our Humane Education Classes would later bring their families on tours at Rikki’s Refuge to meet the animals who’d visited their school.  The kids talked all the time about what Vincent taught me, or what Nanny the goat had said, or what Duke the blind dog told them.  With the animals in front of them, us humans teaching the class, were nothing but the voice of the animals.  They’d look directly at the animal they were asking a question of, and directly at them while we responded for the animal.


On one tour a little boy was looking for “that lady who drives Vincent around”.  I picked up Vincent and went to meet him.  He was so excited.  He told his mom, “This is Vincent, he’s the one who told us about doing something to our cat so she stops having kittens.  Vincent tell my mom!”  His mom wasn’t familiar with speutering and didn’t know it was simple and could be inexpensive.  Vincent snuggled her son, while I told her the benefits to her cat and how it would stop all those kittens.  She was grateful, as she hated “having to get rid” of the excess kittens several times a year.  She lived a financially challenged life and we were able to get her hooked up with a speuter clinic and get her kitty “fixed” for her.


VINCENT LEARNED - Reaching out to teach kids, can teach the older generation too!

Each and every story I can tell you has been repeated over and over again, and I’m sure I’ll hear every one yet again and again.  It’s the first story of it’s kind that is so moving to me, when I realize what a difference Vincent or another animal is making in someone’s life.  Rikki’s Refuge was started to help the animals, the furry and feathered kind.  Yet the longer we’re here, the more we see how we help the human kind too.  Kindness, compassion, sharing, love, crosses all species, we don’t need to limit it - we need to reach out to every creature, large or small, human or other, and just be kind.  And you’ll find it helps your soul too.  If you’re sad, angry, disappointed, unhappy and you reach out to give a kindness to someone else, regardless of their species, you’ll find yourself just a little bit happier.  And if you do it over and over untill it becomes automatic, you’ll find yourself happy despite all the usual events of life.

A dog named Jack came to Rikki’s Refuge many years ago after what must have been horrible abuse.  His background was unknown, but his back was filled with scars, and he cringed in the corner and shook and wet himself when approached.  Whatever had happened to Jack had been not only physically but also emotionally traumatic. 


Childhelp is a wonderful organization who works with emotionally challenged kids. Often from abuse, bad home situations and the like, these kids are working to overcome emotional traumas.  Several counselors at Childhelp had been bringing kids out to Rikki’s on a regular basis.  One week there was a new boy.  Just to look at him was to hurt with the sadness and fear and rejection you could see in him as he hung his head and did not speak.  His counselor said he hadn’t spoken for over a year after a horrible traumatic event in his little life. 

At this point Jack had been with us several months and would now let us approach and pat him, and though he’d back into a corner, cower and shake, he no longer wet himself and sometimes we’d see the fear lesson in his eyes as he’d briefly lift them to look at us.

As we walked into Doggy Downs that day, this little boys eyes immediately went to Jack’s.  Jack stood up and approached the front of his pen.  Never, never before had he done that.  The boy walked to Jack’s pen, the two never breaking eye contact.  His counselor asked if he could go in with Jack.  I opened the door and the boy walked in and threw his arms around Jack.  Jack sat down and they stayed there, snuggled together for the entire visit. 

When it was time to leave and the boy had to go, he looked up at his counselor and said, “I love Jack”.  The first words he’d spoken since his trauma.  Week after week they visited and week after week they both improved.  The boy graduated from Childhelp and I pray has had a wonderful life.  Jack was adopted and had a wonderful happy life with his forever family who cherished him.














Usually it’s the kids and their stories that make such an impression on me.  Though you ought to see Vincent and his friends in nursing homes!!  They light up the residents eyes and lives!!  It so warms my heart to hear the folks talk about pets they had and how much they enjoy stroking Vincent or Duke or one of the other visiting animals.  And what a gift it is to us to be able to see the faces of folks, when we are able to take their elderly animals to visit them.  It’s a hard decision for so many folks, what to do with the beloved older pet when they must go to a nursing home.  Now a days, knowing the benefits, many allow animals.  But in the past few did.  And when their animals would come to the 9th Life Retirement Center at Rikki’s Refuge, if there was any way possible, one of our volunteers would take the animal to visit their owner.  Everybody was warmed by the experience, the previous owner, the animal and the volunteer.

VINCENT LEARNED - Being physically different, doesn’t change who you are.

I was setting up for a Humane Education Class in a school auditorium one day while the kids were filing in.  The last to come in was a little girl in a wheel chair, straggling way behind everyone, no one paying her any attention.  Vincent immediately picked up on her and scooted to the back of the room and reached up to her knee.  I went and lifted him up to her lap and they snuggled.  He told her that if he was a people he’d have a wheel chair too, but with three on the floor, he could scoot!  She smiled. 

They talked about being handicapped and needing help from others to do some of the most mundane things.  Soon I had her up in the front of the class and Vincent began to teach his first class about being differently abled.  She said the worst was that nobody wanted to be her friend and no one would play with her at recess, nobody wanted to sit with her at lunch.


Vincent visited some of the other kids and asked them if they wanted to play with him.  YES!  Did they view him as different, less of a cat, no fun, cuz he had only one hind leg?  NO!  Pretty soon we had the whole class talking about being physically different.  Some of you wear glasses.  One kid said he had a hearing aide.  One had special shoes nobody had known about.  Others had handicapped siblings or parents or grandparents.  Do you love them?  YES!  Are they just the same as you?  YES!  

Some of the kids said it was scary to play with somebody in a wheelchair, they didn’t know how to act, do they treat them different?  We got to talk about how somebody with a wheelchair, a walker, crutches, missing a leg or arm or eye - they’re just the same and they want to be treated just the same.  It’s ok to help them and open an door or carry a package, but other than that, they are just like you and me.




VINCENT LEARNED - The differently abled are just that: differently abled - they aren’t dis abled.

The next year Vincent and I went back to that school for our Humane Education Class and that same little girl was the first to come rolling in the room, big smile on her face, with kids crowding all around her, obviously she was a part of the group now.  She rolled right up to Vincent and said, “You’re my friend!  And now everybody wants to be my friend cuz you’re my friend!  Thank you Vincent for teaching them that you and me are just like everybody else!” 

Over the years as word about the Rikki’s Refuge Spokes Animals got out, they’d get bookings for 2, 4, 6 events a week.  Everyone wanted to meet Vincent and friends.  Often with the schedule, different Spokes Animals would attend different events.  Everywhere Vincent was, the lines were long, waiting to hug him, to have a photo taken with him, to meet him.


A few years ago Vincent got a hold of a ‘puter and created a facebook page, within days he had the maximum number of friends allowed, 5,000.  From all over the world.  He was a wise sage kitty, offering advice on problems, spreading love and peace.  He always emphasized how important love and kindness was.

Animals take the front seat at Rikki’s Refuge, because after all, we are an Animal Sanctuary.  Though people frequently ask to move in, we don’t have the proper habitat for them!  After working with humans and seeing the difference our animals make for them, I’d can dream of a place that has facilities for kids in need, the elderly, the differently-abled amongst the animal neighborhoods!

In the animal biz, I often hear people say, “I hate people, that’s why I like animals, why can’t all people be nice to animals.”  They’re referring to the people they see day in and day out who’ve hurt animals, physically thru abuse, emotionally thru abandonment, and it’s hard to remember they are a small segment of the human population. 

Vincent never, never discriminated against species.  He snuggled up and purred for other cats, dogs, rabbits, chickens, sheep and humans! 






He felt all deserved that extra little bit of kindness.  He would encourage people to be nice to each other.  He’d tell his fans, today is “be nice day” - find just one nice thing you can do.  Open a door for someone, help someone carry their groceries to their car, pick up the neighbor’s paper and take it up to their door, get their mail from their mailbox for them, let somebody merge into traffic.  It doesn’t take much of your time to make a huge happy in someone else’s life.  And you know what?  It even makes you feel good!  Try it - you’ll like it !




These were the lessons Vincent shared on facebook and in his weekly newsletter, “Hairballs - what’s coming up at Rikki’s Refuge”! 


VINCENT LEARNED - Kindness counts, no matter what species you are.

Teaching kids, everyone, to be kind to animals and to everyone, was very important to Vincent’s life.  One day a lot of his friends were talking about bad news and sad news and unkindness in the world.  Convinced there is kindness and there are good people, Vincent, posted on his facebook wall GOOD MORNING GOOD NEWS and listed a number of kind and good things in the news for the day. 

So many fans wrote in saying thank you and the next morning asking for another “edition” that Vincent has published Good Morning Good News daily for several years now. 


His adopted sons, Opie and Timmy, will be continuing the publication as soon as their typing skills improve.

Vincent always believed that if there was something bad happening and you could do something to change it, then do it.  If you couldn’t, then find something that you could change for good.  Don’t sit around and moan about the bad - do something good.  If you can’t think of anything else  - make a donation to your local animal shelter or rescue. 

And he knew everyone everywhere counted, not just him and the animals at Rikki’s Refuge.  But animals and even people everywhere needed help and encouragement. 

VINCENT LEARNED - Share and Share alike.

He began advertising adoption events, fundraising events, and special needs for other animal organizations.  As his outreach grew - thru followers of GOOD MORNING GOOD NEWS and several facebook pages - he became aware of more and more need.  And he began to help with human issues too.  Food banks in need, homeless shelters.  And the contests!  With fans and supporters in every state and in 37 countries around the globe, he could seriously help animal shelters in Romania, Italy, Sweden, Egypt as well as others in need. 

Vote with Vincent !

A year ago Vincent discovered another avenue that he could help lots of animals and people.  With social media and the internet the way it is - people all over the country are seeing animals that will be euthanized for lack of space if not adopted.  Often someone falls in love with a cat or dog that is hundreds, sometimes thousands of miles away.  Thru Vincent’s network he could ask for travelers and volunteers willing to help that animal get to it’s new home.  It worked!!!

He started a special project just for moving animals to new homes.  Katie’s and ZuZu’s Souls Train. Katie, a young black kitty, who’s owner had died and ZuZu, a big black and white boy, given up when their family moved, both destined to die in a shelter in New York were the first two to be rescued with this new project.  Since then, dozens have found new homes.

Vincent always loved Fancy Feast and with the advent of on-line shopping and Amazon.com, may of his fans sent him monthly subscriptions of cases of Fancy Feast.  Vincent D. Cat got more mail than you can imagine!!!

Ron bringing Nums for Vincent

In the fall, Vincent and his facebook kitty partner Polly, who lives in London, adopted two little boys, Timmy and Opie. 

At home in the Tree House, Vincent, Polly, Opie, Timmy

Timmy came from Winchester, where a motorist saw him fly out the window of the moving vehicle in front of her.  She stopped and picked up the badly injured month old kitten and took him to the first vet clinic she saw.  Ken, a Rikki’s Refuge volunteer worked there.  The doctor worked on little Timmy for over a month, and Timmy become the love of the office.  Sadly Timmy’s hind legs would never function properly again, and so he came to live with Vincent and apprentice as a Spokes Kitty. 

Velcro giving Timmy a physical therapy session to exercise his legs

Opie came from Waynesboro where, Barbara, a volunteer of Rikki’s Refuge was called about a mother cat “eatin’ the legs off her kittens.”  She took the family to her vet and discovered the missing limbs were birth defects, no fault of their loving mother.  There were nine kittens!  A huge litter for their young mother, Nellie.  In addition to the leg deformities, the kittens had other issues, and despite loving round the clock care, Opie was the only survivor. 

Barbara introduces Opie to Vincent

Opie and his mom now live with us at Rikki’s Refuge. Mom is kind and loving and will be a Humane Educator.  Opie will represent the differently-abled.  Born with no hind feet, he hops along just fine, but with a hard thumping noise.  A friend of Vincent who lives in New York is designing special padded socks for Opie!

Timmy, Vincent and Opie

Vincent began having some serious health issued last summer.  His wonderful doctors, Meredith Vargas and Andrea Kellum of Culpeper Animal Hospital worked diligently with him, calling in specialist when needed.  Time and time again they’d have our little man back up on his feet and feeling great again. 

He’d had a real tough bout in February and with the love and prayers sent from around the world, pulled thru and was able to spend more time loving his fans and sharing hugs and purrs.  When he had a down spell in early April and would eat only one flavor of expensive Fancy Feast Appetizers - packages addressed to Vincent D. Cat, poured in from friends all around the world.  After a week of hospitalization Vincent was feeling like himself again. 

Through the fall and over the winter, Vincent had snuggled with Timmy and Opie and taught them about being Spokes Kitties.  Timmy did the Christmas Photo Shoot with Vincent and made his debut into the world. 

Timmy’s first photo shoot, Christmas 2011

They’d snuggle visitors, but didn’t go off site for their first visit until the week before Vincent’s 14th Birthday.  Vincent, Opie, Timmy and Duke (a Doberman doggy, blind from birth) making up the Differently-Abled Team went out for a very successful photo shoot.  Opie is super outgoing and took instantly to being a loving cuddly spokes cat, knowing just how to pose and to ham it up when the camera came out, just like his dad, Vincent.  Timmy was a bit scared and will have to do some more car traveling and visiting different places to gain that level of comfort.  But they were great!

No one knew this would be Vincent’s last off-site photo shoot

Vincent had a big birthday bash scheduled for the 28th of April.  Though is birthday is officially on the 30th, his celebration was Saturday so more of his fans could attend.  He didn’t want them to have to explain to their bosses why they needed to take a day off work!!  Though one beloved fan and friend came all the way from St. Louis for the party!

The morning of the 27th Vincent wasn’t feeling well and went to see his docs.  Early in the morning he had seemed just a little off, but as the day wore on he was really not feeling well.  He’d had kidney insufficiency for quite some time, though with daily subQ fluid therapy he was doing and feeling great.  Everyone at Rikki’s Refuge, Culpeper Animal Hospital, and his friends and fans around the world were praying this would be just another little bleep in the road.  It was on the morning of the 28th, his birthday party day, that we had to face we’d probably reached the end of what modern medicine could do, there hadn’t been an improvement and likely wouldn’t.  Though Vincent had surprised us again and again over the years with his will to live and to pull thru health issues ....  maybe with prayer ....


His party started at 1 pm and we arrived a bit late, coming home from the vet.  He wasn’t feeling good.  Mostly sleeping, only lifting his head occasionally, and purring when I’d rub his nose, he always loved nose rubs.  Instead of a happy joyful party, it started out with a lot of tears as Vincent was held by those who loved him so much.  It was a chilly cloudy day.  But the love of his friends made it warm.

When it was time to open presents, Vincent sat up and said “HEY, I’m in on this!”  He begged to get down, and he went to help open presents, to eat - and he really ate - his fishy smelly birthday cake, and to share with his friends, cat, dog, goat and human!  As we sang Happy Birthday and cameras came out, Vincent just glowed and basked in the excitement of the party.  He never saw a camera that he didn’t start posing!!!   He scooted about, ate more fishy cake, opened more presents, played with his toys and friends.  He had a blast.




And what had started as a sad day, turned into a wonderful fun happy birthday party.


VINCENT LEARNED - Always put love first.

Despite not feeling well, he wanted to be a part of the love that day.  And his burst of energy, the tremendous amount he’d eaten, the way he seemed to feel so much better, made us hopeful.  Sunday was a lovely sunny day, and though weak, Vincent wanted to be out in the sun and was able to spend the afternoon in the sunny day run with Opie, Timmy and other friends. 

When we went to bed that night I knew most of his strength had drained away.  We cuddled up just like usual, his nose against mine, with several other furry friends.  His breathing was slowing and shortly after midnight, now officially his birthday, he crossed to Rainbow Bridge.

WE LEARNED - What Would Vincent Do?

Vincent spent 12 of his 14 years of life teaching about kindness and love and compassion.  His adopted kids, Timmy and Opie, and all of his friends and fans, will carry on that tradition.  Before making a decision, we’ll stop and think, What Would Vincent Do, and we’ll reach out to the world with a little more love and compassion and with less judgment and anger.

I’ll see you at the Bridge my beloved Vincent,
   Mom

by Kerry Hilliard, founder of Rikki’s Refuge


Rainbow Bridge
     Author unknown

Just this side of heaven is a place called Rainbow Bridge.

When an animal dies that has been especially close to someone here,
     that pet goes to Rainbow Bridge.

There are meadows and hills for all of our special friends so they can run and play together.
There is plenty of food, water and sunshine, and our friends are warm and comfortable.

All the animals who had been ill and old are restored to health and vigor.
Those who were hurt or maimed are made whole and strong again,
     just as we remember them in our dreams of days and times gone by.

The animals are happy and content, except for one small thing;
     they each miss someone very special to them, who had to be left behind.

They all run and play together, but the day comes when one suddenly stops and looks into the distance.
His bright eyes are intent. His eager body quivers.
Suddenly he begins to run from the group, flying over the green grass, his legs carrying him faster and faster.

You have been spotted, and when you and your special friend finally meet,
     you cling together in joyous reunion, never to be parted again.
The happy kisses rain upon your face; your hands again caress the beloved head,
     and you look once more into the trusting eyes of your pet,
     so long gone from your life but never absent from your heart.

Then you cross Rainbow Bridge together....