2 yr old • Female • Orange Tabby • ~8 lbs
Spayed/Neutered
Yes
Size
Small (~8 lbs)
Microchipped
Yes
House-Trained
Yes
Declawed
No
Good With Dogs
Yes
Good With Cats
Yes
Energy Level
Medium
Daisy is a 2-year-old orange tabby with a personality as warm as her coat. She's the kind of cat who makes you believe that every cat is secretly a sweetheart — because she certainly is. From the moment you walk in the door, she's there to greet you with a head bump and a purr so loud it sounds like a small engine running.
She loves everyone. Kids, adults, other cats, dogs — Daisy has never met a living thing she didn't want to befriend. She'll climb into any available lap, knead biscuits on your blanket, and fall asleep with her paw resting on your hand. She's also playful and curious, with a particular fondness for crinkle balls and the red dot from a laser pointer.
Daisy would thrive in just about any home. She's adaptable, social, and endlessly affectionate. She'd be a perfect first cat for a family, an ideal companion for someone living alone, or a wonderful addition to a home that already has pets. She just wants to be near her people.
Daisy was born feral in a barn colony near New Richland in 2024. She was trapped as a kitten at around 8 weeks old and brought to WCAHS as part of a TNR (trap-neuter-return) effort. But unlike most feral kittens her age, Daisy took to socialization remarkably quickly — within days, she was purring in volunteers' laps.
A team of dedicated WCAHS volunteers spent weeks working with her, and she blossomed into one of the friendliest cats they'd ever socialized. She was placed in a foster home at 12 weeks old and has been living the good life ever since. You would never guess she started life as a wild kitten — she's now the most domesticated, people-loving cat imaginable.
Spayed, up to date on all vaccinations including FVRCP and rabies
Microchipped
FIV/FeLV negative, dewormed
No known health issues — clean bill of health from veterinary exam
Amy, fostering since April 2024
"Daisy greets me at the door every single day when I come home from work. She runs up, does a little chirp, and then rolls over for belly rubs. I've never had a cat do that before."
"She sleeps on my pillow every night. Not at the foot of the bed, not on the other pillow — MY pillow. I've learned to share. She purrs herself to sleep and it's honestly the most soothing sound."
"I keep telling people that Daisy is the reason I became a cat person. She's going to make someone incredibly happy. I'm going to cry when she gets adopted, but she deserves her own forever home."