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Salad

Domestic Long Hair (long coat)

Details about Salad

  • ID C231193
  • Adoption Fee: $225
  • Breed: Domestic Long Hair (long coat)
  • Gender: Female
  • Coat Length: Long
  • Grooming Needs: Moderate
  • Current Weight: 0.0 lb.
  • Estimated Birthdate: 4/17/2023
  • Declawed: No

Salad's Compatibility Attributes

  • Good with Cats: Yes
  • Good with Kids: Yes
  • Older/Considerate Children Only: Yes
  • Good with Adults: All
  • Good for Apartment Living: Yes

Salad's Personality and Behavioral Qualities

  • Housetrained/Littertrained: Yes
  • Energy Level: Moderate
  • Reaction to New People: Cautious
Other Traits:
    Playful, Timid, Independent, Intelligent, Goofy, Plays with Toys

Salad was found outside as a stray with her sibling, Soup. As a result, she is still learning that humans are safe and can be trusted. She is semi-social but still a bit timid. An ideal family for her would be a quiet home, or a home with a quiet space for her to slowly adjust to her new environment, at her own pace.

This beautiful girl will need continued patience as she learns that humans are good and that indoor life is much better than the wild outdoors. She is totally worth the effort and deserves to be in her forever home, warm and loved!

Salad is from a stray surrender with one sibling, Soup. If you are interested in getting to know this animal better, please fill out an adoption application. An adoption application is the best way to show your interest in an animal and is not a binding contract.

To learn more about Ruff Start’s adoption process and the care our foster animals receive, please visit our How to Adopt page.

If you'd like to donate towards this pet's care, you can donate to our Animal Care Fund.   Our Animal Care Fund supports the medical and veterinary needs for all Ruff Start Rescue animals. You'll be able to enter this pet's name on the second page of the donation form.

Want to adopt a kitten? We highly recommend you consider bringing home two instead of one! Adopting kittens in pairs has been proven to be beneficial for cats’ emotional and behavioral well-being and greatly improves the likelihood of long-term adopter happiness as a result. Adopting more than one kitten also reduces the risk of “Single Kitten Syndrome” (also known as Tarzan Syndrome), a symptom of under-socialization during a kitten’s most formative weeks. Kittens who are under-socialized may develop aggressive tendencies toward both other animals and humans as they grow, creating lifelong behavioral issues for owners.