seeraig
05/09/11
12:48 AM EST
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Ingrid Kerger holds long lost cat named Tiger. Credit: Boris Minkevich,
Winnipeg Free Press Fourteen years after her cat, Tiger Lily, disappeared,
Ingrid Kerker of Winnipeg, Canada was stunned to receive a phone call from
a veterinary clinic, asking if she had ever owned an orange tabby. The
clinic had found a feline with an identification code tattooed in its right
ear that led to Kerker's old address, reports the Winnipeg Free Press. "I
was just shocked," Kerker tells Paw Nation. "Tiger Lily disappeared on
October 12, 1996. I remember because I wrote the date down in my Bible." At
the time, Kerker and her two young sons put up posters looking for their
cat, but they never found her. "Over the years, we wondered what happened
to her and she would come up in conversation periodically." Tiger Lily had
once been a stray that Kerker adopted and had spayed and tattooed. "In
Canada, every animal that is spayed or neutered has to be microchipped or
tattooed," Kerker explains. "Back then, they didn't have microchipping, so
I had Tiger Lily tattooed." After getting the call from the veterinary
clinic, Kerker quickly called her sons, both now in their twenties. "My
younger son Rick [now 23] couldn't wait to go out and get her." Rick took
along a photo of himself at eight years old, sleeping with Tiger Lily. "She
was very friendly right away," Kerker tells Paw Nation about reuniting with
Tiger Lily. "She just cuddled up on my chest and it was like we hadn't
skipped a bit." Except, of course, that Tiger Lily was much older. "The
animal clinic examined her and we think she's actually 19 years old,"
Kerker says. The family has no idea what Tiger Lily was doing these past 14
years. All they know is that when the staffer at the animal clinic rescued
her, the cat was thin and smelled of diesel fuel. Tiger Lily is as
affectionate as always and loves to hug cheek to cheek. It took her about
three days to get used to the two other cats in Kerker's household, though
the dog is another story "All three of the cats line up and eat out of the
same bowl," Kerker says. "But Tiger Lily's still a little uncertain about
the dog."
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