How I survived flying with 2 cats on 3 airplanes during the coronavirus and a civil rights crisis.

You probably don’t remember, but back when I was still themysterywriter, I made a thread here about how I was scared my cats were going to die when we had to move across the ocean. Well, that move is finally over, and the kitties are safely in their new home.

It was quite the harrowing journey. Our flights were canceled twice before we finally made one that stuck. I wasn’t upset about them being canceled. I didn’t want to move and was hoping we’d be stuck in Hawaii forever, but now I’m here in Idaho. Oh well.

The day before we were scheduled to leave my dad went online to check the status of our flight and read that our flight for the next day had been rescheduled and we were booked on a new flight that was leaving in 7 hours. Luckily, we had sent by postal mail most of our stuff already, and we had the suitcases we were taking all packed. Dad had one of his parishioner friends stop by unexpectedly, which my mom keeps saying was a total “airquotes” coincidence. It’s really funny. Because yes, it was a coincidence. It’s not like he has never stopped by unexpectedly before. He even had a reason to do it. But no, it was the will of your imaginary friend. Sure.

Anywho, so we shoved our kitties into their tiny torture carriers and drove to the airport. Once we got there and were standing in line to check in we found out that Delta could get us from Hawaii to La, and and La to SanFran, but they didn’t have a flight going to Boise. So a whole bunch of employees were trying to figure out how to get us to Boise. They finally accomplished this by getting us tickets on a United Flight.

So then we lug our heavy carryon luggage plus kitties to the first 5-hour flight. The kitties meowl off and on the entire time because they’re terrified and don’t understand. They let us take them into a separate room to let them out of their carriers while they searched them though, which was nice.

Then we get to LA, and the kitties continue to meowl as we find our gate and sit down and wait for the next two hours for our next flight. Then we get on that flight and the kitties cry for another hour. Then we get off and make a loooong trek outside the SanFran airport to get to the United desk because we have to check in and go back through security.

When we get there the check-in lady says we can’t take pets on the plane without calling their pets program first and setting it all up, and paying again, even though we had already done that for Delta. Our plane was scheduled to leave in about an hour. So dad gets on his phone and calls. Someone actually answers, and he is able to set it up for us to take the kitties with us, then we get back in line to check in. Then we go through security again. They decide to just have us take the cats out there, rather than going into a separate room. Smokey almost escapes! But we manage to catch him again before he has a chance to run off and squish him back into his carrier. Then we race to the gate and get there just as they have begun boarding.

So then we get on the plane and the kitties meowl for another hour and a half before we finally land in Boise. That was the worst trip ever and I am never, ever, ever doing that again!!!

We have been here in our new/old home and the kitties are adjusting surprisingly well. About ten minutes after we got here, Patches jumped up on my bed and pissed on it. She hasn’t done that for years, but I don’t really blame here after all that stress and being in a new place. She tried doing it again two more times, but I picked her up and put her in her litter box. She’d jump out immediately and be mad, but then she eventually used it.

Patches was the cat I was the most worried about because she’s the cat version of me, and she hates change. But she’s done so well. I’m so proud of her. I’m proud of both of them. The very best part is that Patches, who has hated me ever since we rescued Smokey and he took over what used to be “her room” seems to have forgotten she hates me. I can pet her now, she doesn’t growl at me except when I pick her up. They both come into my room. It’s like she’s a totally different cat. She even played with me this morning, something she hasn’t done since she was a kitten.

We’ve kept them inside, but this morning we let them out for the first time. They’re both pretty skittish about outside though and are staying in for the most part, which is so weird because Patches pretty much lived outside in Hawaii.

The house is a mess and it smells because the previous owners also had cats and didn’t clean it very well. So we’ll be living in a construction zone for a while. I still call Hawaii home, but eventually I’ll start to think of here as home, too. My brother brought over a new WiFi modem for us this morning, so we finally have WiFi again. I was using the 3G on my phone until my dad texted to say that I’d used 80% of that months’ data, so I quit using it except for imessage. I was missing the dope a lot, so I’m super happy to be back.

All-in-all, the move was successful, I guess. No one got kicked off any of the 3 flights I was on. The United plane was super tiny and they were offering zero services, not even water, so the only time you saw any attendants was when they were obsessively picking up trash, and they were all wearing their masks. On our first Delta flight the attendants slipped their masks off whenever they sat down and only put them on when they were serving. They would toss these wrapped plastic packs at you that came with a small water bottle, a bag of Cheezits, and a bag of nuts. We got them on both of our flights with them. I slept through it the second time though.

I was worried about my laptop because Smokey jumped on it and knocked it to the ground a while ago which broke one of the hinges, and now it won’t close all the way. But it managed to survive the trip and is still working for the moment.

We went shopping at WinCo our first day back and hardly anyone was wearing a mask. None of the employees were. It’s like that in most places. Although most of the food places are still drive-thru/delivery only. But not all. Idaho is a very red state though.

I’m glad you and the cats made it intact. Thank you for the update.

So, Happy for you and the kitties.
Welcome to the mainland. It ain’t so bad. :slight_smile:

I don’t know how you managed it without losing your marbles!* Just moving my cats across town was traumatic. The meowling…the meowling…shudder

  • Maybe I’m being presumptuous?

Thank you, and you’re welcome, EmilyG! I thought because of my earlier thread that maybe I should do a followup one.

Thanks Beckdawreck. I grew up here, and I survived. I just really hate moving. Once I’m planted somewhere I wanna stay there. whinges Why can’t I stay?

Dung Beetle, It was absolutely zero amounts of fun. The worst part is they don’t understand and there wasn’t anything I could do to make it better until we finally got here.

I don’t think I was born with any marbles, so nothing to lose there. titters

Good thread title/user name combo!

I do remember that thread! and am very glad to see that the cats and you all survived the trip.

I’m not in the least surprised that they’re skittish about going outside. Hawaii and Boise must seem like entirely different planets to them. Everything’s going to smell different; nearly every species outside is different. For all they know, they’ve been transported to some other world entirely, and have to learn all over again what’s safe and what’s dangerous.

I moved a cat from Florida to New York State once; and he was terrified when he first went outside. He got over it eventually, though; yours will too.

I was thinking that also!

Thanks! :smiley:

Hurraays for being remembered! Yes, I’m sure they do feel like they were taken to an alien world. They were both born in Hawaii and have never known anything else. They’re young though. Patches is 2 and Smokey is 1, so they will probably end up forgetting Hawaii at some point. When winter comes they are really going to be in for a shock. I’m glad we moved them in summer. It’s hotter and dryer here. They’re drinking a lot more water and are constipated. But right now they’re just napping, Smokey on my bed and Patches on my parents bed. So their lives haven’t changed too much. teehee

The other day we were working in the garage and Smokey climbed up into the attic and went into a crawlspace to hide because he was so scared of all the moving noises. My dad had to climb in and rescue him. We keep the attic door closed now!

Florida to New York would be a pretty big shock, too. How did they react when they first saw snow? I’m glad yours adjusted over time. :slight_smile:

Ah, so glad things are fine. Believe me, I can totally relate. While I am now a veteran of having moved multiple cats through international moves, the first time (from Virginia to Micronesia, via Oahu) was the scariest. At one point, the cat carriers were on the tarmac for an extended period while noisy planes were coasting by (I could see the carriers out the airport window but could do nothing about it). I was SURE the continuous noise would deafen the cats. When they were finally safe in their new Micronesian home, I repeatedly snuck up behind them and clapped to test their hearing for about a week before I believed their ears were fine :slight_smile:

Anyway, I now formally initiate you into the club of People Who Really Love Their Pets and Survive Extremely Scary Moves Involving Terrifying Airplane Flights. Welcome!

Thank You for the initiation. And wow, from Virginia to Micronesia! I couldn’t have handled having the cats out of my control like that. That must have been awful to see them out there and not be able to help. I’m really glad yours made it through without damage!!!

I remember the first thread. I’m so glad the poor cats survived and everything went better than you feared.

I no longer remember that specific reaction; it was quite a few years ago. But my guess is that it was about the same as the usual reaction of a spring kitten discovering snow in the fall:

What is this stuff?!

It’s on my paw!!!

Now it’s on my other paw!!!

I can’t shake off all my paws at once! Let me back in!!!

– though I’ve known cats to roll around in it with glee like puppies or young humans, once they got used to it.

teehee I think Patches will at least try snow, but Smokey is still very scared of outside right now. They’re both inside most of the time, but she will go out more than he does. The worst part is night time when he meowls all night. In Hawaii it got dark at six, but here it doesn’t get dark until ten, so he isn’t getting up until around 11 pm, right when I’m going to bed. And we don’t have the cat door installed yet so he can’t go out, not that he would, anyway. So he meows all night.

Not sure just where you are; but just about everyplace in North America has coyote by now, city or country. I strongly recommend keeping the cats in at night.

Copying a blog post from when we moved our cats (and a 10-month-old baby) from Boston to Seattle 15 years ago. My parents had come out from California to help with the move.

Yikes! 2 kitties and a baby. It’s nice you had help. That’s funny that they searched one of your cats for bombs. :smiley: I’m glad everything went smoothly for the most part.

We didn’t give our cats anything because we’d read it could cause them to choke or something. We had leashes for both cats but the airport said they must be in their carriers the whole time, so we didn’t let them run around on them. Maybe we should have tried.

** @thorny locust**, we’re in Idaho. There are coyotes in the mountains, but not generally down in the city. Our cats run every time they hear a noise or the wind blows, so I don’t think they’d ever let anything close enough to get them. :smiley: Although, it is better to be safe than sorry.

The blog post was getting long, so I didn’t talk more about that part. They didn’t just search Cobalt for bombs. The person in charge of the checkpoint seized the opportunity to shut down the entire checkpoint and train everyone on how to wand a cat for a few minutes. We were not popular with other passengers or with staff that day. I’m glad it was the mellow orange cat, at least, and not the high-strung brown tabby, who might easily have gotten away from me.

Nobody wants to be an object lesson, but it wasn’t your fault they picked you. goes back in time to tell irrinoyatated passengers

Smokey was very close to escaping, but Patches was too scared and was our mellow one. She didn’t even cry that much.

If anybody is going to sedate a cat for travel, make sure to try a sample dose while they’re safe at home first.

My mother and I flew two cats from Florida to New York State once (I’m extremely thankful that this was well before 9/11 and security was a non-issue.) On the vet’s advice we gave them each a sedative dose a couple of days beforehand. One cat went to sleep, which he might have done anyway, being a cat. The other cat – apparently the sedative, instead of calming her mind, left her wide awake but with her muscles or nerves not working right. She was staggering around the place in obvious mental distress for some time.

We did not sedate her for the trip; putting her through that while she was mentally aware but physically helpless because her body wouldn’t work right would have been far worse than taking her with no medication. (She forgave us much sooner than the other cat; he wound up with me – the airline would only allow one cat per cabin – and he wouldn’t talk to me for months.)

I am really really glad I never had to do anything like that with Marmalade. There would have been blood all over the place.

We did that, and Rhodium was fine - went and took a nap. I think the diarrhea was stress-induced.