* Report a cat that needs help
If you have seen a cat in our area that is sick, injured, or in distress, please tell us here so we can respond properly. Giving us clear, factual information, where the cat is, when you saw it, and what you observed, helps us coordinate care quickly.
Please report before acting on your own. Thank you so much for caring!
→ https://forms.gle/i32NFLDraGVR8c317
* Follow and share the campaign
Hashtag: #ProtectTheRRCatColony
----> Donate so we can continue taking care of the cats. https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=576QNJ4M4XCAE
Would you like to support the colony, volunteer during your holidays, or ask us something? You can use the form or write us an email.
We're always looking for holiday visitors willing to help, even an hour of your time is valuable!
What if a residential community in Spain became the first to openly welcome and care for its feline residents, a model others could follow?
In many places, the best we hope for is that outdoor cats are simply left in peace. But some communities could choose to go further:
to formally recognise and care for a managed colony, and to show what humane, responsible coexistence really looks like.
Achieving this requires new agreements, creative ideas, and people willing to lead with compassion and clarity. It does ask for cooperation, but also sometimes just for simple tolerance.
And the potential impact is enormous.
A well-managed colony not only improves the lives of the animals, it strengthens the sense of community, demonstrates civic responsibility, and reflects a modern, humane approach to shared spaces.
This is the vision we work toward:
neighbourhoods where people and animals coexist with respect, balance, and care, and where communities become examples of what is possible when empathy and good management come together.