My cat has moved her kittens, she’s meowing and won’t stay with them

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Hi everyone,

So, I’ve been browsing your site/forum for a few days now, and it’s been really helpful for answering some questions I had. But right now, I really need some individual advice.

Here’s the story from the beginning:

Our cat Luna, whom we adopted after she was found at a motorway services, got pregnant. We were supposed to get her spayed, but unfortunately, someone let her out by mistake during her first heat.

Last Tuesday marked 60 days since she’d conceived. On Thursday morning around 3:30 am (just as we were getting back from a night out), she was waiting for us, followed us everywhere, and eventually settled on the bed to have her first contractions. We tried to put her in the spot we’d prepared for her (towels, dim light, a little nook), but she wasn’t having any of it. She spent three hours having contractions almost on my lap. We were surprised because we’d been told that cats look for an isolated spot to give birth. But she seemed anxious and was reassured by my presence, my stroking, etc. At 6:30 am the first baby arrived, then the second and third about fifteen minutes apart. The fourth came an hour later. She looked exhausted, tried to sleep a bit, and with our encouragement, she finally had the fourth and the fifth.

She did everything exactly as she should: broke the sacs, licked the babies so they could breathe, ate the placentas... After a while, we moved her and the babies into a nesting box. She let us touch them without any trouble. I stayed with her all day, and when I tried to go and get something to eat, she meowed at me looking worried, followed me downstairs, and meowed at me very loudly. When I made a move to go back up to the bedroom, she stopped at every step to check I was following. I concluded that she was anxious, scared of being alone with her little ones.

After a while, we ignored her meowing and she eventually went back to her babies. Phew! Especially since we had to go away for the weekend on the Friday evening. When we got back, everything was fine; the 5 babies were in great shape and so was Luna. But every so often, she starts meowing very loudly while looking at us, as if she’s trying to make us understand something. Sometimes she goes out into the garden and leaves her babies (I’m not sure exactly how long for), and sometimes we get the impression she’s panicking. This morning, with the babies being 5 days old, she left them alone and started meowing again.

To make her understand she needed to look after her babies, I picked one up. She meowed at me, grabbed it, and moved it to a different spot. She put it under a bedside table that has a cloth over it reaching down to the floor—as if she wanted to hide it. Then after fifteen minutes, she moved all the babies over there. But then she left them alone. They meow and call for her, but she just comes and meows while looking at me. I’ve checked that she still has milk, and she seemingly does. She has dry food and water available. I also noticed this morning that she had some dried blood on her fur around her vulva. Is it normal for her to still have some discharge 5 days after giving birth?

Sorry for the wall of text, but I really wanted you to know how the birth went, seeing as she didn't act in a typical way from the start. I hope you can give me some information and, above all, reassure me. She’s just gone back to her babies this second; they’re nursing. I’m probably worrying over nothing, but I’d rather do too much than not enough. It’s like she’s having new-mum panic attacks, realising she has 5 babies to look after, getting scared and abandoning them for a bit, before changing her mind later on...

Thanks in advance

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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    Actually, we both got Luna together last summer while we were doing a summer season on the Isle of Oléron. So she belongs to both of us. But since she’s had a garden from the start, we decided it was best for her to stay at his place. No, we don’t weigh the kittens. But you can clearly see they’re putting on weight and they’re all nursing very regularly, which is really reassuring. Apparently, he’s got some kitchen scales, so we might start doing that. However, he’s heading off this weekend for another season and he’s taking them with him. He won’t have any internet access there, so he won’t be able to ask for help on here (thanks for all your advice, by the way—I haven’t found anywhere else where you get such good advice so quickly). I suppose once he’s there, he’ll just have to see a vet if any problems crop up.
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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    @dellys is right, cleaning their eyes with an eye wash and using medicated drops. At the moment I’m using a tetryzoline-based eye drop; both are really effective and the kittens’ eyes look perfectly clear.
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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    By the way, are you weighing the kittens every day to check they're putting on weight steadily, say around 10-15g a day?

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    OK, I get where you're coming from, Shinya, regarding the slight delay in getting her to the vet. But when you say he's the one "looking after" this little cat, what exactly do you mean? Is she his or not? Just for your information, Shinya, whenever my kittens have gunky eyes that are stuck shut, I clean them (as often as necessary, so basically every time they're stuck) using a makeup removal pad—definitely don't use loose cotton wool as the fibres can get in their eyes—and an eye wash. Then, I either use antibiotic eye drops several times a day, or if I'm going to be out for a few hours, I use an antibiotic eye ointment.
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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    Thanks for the advice, we’ve already switched vets twice now -___- Is there honestly not one decent one in the area or what? As for why it’s taking me so long, it’s mainly because I’m not the only one making the decisions. My boyfriend is involved too, as he’s the one actually "looking after" Luna (he’s got a big house with a garden, whereas I’ve just got a tiny flat). Plus, he’s the one paying the vet bills, so I don’t really have much of a say, to be honest... But we’re going to try and get them to a vet today. We’ll mention the eye wash and the drops... The thing is, the vet said over the phone that it’s probably viral so there’s nothing to be done... but I don’t see how he can know that without even seeing them...
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    Euqinorev, I have kittens with sticky eyes in almost every litter (it’s quite common for them to have a bit of gunk just as they’re opening their eyes), so I always keep some eye wash and eye drops handy. It really winds me up to hear that a vet would say kittens can’t be treated at that age.
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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    Find another vet but don't wait around; it's urgent that this cat and her kittens are seen to.
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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    That’s mental, so there are actually vets who refuse appointments? I really would have thought they’d be the opposite and always trying to get you to spend more.
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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    You should change your vet ;)
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    Anonymous user Icon representing the flag French
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    Just to clarify: kittens with sticky eyes can ABSOLUTELY be treated with a sterile eye wash to clean them up, along with liquid eye drops and an eye ointment (the ointment version is used when you're out for a long time and can't reapply the drops as often).
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