Having suffered from abuse, poor Lily remains traumatised!
It is always a huge disappointment to see a campaign fail, it means that the concerned animals will not receive any help. Unfortunately, we can not ship incomplete campaigns.
We want to maximize the help we are all bringing to the animals in distress. Our campaign goals are calculated to balance our storage, delivery and manufacturing costs of the offered products.
Delivering failed campaigns would generate too many costs, which would eventually lead to the bankruptcy of the website and leave all the animals that we could have helped alone...
The delivery of unfinished campaigns is also physically impossible for some products (if only 50% of a kennel is financed: we can not cut it in half).
Our activity is regulated by the french tax law, it forbides us to transfer money instead of the advertised product (article L 548-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code).
For this reason, when a campaign fails, donations are immediately refunded. If they want to, donors can send this money directly to the association.
Our activity is regulated by the french tax law, it forbides us to use the money for anything else than the original use announced in the campaign (article L 548-1).
So, unfortunately, we are not allowed to transfer donations from a campaign to another.
Free clicks are saved before being reallocated to other campaigns (free clicks being immaterial, they are not submited to the same obligations than financial donations).
This campaign failed, it won't be delivered... Collected quantities have been cancelled (payments have been transfered back and free clicks have been saved in a stock).
0 cm2
blankets offered
287,300 cm2
blankets necessary
Valdo is a two-and-a-half-month-old kitten, who was found in the street with his mother and siblings. He is terribly thin, suffering from a growth delay due to recurrent bouts of diarrhoea. His body doesn't have time to absorb the nutrients, as he passes his food through too quickly!
A supply of blankets would allow Valdo to rest better and keep his body temperature stable. It would provide him with some much-needed comfort, which would cheer him up after all he's been through.
At the moment, we're caring for around thirty cats in our foster homes and another thirty as free-roaming cats. We're facing a challenging situation, with a constant influx of kittens.
Regrettably, typhus has spread even to our foster homes! There have been several deaths due to this disease...