The cat came back to a Calgary neighbourhood 2 years later - Action News
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Calgary

The cat came back to a Calgary neighbourhood 2 years later

Calgarian Wendy Syvret was scrolling her Facebook feed last week when she saw a familiar sight the furry face of her missing cat, Epsy.

Epsy the cat went missing in 2020 but is now reunited with her owner

two photos form a collage, on the left hand side is a cat with shaved fur that is orange and grey. on the right a woman smiles while holding the cat.
Wendy Syvret and Epsy the cat were recently reunited. (Submitted by Wendy Syvret)

Calgarian Wendy Syvret was scrolling her Facebook feed last week when she saw a familiar sight the furry face of her missing cat,Epsy.

"I thought, 'Boy, that cat looks like Epsy,'you know?What are the chances? She's been gone two years," Syvret told the Calgary Eyeopener.

She said in September 2020 Epsy escaped her backyard in northeast Calgary through a small gapin thefence. Syvretsent a missing cat alert to YYC Pet Recovery, but nothing came of it.

Two years later she came across a post on that same Facebook page.

Epsy went missing from a northeast Calgary backyard in September 2020. (Submitted by Wendy Syvret)

"It really looked like her and I sent it to my kids and then I phoned the vet clinic where the absolute angels that picked her up took her," Syvretsaid.Epsy was found just a few blocks away from where Syvret lives.

"I had her record still, so I read off her chip number and they confirmed it with her chip."

Epsy was in rough condition, with thick matted fur which needed to be shaved, Syvret said. But she credits the goodwill of Calgarians in the area, who she believes kept the cat fed.

The cat has little rounded ears now from frostbite, but Syvret said the vet told her Epsy's organs are working fine.

"She was just amazed at the shape she's in.That she's beenoutside for two years and yet is in such good shape."

'Knows she's home'

Despite all that Epsy had been through over the years, she remembered her owner.

"Right away she kind of leaned on me when she was rubbing on my purse and then when I got her home she knew exactly where she was, and she's been coming to me and she has a little trill that she does when I call her," Syvret said.

"She definitely knows she's home."

Sheila Nixon, YYC Pet Recovery Facebook page administrator, said stories like Epsy's are the reason why she and the other admins volunteer their time to keep the page going.

Sheila Nixon and her foster dog, Granny. (Submitted by Sheila Nixon)

"Stories like this are when they're gone longer quite rare. So when one comes, the whole team is very excited and we share the news, and the happy story and pictures of the reunion," Nixon said.

"But we're really happy for any reunion, whether a pet is missing for two hours or two years, we're happy. We're very happy when they're reunited because they really become part of our lives."

Nixon said last year YYC Pet Recovery reunited more than 2,000 lost pets with their owners, though that figure does not include animals that were reunited with their owners the same day they were posted tothe page.

Nixon warned Calgarians who may see a cat out and about to not assume it is feral, or doesn't have a home.

"It may well be that it is lost and doesn't know how to get home. Epsy is a perfect example of that."