#CatLiveMatter
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The Kebab Den?
Cats are vanishing into thin air in this Bangor neighborhood
Avatar photo by Kathleen O'Brien 8 hours ago
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Matt Mason's three-year-old Maine coon cat, Eloise, has been missing since July 24. She is one of 16 cats in Bangor's Fairmount neighborhood that have gone missing without a trace in the last two months. Credit: Courtesy of Matt Mason
Frankee Foster is somewhat of a local celebrity on Harthorn Avenue in Bangor where she lives. With her fluffy white coat, bright blue eyes and friendly disposition, she’s easily recognizable and will approach anyone.
“My Frankee is so joyous and loving — she’d walk up to the Boogeyman,” said Anne Foster, Frankee’s owner. “Frankee is one in a million. There’s a hole in my heart without her here.”
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Frankee has been missing since Thursday, making her one of the 16 cats in Bangor’s Fairmount neighborhood that has disappeared, seemingly into thin air, in the past two months.
Aside from the heartbreak of beloved pets vanishing without a trace, residents are most frustrated by the lack of clues as to what may be happening. Some have looked to animal service officials for help, but were told there’s little they can do.
Experts are similarly baffled by the “unusually high” number of disappearances, but disagree on what they believe is causing the cats to go missing. Bangor’s animal control officer says local wildlife is likely to blame, but a state wildlife biologist argues that the spike in missing cats suggests a natural predator isn’t taking them.
While a cat going missing in a residential neighborhood isn’t unheard of, the unprecedented number of animals that have vanished in a small area in roughly two months has created an unsettling mystery for the people who live there. Members of the community are banding together as they hope their pets return, or that they at least get closure for the disappearances.
Jennifer Delano created a map of where the more than a dozen missing cats in Bangor’s Fairmount neighborhood live. Credit: Courtesy of Jennifer Delano
Jennifer Delano, who has lived in the neighborhood for 15 years, said she first noticed a few reports of missing cats in mid-June on the neighborhood’s Facebook page. Those posts prompted more residents to chime in, adding that their cats hadn’t come home either.
The trend led Delano, who has seven cats of her own, to make a map of where the missing animals live, which revealed more than a dozen lost felines between Webster Avenue and Hewey Street.
“It quickly went from six or seven cats to 12,” the self-proclaimed “crazy cat lady” said. “If it was one or two cats, it’d be a whole different conversation, or maybe there wouldn’t be a conversation at all. When it’s this many, it’s beyond the realm of normal.”