⚠️ Scam Alert: Pets Reunited does not use WhatsApp or any messaging apps to contact customers. If you receive messages claiming to be from us, do not respond, click any links, or engage. Please block the number immediately.
Back

LOST CAT: Ginger cat called Lemoney - Wembley area, Brent

£75
REWARD OFFERED

LOST
Lemoney
Name: Lemoney
Breed & Species: Unknown cat
Colour: Ginger
SimpleColour:
Went missing: 5 days ago
(29 March 2025 at around 13:00hrs)
Location: Church Ln, London, UK
Health: Healthy
Age: 1 year old
Sex: Male
Collar: No
Microchipped: No
Markings: None
Circumstances: We were outside 60 Harlesdon Td to get him microchipped he leapt out the cage and ran into the traffic. People saw him hiding under vehicles.
Our ref: PR112939
Posted on: 31 March 2025
Posted by: NazelinetooraballyNazelinetoorabally
Have you seen this cat? Call:
[Log in to view contact details]

Or leave a comment below

Where Lemoney went missing:

Church Ln, London, UK

View larger map

Poster Download:

Please log in to access the poster for this report

Flyer Download:

Please log in to access the flyer for this report

Report activity, comments and sightings:

You can post a message here if you have any information about this pet. The owner will be automatically notified.

petsreunited
petsreunited
Missing pet report received on Pets Reunited.
petsreunited
petsreunited
Report is now online.
petsreunited
petsreunited
Report added to PetWatch™ alert dispatch queue.
petsreunited
petsreunited
Report added to alert dispatch queue for local Vets and Rescue Centres around Wembley, Brent, Greater London.
petsreunited
petsreunited
'Missing Pet' poster and flyer created
petsreunited
petsreunited
PetWatch™ follow up reminder scheduled for 07 April 2025
petsreunited
petsreunited
Local Vets and Rescue Centres reminder scheduled for 07 April 2025
petsreunited
petsreunited
Report dispatched via email to our local PetWatch alert subscribers.
petsreunited
petsreunited
Report dispatched via email to local Vets and Rescue Centres.
alemcmilan
alemcmilan
I amsharing this advice from a person ... it helped me... to find my boy.. LOST CAT ADVICE (long read but very useful) A CAT USED TO GOING OUTSIDE: something has happened to interrupt the cat’s behaviour of coming home. Cats are territorial and do not just run away from home. Something will have spooked the cat and it has bolted out of its familiar territory and ended up in a garden it has never been in before. Cats just hide mostly when scared. They don’t just wander around. 1. A SOUND - Cats have extremely acute hearing and are naturally terrified of loud noises such as thunder, a car horn, a dog barking, a refuse lorry coming down the road emptying bins. The younger the cat the more easily they are scared by noises and bolt. 2. A LOCAL BOLD and DOMINANT CAT – will size up to a more timid cat to exert control over the territory. 3. An UN-NEUTERED MALE CAT will scare off all local cats in his endless searching over miles seeking a female. His instinct is to dominate in all territories and intimidate and fight with all local cats. THE SUPER FRIENDLY CAT KNOWN TO EVERYONE: sometimes disappear on occasions for longer than normal as they are visiting many homes. They turn up suddenly as if nothing had happened, oblivious to the panic they have created. INDOOR ONLY cat who has escaped is very different, it will be MUCH CLOSER to home in the first hiding space it can find. It will be terrified finding itself suddenly outside. It will hide immediately very nearby but too panicked to respond to being called. A cat NEW TO AN AREA through moving house or being re-homed will also find being outside frightening and will hide away quickly and nearby. MISSING CAT STUDY from Missing Animal Response Network - A study of 1200 missing cats that were lost and then found. • The majority of cats 75% were found within 500 metres (1/3 of a mile) of their home (or escape point). Indoor only cats were closest to home often up to 10 houses distance. • The majority (83%) were found outside in a GARDEN near to home (or to their escape point) under shrubs or decking. • The majority of cats that were found, were found within 8 weeks. Half of those found was within 7 days. • Some bolder cats work their way home when their adrenaline has subsided (sometimes after a few days). Many cats will stay in hiding for very many days – often 10-12 days. They need our help to be reunited especially if they have bolted beyond their personal territory; they will be disorientated and unable to find their way back. THINGS YOU SHOULD DO: FIRST: SEARCH STRAIGHT AWAY and REGULARLY: Immediately search the local area. Call from your garden day and night. Walk the length of your road STOPPING and WAITING. Frightened cats take a while to respond. Start at the end of your road and WALK TOWARDS your house as you call so you don’t tempt your cat to travel further away from its home. Do the same on parallel roads as many times as possible every day. Don’t give up as the majority of found cats are found within 2 months with 50% in the first 7 days. Call in your normal voice so your cat is reassured that it is safe. They will pick up on the slightest anxiety as cats are hugely sensitive. Unless your cat is very bold, he/she will not rush straight out of hiding on hearing you; many stay in hiding for up to 12 days. Stand still and call. Build your cat’s confidence by hearing your voice sounding relaxed, talking to switched off mobile as you walk towards home. NIGHT-TIME/EARLY HOURs when the WORLD IS ASLEEP, when it is QUIET is a very good time to call and search. SOUND TRAVELS MUCH LONGER DISTANCES at night and your cat is much more likely to hear you calling it. CATS FEEL SAFER IN THE DARK from predators and are more likely to leave their hiding place on being called. Call in your garden frequently overnight. If walking on the street near your home to call through to reach neighbour’s gardens; take someone with you to stay safe. Shaking a treat bag GENTLY is a signal to cats (if it’s something they have heard at home) and the sound will travel much further late at night. Search at dusk and dawn BE PATIENT; WAIT; REPEAT: Hiding away and not responding has nothing to do with whether your cat loves you, whether it recognises your voice – it has everything to do with the fact that a frightened cat will hide in silence! It is following its instinct and is in survival mode. Even if you are nearby the cat won’t just come out. Search hiding places. SECOND: PUBLICISE: LEAFLET EVERY HOUSE. LEAFLETS are very successful and have resulted in reuniting quite a few cats. Leaflet both sides of your road and parallel streets. Include a clear full photograph of your cat and your mobile number. Ask them to search in their gardens, sheds and under decking. Leaflets through doors really RAISES THE PROFILE of your lost cat in a large number of people’s minds. It reaches so many people – literally many hundreds. A good leaflet expressing how much the cat is missed and loved also touches the heart of many people who will then make the effort to go and search. USE A FORWARDING NUMBER ,not your own phone number, you will receive pranks... And finally check on the Council website reported dead animals... it is sad, but it will give you closure... they will scan the body and call the registered owner. I wish you all the very luck finding your baby

Leave a public comment:

Web addresses and report reference numbers (eg. PR42425) in comments will be automatically linked

Login here to leave a comment

Other reports nearby:

LOST
Millee

Tabby and white cat

Elthorne Road, London NW9 8BJ, UK

FOUND

Tortoise cat

Sunnymead Road, London NW9 8BX, UK

FOUND

Yellow eyes cat

Elthorne Way, London NW9 8BN, UK

FOUND

Golden/light brown ferret

Birchen Grove Garden Centre, Birchen Grove, London, UK

FOUND

Ginger cat

Church Lane, Kingsbury Green, London, UK

LOST
Tinkerbell

Tabby Domestic short-haired cat

Salmon Street, London NW9 8YA, UK

LOST
Ellie

Brown Spotted Bengal cat

London NW9 9PF, UK

FOUND

Light brown and white Staffordshire Bull Terrier dog

Welsh Harp Open Space, London, UK

FOUND

Black and white Domestic short-haired cat

London NW9, UK