CARRIERE — It seemed to Kenny Abney of Carriere, to be a regular day on the job last July 10. It was a Friday and he was looking forward to the weekend. As he was running his tugboat and moving the barges used for the construction of the new Twin Spans across Lake Pontchartrain, he and his crew saw something that hadn’t seen before. A flying cat.
Dropping from the across the top railing of the bridge and through the air in front of them was a tiny black kitten. It landed with a thud in the choppy waters 80 feet beneath the high rise portion of the bridge. “This cat came flying over the bridge and landed in the water,” said Abney. “Someone had to throw it out of a car, there was no other way it could have happened.”
Pointing out that his crew and himself had rescued about a dozen raccoons and nutrias following Hurricane Gustav last year, Abney said in all his time as a tugboat captain, he hadn’t seen anyone toss a pet off the bridge. “With Gustav we saw a lot of raccoons and stuff, but not a cat,” continued Abney.
Realizing the kitten had managed to survive the fall and was now struggling to swim, some men on a smaller boat scooped the kitten up in a net. That is when Abney called out to them to put it on a nearby barge where he could pick it up. “We dried it off and wrapped it up,” said Abney of the tiny five-week-old kitten. “It wouldn’t have made it if we hadn’t been there.”
But the moment the kitten had a chance, it skirted away from the men and crawled beneath a large storage container on the barge. “It climbed up underneath one of those big shipping containers,” explained Abney. “And we couldn’t reach it there.”
When no amount of coaxing or food would draw the kitten from beneath the container, Abney knew he would have to some how catch it. So, the next day he returned with a live trap and set it up with some food. But capturing the kitten, now afraid of everything, but would prove a challenge for Abney. “It was pretty skittish,” he said.
But Abney didn’t give up. After several days of feeding the cat and talking to it, trying to coax it from its hiding place, he managed to catch the kitten. That is when he brought the tiny animal home to his wife, Liz.
“I was shocked,” said Liz. “I couldn’t believe someone would do that.”
Noting that the kitten had signs of abuse, Liz said it had no skin on his nose and that the skin around his eyes was covered in sores. “I don’t know what she endured before they threw him off that bridge,” she continued. “But it couldn’t have been good.”
Adding that for the first month, the kitten holed up in the laundry room rarely venturing out, Liz said it took awhile for it to begin to realize it was safe now. “I think she was afraid of loud noises,” she said, pointing out that perhaps the days on the barge with all the noises of a construction site may have terrified him even more. “she wouldn’t come out of my laundry room except to skirt out once in a while,” she said.
Continuing, Liz said that the kitten, now named Buttons for a tiny “button” of white on his chest, was acclimating into his new home quite well. “She goes running around here with the other cat like a maniac,” she said.
Adding that the kitten now had a permanent home with them, Kenny said, “She won the lottery I guess you could say.”
Features
Kitten tossed from Twin Spans
Local man sees it fall and rescues it
- Features
-
-
Historic painting donated to museum
Descendants of Eliza Jane Poitevant and George Nicholson, Jerry K. Nicholson and his son George, visited Picayune last week to bring a painting of historical significance as a donation to the Lower Pearl River Valley Museum located at the Intermodal Transportation and Tourism Center.
- Krewe of the Pearl rides Monday The Greater Picayune Chamber’s Krewe of the Pearl Mardi Gras Parade will be held Monday, February 13, at 6 p.m. on Goodyear Blvd. The Greater Picayune Arts Council (GPAC) is set to lead the parade with their newly purchased and renovated float they acquired strictly through donations.
-
Grammy winning guitarist and composer, visits Picayune
Andrew York, classical guitar great and brother of Picayune resident, Theresa Dischinger will be in town today.
The world renowned Grammy winner, will be coming through to visit his sister and soak up a little local flavor, says Dischinger.
“He has such a hectic schedule; this will be a nice rest for him after teaching a Masters Class in Pensacola, Fla.,” she says.
How did York get started on the road to international acclaim and how did Dischinger end up in Picayune?
-
Picayune Item’s super seniors
Coach “Twig” and Dana Branch are this week’s Picayune Item Super Seniors.
The couple have always lived by their motto of “it’s not the number of years in your life but the life in your years that matters.”
- Valentines Day is for celebrating romance Valentine's Day, unlike other holidays, was not officially set up by the government. Actually, it came about in spite of opposition from the government.
-
These walls are talking and they have stories to tell
Thirteen captivating days of historic home tours via an authentic double-decker bus, candlelight reenactments at Friendship Cemetery, dining, boutique shopping and walking tours in Columbus, Miss.
-
PRCC dental hygiene students brighten kids’ smiles
Approximately 60 children left Pearl River Community College’s dental hygiene clinic with bright smiles Friday, Feb. 3, after participating in the annual Give Kids A Smile event.
-
Planning ahead makes a difference in landscape
Even though it’s cold outside, now is a good time to stroll through your yard with pencil and paper in hand, noting what worked and what didn’t in your landscape last year. Viewing it during the bare-bones winter season will help you see where changes should be made.
-
“Words With Friends” kidnaps innocent brain cells
“All our words are but crumbs that
fall down from the feast of the mind.”
— Khalil Gibran -
Mr. Know it all: ‘A River Runs Through it’ Montana
Q: I was watching a DVD of the movie “A River Runs Through It.” Where was the movie filmed? — V.A.D., Carson, Calif.
- More Features Headlines
-






