
Photo: Melanie Stetson Freeman/Monitor Staff.
Carpenters use donated items, such as a surfboard, to create the right environment for cats to play and sleep at a cat sanctuary in Hawaii.
If you are mainly a “dog person,” today’s cat story may seem a bit silly to you. But if you have ever worried about what cats can do to endangered birds, you will be as glad about a sanctuary for feral cats in Hawaii as if you were a longtime “cat person.”
At the Christian Science Monitor, Jackie Valley writes about Lanai Cat Sanctuary. The resident cats, once wild and fierce, are very friendly. That’s because they’ve learned that visitors “come armed with staff-approved goody bags,” Valley says. “[They] saunter up to guests, begging for delicious morsels and maybe some head rubs. The shy cats hang back, with some lounging on benches, curling up in trees, or sleeping peacefully in small condos.
“Call it a cat-lover’s paradise in paradise. This four-acre, open-air haven exists on the Hawaiian island of Lanai.
“ ‘This place is made for feral cats to become friendly,’ says Joe Adarna, the sanctuary’s director of operations.
“Decades ago, Lanai contained the world’s largest pineapple plantation. Today, billionaire Larry Ellison owns roughly 98% of land on this mostly undeveloped and rugged island bursting with pine trees. About 3,000 people call Lanai home, and only Hotel Lānaʻi and two Four Seasons resorts operate here. But every year, thousands of tourists make day trips, usually by ferry, to visit the sanctuary, where more than 700 cats live.
“The sanctuary’s purpose is twofold — protect bird species while saving cats. And it all started with one kitten.
“Kathy Carroll needed help. In the early 2000s, a kitten that had been hit by a car wound up in her care. But no veterinarian lived on the island. So Ms. Carroll boarded a ferry, with the tiny cat in tow, and headed to Maui. The kitten survived.
“While on Maui, Ms. Carroll mentioned Lanai’s swelling population of unsheltered, hungry cats that no one seemed to be helping. The veterinarian’s response: ‘Maybe you should look in the mirror and do something.’
“The blunt advice set in motion an effort to trap and spay or neuter the island’s roaming felines. By 2006, however, the discovery of endangered Hawaiian petrels at a higher elevation on Lanai fast-tracked the desire for a physical sanctuary. The seabirds typically lay one egg per year in a ground burrow, making them particularly susceptible to feral cats.
“The sanctuary started in an unused horse corral until it moved to its current location in 2009, Ms. Carroll says. Over time, the sanctuary’s land – once littered with old car parts and discarded refrigerators — transformed into a series of homey enclosures fit for each cat. Older cats, for instance, have their own fenced-in areas, as do cats with special needs.
“The safe space for the cats, in turn, provides protection for the island’s vulnerable feathered inhabitants, including the wedge-tailed shearwater, the Hawaiian coot, the Hawaiian stilt, and the Hawaiian petrel.
“Hawaii is an island ecosystem in which birds evolved without the presence of feline predators, says Grant Sizemore, director of invasive species programs for the American Bird Conservancy. He credits Lanai Cat Sanctuary with playing a ‘valuable role’ in protecting vulnerable birds. …
“The nonprofit’s leaders say fights among the felines are rare. There’s no need to be territorial. The cats have enough nourishment (120 pounds of dry food and 100 cans of wet food per day total), plenty of room (70,000 square feet of enclosed spaces), and, for those who want it, lots of attention (12,000 or more visitors a year). The cost to keep the operation afloat: $2 million per year, most of which comes from donations. …
“Every year, the nonprofit takes in 150 to 200 cats, most of whom come from Lanai. An exception occurred in August 2023 after a deadly blaze swept through Lahaina, a city on Maui’s northwestern coast. The sanctuary opened its arms to 220 cats rescued postfire by the Maui Humane Society. In exchange, that organization agreed to take 220 adoptable cats from Lanai Cat Sanctuary over the next few years, Mr. Adarna says.
“Some cats live out their remaining time at the sanctuary. But the true aim of sanctuary workers – who give the cats unique names – is to socialize them better and help each one find a loving forever home.
“ ‘As they get older, it’s so much better to have a couch and a family,’ Mr. Adarna says.
“The sanctuary facilitates anywhere from 50 to 100 adoptions each year, with new homes as far-flung as New York and Florida. Some of those bonds begin when visitors meet a special four-legged friend at the sanctuary.
“Other visitors come for the cuddles and leave with happy memories. A few have even departed with wedding rings. About a dozen couples have gotten married at the sanctuary.” More at the Monitor, here.
I am not that level of cat person, but I do like cats and am glad they have a sanctuary, especially as I care a lot about endangered birds.
But changing the topic, I’d like to say before closing that it makes me really uncomfortable that one man “owns 98 percent” of this island. Something feels wrong about that.





















