Saturday, June 6, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Surrey Animal Resource Centre reunites globetrotting cat missing since 2014 with owners

Darpan News Desk, 21 Dec, 2016 11:11 AM
    Stray pets are common guests at the Surrey Animal Resource Centre (SARC) but Pharfalla, an 8 year old Torti female cat, is not your everyday stray cat. Animal Control staff picked her up in Guildford on December 14th. The Guildford couple who found Pharfalla helping herself to food at their home were happy to keep the stray but wanted to ensure they weren’t keeping someone else’s cat.
     
    The good news is that Pharfalla had been tagged with an identification microchip. However, when SARC staff ran the chip there was no local information on it. After a little more sleuthing, staff determined the microchip was of Swiss origin. Turns out, Pharfalla had been flown from Switzerland to Seattle to Calgary before being trucked to McLeese Lake with its owners in Central BC.
     
    In June 2014, Pharfalla went missing without a trace. Somehow Pharfalla found a way to make the 560 km journey from McLeese Lake to Surrey. Despite the lengthy trek and her extended time on her own, she is in excellent condition.
     
    Pharfalla’s rightful owners have been contacted in McLeese Lake and will be driving down on Friday to Surrey to collect their globetrotting feline.
     
    Every year, the Surrey Animal Resource Centre provides care to over 2000 animals with the commitment to ensuring safe, quality animal care.  The Centre provides animal care, information about owner responsibilities, dog off-leash areas, the City of Surrey's animal regulations, and serves as a call centre for lost pets, and animal complaints.
     

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you

    Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you
    The behaviours like seeing, smelling and sexual arousal that "come naturally and do not have to be learned" occur because of two classes of pheromone...

    Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you

    Stomach most hated body part: Research

    Stomach most hated body part: Research
    Stomachs have been voted the most hated part of the body by the British, followed by love handles and bingo wings, according to new research by non-surgical...

    Stomach most hated body part: Research

    Australian children hide internet usage from parents

    Australian children hide internet usage from parents
    In a survey released Monday, 70 percent of Australian children aged between 8-17, said that their parents did not know about their internet usage...

    Australian children hide internet usage from parents

    'Dropped' calls may measure rainfall

    'Dropped' calls may measure rainfall
    We know that cellphone calls break up and crackle when it rains. But did you ever think that tracking this disruption in cellphone signals could help you calculate the amount of rainfall?

    'Dropped' calls may measure rainfall

    World's oldest recorded near-death experience found

    World's oldest recorded near-death experience found
    Researchers have stumbled upon what they believe to be the oldest professional/medical case report of near-death experiences (NDE) - dating back to the year 1740....

    World's oldest recorded near-death experience found

    Oldest evidence of human brain damage found

    Oldest evidence of human brain damage found
    Anthropologists have unearthed a 100,000-year-old skeleton of a child in Israel who may have died because of a brain injury - the oldest evidence of brain damage in a modern human....

    Oldest evidence of human brain damage found