Today, our team includes foster cat parents, vet assistants, and people who’ve raised cats since they were kids. We’re following the same path the original team started. And we’re proud to do it.
There are tons of cat sites out there, but Archie Cat feels like it’s written by people who really love and know cats. I have a rescue kitten named Luna who jumps at every sound. Their article on helping anxious cats gave me real tips, like using hiding spots and calming playtime. Within a week, Luna was more relaxed and I felt more confident, too.
My cat Mango stopped eating one weekend, and I freaked out. I was ready to rush to the vet. Then I read an article on Archie Cat that explained when to worry and when not to. It was written in such a calm, helpful way. I realized it was a stress thing, not an emergency. I changed her feeding spot, and it worked. That one post saved me money and a lot of stress.
I read Archie Cat almost every week. It’s not just a blog. It feels like a friend who gets what it’s like to love a cat deeply. When I lost one of my fosters last year, I found an article about grief and pets that made me cry (in a good way). They talk about the hard stuff no one else does. I always leave the site feeling seen and less alone.
When my senior cat, Buttons, started acting confused, getting stuck in corners, meowing at night, I was heartbroken. I thought I was losing her. Archie Cat had an article about cat dementia that explained things clearly, without scaring me. It gave me small ways to help her feel safe again.