<p>Someone was searching for a friendly black cat, missing in rural southern Vermont. Someone who had never been to the Vineyard. So how did Boxer end up in Oak Bluffs?</p>
The Facebook posts popped up over the weekend. Was anyone missing a friendly black cat with one injured eye? There were several reports of him showing up at homes in Oak Bluffs, but no owner stepped forward to claim him.
More than 200 miles to the north (including seven miles of Nantucket Sound), someone was searching for the cat, missing in rural Vermont. Someone who had never been to the Vineyard.
The two sides, lost and found, eventually connected thanks to social media, the Oak Bluffs animal control officer, a game of telephone and a pet microchip. By Tuesday night, the cat was back home on the mainland with his owner, Fran Hendricks.
“Here he is, he's playing with his cat toys,” Ms. Hendricks said by phone Wednesday. “He's as casual as can be.”
While Boxer’s journey from Readsboro, Vt. to Oak Bluffs is still a mystery, his journey back started at the home of Anthony BenDavid, the town animal control officer.
One of the people who found the friendly black cat wandering around Oak Bluffs brought him to Mr. BenDavid late Saturday afternoon. The cat was sweet and the weather getting cold, so the BenDavid family took him in and set him up in a downstairs playroom, away from the family’s two dogs and cat. Mr. BenDavid’s wife, Rachel, posted information about the cat on Facebook. Their five-year-old daughter, Lyla, played with Boxer and drew a picture of him. “She wanted to keep it,” Mr. BenDavid said.
Mr. BenDavid scanned the cat for a microchip and got a hit. But a call to the microchip company had the chip tracing back to a dog in Alabama. That wasn’t right, Mr. BenDavid said, and the family kept him for the night.
On Sunday, Boxer went to Animal Health Care Associates in Edgartown, which has a boarding shelter. On Monday Mr. BenDavid got a call from Second Chance Animal Center in Shaftsbury, Vt. They had registered the chip number that erroneously traced back to the dog in Alabama, and had been alerted to the pet’s discovery. But they had the right information: the chip was registered to a cat adopted from the shelter in late November.
“The staff loved him,” Second Chance director of shelter operations Shona Ross told the Gazette Wednesday. “He was actually in a condo in the front lobby so he was a greeter.”
The two-year-old cat named Boxer — he liked to bat at people as they walked by his cage — had been adopted by Ms. Hendricks in late November. Ms. Hendricks, 67, was actively looking for Boxer, who went missing Dec. 20 after slipping out an unlatched dog door.
“We were upset,” Ms. Ross said. “She was devastated.” Fliers were posted, but Ms. Hendricks said she had lost other cats over the years to wild animals in the rural area, so she thought Boxer was gone for good.
When the shelter heard from the microchip company that he had been found on the Vineyard, they called Mr. BenDavid and confirmed it was Boxer, easily distinguishable because of his unusual right eye.
“We were thrilled and just as much dumbfounded,” she said. “How did he get all the way to an Island?”
The happy news was passed on to Ms. Hendricks. “She was so blown away when I called and said I [found him],” Ms. Ross said. “I kept her voicemail.”
Boxer was a special cat, Ms. Hendricks said, noting his weeping eye. He's been checked out by doctors and is on a special diet, she said, but he is healthy and can see out of both eyes. She thought that was why he hadn't been adopted yet, because “the personality is so killer. He is so nice.”
When she heard that Boxer had been found, “I was ecstatic. I was over the moon,” she said. “I said, this is better than winning the Powerball.”
Ms. Hendricks called Mr. BenDavid late Monday. Mr. BenDavid told her where to park her car and how to catch the ferry, and Ms. Hendricks and her dog, Little Man, headed down to the Vineyard first thing Tuesday morning. Ms. Hendricks admitted she went over the speed limit in her eagerness to get to Woods Hole.
Mr. BenDavid and Boxer met her at the Vineyard Haven ferry terminal. They chatted for a bit, and Boxer, a “wonderful, well-behaved cat,” Mr. BenDavid said, walked right into a crate Ms. Hendricks brought over. Then dog, cat, and owner got back on the ferry and headed home.
“I've never been to Martha's Vineyard but now I've been,” Ms. Hendricks said. “Someday I might come back.”
The trip home was not without incident. Ms. Hendricks said it started snowing and visibility was poor, and as she hit the outskirts of Readsboro she lost control of her car, which rolled over. Ms. Hendricks, Boxer, and Little Man were all okay, though the car is a loss, she said. Boxer remained unfazed and was so quiet the paramedics did not realize he was in his carrier. When he got home he walked over to the spot where he was served food.
One mystery was solved, but another remained — how Boxer got to the Island in the first place.
“We have no idea,” Mr. BenDavid said. “[Ms. Hendricks] doesn’t know anyone from the Vineyard or anyone near here. She lives in a small community.”
Maybe the cat was a stowaway, or maybe someone thought he was a stray and picked him up, Mr. BenDavid said.
“Who knows,” he added. “Unfortunately, you can’t ask him.”
“I have no idea how he got there and he's not talking,” Ms. Hendricks said, noting that her dog door is now permanently closed. She's working on the theory that someone who lives nearby found the cat and adopted him, brought him to the Vineyard, and "he eventually just took a walk.”
“That's the only viable story I can come up with," she said. If he hitched a ride, “someone would notice. He didn't swim across....he had to cross on the ferry in a car.”
Ms. Hendricks had only had Boxer for a few weeks when he escaped, and she hadn't fully decided on his name. “All the way home I kept thinking of names having to do with his miracle,” she said. “Vinny, for Vineyard. If he was a girl it would definitely be Martha. Or Lazarus, raised from the dead.”
Maybe she would keep Boxer, the shelter's name, she said, though she was leaning toward Big Boy.
Ms. Ross also speculated that someone found him in the rural area and thought he was a stray because of his injured eye. “He’s a super social cat,” she said. “Boxer loves everybody.”
“My question was how he ended up a stray on Martha’s Vineyard,” she said. “He had quite an adventure. He traveled further — and on a boat — than some of the staff here at the shelter.”

Comments
HOLY COW I was one of the
Hannah M Oak bluffsHOLY COW I was one of the people who took the cat in last Friday, this is blowing my mind! Sweetest cat I've ever met, so happy he's finally home!
Thank you for showing him
Joy OBThank you for showing him kindness. This could have gone many ways....this one I could not have predicted!
Yea! Thank you for saving
Shannon Burke TexasYea! Thank you for saving Boxer/Vinney!
Hannah, Thank you so much
Fran Hendricks Readsboro VermontHannah, Thank you so much for taking care of Boxer, he is truly the sweetest cat, and the fact that I have him back is nothing short of a miracle. His sneezing has cleared up since his mystery vacation, thanks to what, I don't know. Not even being in a near-death experience in (my former )car phased him. Again, we are blessed, thank you.
What a story. I am so happy
Anna Warren RIWhat a story. I am so happy Boxer is home. If only Boxer could tell us of his adventure. Glad you are home Boxer.
Thank you all for taking care
Fran Hendricks Readsboro VermontThank you all for taking care of Boxer! We are all very happy to be reunited. He walked right back up to where I used to place his food and waited to be served! Thank you thank you thank you. Lots of nice people out there on your island.
So happy to hear about Boxers
Laurie Holland Bennington, VTSo happy to hear about Boxers safe return. I owned Boxer for several months but had to give him up because of my agreement with my landlord that I wouldn't take in any more cats. He's a super nice cat and I new people would fall in love with him just as I did. Love you Boxer.
I think I know how Boxer got
Molly Marbles Northamptonshire, EnglandI think I know how Boxer got to MV, because I had a similar experience. Check me out on Facebook and see what you think.
Love, Molly
This article is Keeping my
Judy PA & KatamaThis article is Keeping my hopes alive that Brown Bear will be found. He was lost from our Katama home on 9/2/15. He was our rescue from Edgartown Animal Shelter & was chipped to our residence in Pa. Looked very much like the cat in this report. 717-761-2154
I am so happy to have been
Shona Ross Shaftsbury, VTI am so happy to have been part of this great story, and also want to thank everyone on the island who looked after Boxer during his stay with you!
What a story! And what a plus
Gary Moscowitz Castleton, NYWhat a story! And what a plus for microchipping and social media! Please, please, all you pet owners out there get your pets chipped!
What's so strange? Most
Mason Buddy Marblehead/VHWhat's so strange? Most living things would give at least 8 of their 9 lives to find The Vineyard at some point. As much as I also love Vermont, when it comes right down to it there really is no choice. And I venture to say Boxer was trying to say the same...
What a remarkable story! I'm
Edwin Sydney, AustraliaWhat a remarkable story! I'm rather surprised no one has made any mention of Mrs. Hendricks rolling her car on the way home! What a traumatic experience for all involved. I'm glad she, her dog, and her newly reunited cat all survived after all that!
We love the Vineyard also.
Cynthia Kritz-Consic Stuart FlWe love the Vineyard also. Boxer has fine taste. My grands were born there. Glad he found his way back home.
This was the star story this
Xander Johnson Cape Cod, Mass.This was the star story this week. Thank you for writing what the readers want!
I hate cats but I love this.
Dog Devotee Anywhere but in the same room as a catI hate cats but I love this. I love it when the animals mystify the humans.
' -)
Amazing story. So glad they
Sarah Mayhew Davis, CA and West TisburyAmazing story. So glad they all weren't hurt in the car roll over! I was once in a car that drove about 30 miles or so up to the top of the mountain. When we got out to look at the view, the dog that came with us started barking wildly and looking under the car. Low and behold a black kitten was sitting somewhere in the engine area under the hood. It had been seeking warmth on the cold winter day and we didn't know it had stowed away. It was perfectly fine and we took it home. It turned out to be the neighbor's cat. So perhaps that is how it got to the Vineyard, as a stow away!
Such a great story to
Constance Ellis NYc and ChilmarkSuch a great story to distract us from the ravings of Donald Trump..
Great story. And for Boxer
Allison Kart PortsmouthGreat story. And for Boxer (we know he's reading this): Meow.
This is the best kind of
Sarah Clark Elmore, VTThis is the best kind of story. I am so happy Boxer is safe and reunited! Thank you for sharing!
I'm glad none of the animals
sharon illenyeI'm glad none of the animals escaped from the car when it rolled over, that is another common way animals are lost. I wish microchips were manditory and lucky was registered to original rescue
Easily mystified it is not
C.HEasily mystified it is not unknown for animals to stow away on the ferry. Even though we watch closely sometimes we miss a beat down at the terminal. As a worker for the ferry service, we have had animals hop the ferry to take a ride without owner. Thank god he is safe and sound!
This is a fabulous story,
Laura Dorset, VTThis is a fabulous story, filled with joy and kindness--so rare these days! Additionally, there are lessons in this article and in one of the comments that are cautionary. One, always make it a habit to bang on the car hood on cold days to make sure there are no animals trying to warm up on your car's engine! (Just bang on it once before you get in--this happens more than one might think.) Two: "Ms. Hendricks said she had lost other cats over the years to wild animals in the rural area"--cats who are kept indoors are safe from predators, disease, theft, and bird populations are safeguarded. Some shelters won't adopt animals out to people unless they're kept indoors, or go out only when supervised. The car roll-over is absolutely incredible--Ms. Hendricks is one lucky lady, and Boxer is one very special kitty.
What a wonderful story! My
Kathy MAWhat a wonderful story! My mother lost her kitten and we finally found her after 32 days of searching and getting the word out via flyers, posters, and social media. She was found 5 miles away living behind a little strip mall, and we think she must have stowed away. We considered it a miracle that we found her (thanks to someone who recognized her from a flyer), but Boxer's story takes the cake! And the fact that they survived the car rollover - he truly has 9 lives!
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