tool name

close
tool goes here

Where's Punto? Woman hires dogs to sniff out cat

Love can make you do crazy things. It’s why Lisa Tuttle has spent $4,500 in a desperate search to find her purebred Persian cat, Punto, who slipped out the door of her Lakewood home May 26.

Published: June 21, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDTUpdated: June 21, 2012 at 3:02 p.m. PDT
0 comments
Heartbroken cat owner Lisa Tuttle of Lakewood has spent more than $4,500 to find her cat Punto, who went missing from her home May 26. Tuttle’s efforts have included hiring a pet psychic. (DEAN J. KOEPFLER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER)

Love can make you do crazy things.

It’s why Lisa Tuttle has spent $4,500 in a desperate search to find her purebred Persian cat, Punto, who slipped out the door of her Lakewood home May 26.

“Nothing is more important than getting this cat back,” said the 60-year-old woman, her voice breaking. “I love him.”

Her former housemate (now evicted) broke the only rule of the house: Do not let Tuttle’s seven cats outside. Ever.

Punto’s absence wasn’t noticed until the next morning because Tuttle spent the entire day in a back room with another cat she was about to put down.

Since Punto’s disappearance, Tuttle has dipped into her retirement savings to buy three trail cameras that detect wildlife. She hired two search dogs to sniff out the areas where cats congregate in her neighborhood in the 8300 block of Phillips Road. She paid to send 3,500 oversized postcards to Lakewood residents and businesses asking if they had seen the brown tabby with a white chin. She is consulting with a pet psychic, who gives her hope that Punto is still alive.

Tuttle has plastered the telephone poles with posters, only to have them ripped down. She has placed 2-by-6-foot signs in neighbors’ yards. She has spent several nights in the rain at a nearby apartment complex, armed with a flashlight, book and tuna, after three women reported seeing Punto. She has knocked on dozens of doors and partnered with online agencies that made thousands of automated calls around the city.

That’s how Patti Lundgren, who lives near Tuttle, heard about the missing cat.

“This cat means so very, very much to her,” Lundgren said. “I’m keeping an extra, extra eye out. Truly she had been putting forth quite an effort.”

When Punto first disappeared, Tuttle took nearly two weeks off from her computer programming job without pay. She said she lost a possible promotion because she made it clear her cat is more important than her job.

Although none of the tips or sightings has ferreted Punto out of his hiding spot, Tuttle isn’t giving up. She can’t.

“My cats are the most important thing in my life,” she said.

She’s had Punto only since Halloween 2010. That’s when she attended a cat show and learned an old friend had died and left behind several cats.

Punto had lived his life in a cage and hadn’t been neutered. When he came to live with Tuttle, he constantly sprayed and peed and harassed the other felines.

“He was a total nightmare,” she recalled. “I thought I made the biggest mistake of my life.”

But over time, Tuttle coaxed affection out of him by rocking Punto and speaking softly. She never punished him for his misbehavior and before long, he was curling up at her feet at night and threading himself around her feet, wanting to be picked up.

It breaks Tuttle’s heart that she had just started to give Punto a good life before he went missing.

Fighting a fresh wave of tears, Tuttle said, “He deserves a wonderful life. He deserves the life he found with me.”

stacia.glenn@ thenewstribune.com 253-597-8653

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

MORE PHOTOS
CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • Birth of son helped stop woman’s downward spiral

    Camryn Ramirez was 34 years old, and her past was wreckage. She’d left school in sixth grade, got pregnant at 13 and spent most of the next 20 years high on whatever was available – marijuana, meth, crack cocaine. With hard work, the help of a local church and the staff at Bates College, Ramirez turned her life around.

  • For some owners, euthanizing a beloved pet at home eases pain

    Putting a pet down hurts. To take the edge off the pain, many pet owners are embracing in-home pet euthanasia, where a vet makes a house call.

  • 'Curious Psychic' Shirlee Teabo loved being a star

    The column was called “The Curious Psychic,” and it ran in The News Tribune for more than a decade. It was an apt description of Shirlee Teabo, who teamed with writer/sister Jacquie Witherrite as she looked into paranormal activities — from UFO sightings to reading tea leaves. After a fall led to her hospitalization, Shirlee Teabo died last week. She was 80 years old.

  • Relay For Life more meaningful for longtime organizer, survivor

    Relay For Life, the annual walk to raise money for the American Cancer Society, has been Pam Massey’s cause for the past 17 years. The Gig Harbor hair salon owner “bleeds purple,” she said, referring to the telltale color of the event’s logos and T-shirts, and she likes the fact that she’s involved in an organization that makes a difference in people’s lives.

  • Sure, it purrs and rubs up against you – but it’s a natural-born killer

    Former President George W. Bush’s dog Barney has gone to that great kennel club in the sky.