Low-Cost Spay, Neuter and Vaccination Clinic
Spay and neuter surgeries are offered for cats and kittens over two pounds in weight and over eight weeks of age, also for dogs and puppies over 12 weeks of age.
Spay and neuter surgeries are by appointment only. Please call (559) 233-8554 to set up an appointment.
Spay and Neuter Pricing
- For Cats
- Spay (female): $40.00
- Neuter (male): $35.00
- For Dogs
-
- Under 30lbs.
- Spay (female): $60.00
- Neuter (male): $55.00
- 31-100lbs.
- Neuter (male): $95.00
- 31-100lbs.
- Spay (female): $100.00
- For dogs over 100lbs.
- Please call the shelter at (559) 233-8554 for information.
Other Clinic Services
- For Cats
- FVRCP (Rinotracheitis, Calicivirus, Panleukopenia, Chlamydia) Vaccine: $12.00
- Feline Leukemia Vaccine: $12.00
- Rabies Vaccine: $15.00
- FIV/FeLV (Feline AIDS/Feline Leukemia) Test: $25.00
- Multiple Dose Ear-mite Treatment: $15.00
- One Dose Ear-mite Treatment: $25.00
- For Dogs
- DA2PPv (Distemper, Adenovirus Type 2, Parainfluenza, Parvovirus) Vaccine: $12.00
- Bordetella Vaccine: $12.00
- Rabies Vaccine: $15.00
- Heartworm Test: $25.00
- For Both
- Frontline Plus: $5.00 and up (price per dose dependent upon size of animal)
- Nail Trim: $15.00
- Microchip ID: $25.00
- Deworm (Pyrantel Pamoate for roundworm and hookworm): $15.00 and up (price per dose dependent upon weight of animal)
- Deworm (Praziquantel for tapeworm): $20.00 and up (price per dose dependent upon size of animal)
- Packages
- Any Two (2) Vaccines: $22.00 per animal
- Any Three (3) Vaccines: $32.00 per animal
- Furry Friends Feline Spay Wellness package: $75.00
- (Spay,Vaccines and a Microchip ID or an FELV/FIV test)
- Furry Friends Feline Neuter Wellness package: $70.00
- (Neuter,Vaccines and a Microchip ID or an FELV/FIV test)
Vaccinations available Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 10:00am to 4:30pm. Days may vary, please call (559) 233-8554 for more information.
Benefits of Spaying and Neutering
- Healthy Pets
- Spaying or neutering improves your pet's health, reducing or eliminating the risk of certain cancers and other diseases. Because spaying or neutering often reduces the tendency to fight with other animals, it also protects your pet from fight-related injuries and from dangerous viruses that spread through bite wounds, as well as sexual transmission.
- Happy Families
- Spaying or neutering reduces or eliminates spraying (the marking of objects with a spray of urine), yowling or howling, and other troublesome behaviors. You won't have to deal with the mess or the incovenience of a pet in heat (or a male pet reacting to a female in heat). You'll be saving a considerable amount of time, money and stress involved in raising litters of puppies and kittens.
- Healthy Communities
- Spaying or neutering has a direct impact on the incident of dog bites in a community. The majority of dog bites (60-80%) are caused by intact male dogs. Pregnant or nursing female dogs are more likely to bite as well. Reducing your pet's likelihood of biting or fighting may also help protect you from potential legal action.
- No More Homeless Pets
- Spaying or neutering directly impacts the number of animals that lose their lives in shelters and on the streets. Having your pet spayed or neutered frees up homes for homeless pets that are already born. By getting your pet fixed, you are part of the campaign to reach the day when there are truly no more homeless pets!
Each day, 70,000 puppies and kittens are born. As long as these birth rates, exist, there will never be enough homes for all of them. As a result, millions of healthy, loving cats, dogs, kittens and puppies face early euthanasia as a form of animal control. Others are left to fend for themselves against automobiles, the elements, wild animals, and cruel humans.
What can you do to stop the suffering? Spay and neuter your pets! Every year in the US, 6-8 million animals will enter a shelter; only half will make it out alive. That's 3-4 million killed every year, simply because there weren't enough homes. An unspayed cat, her mate, and all of their offspring producing two litters per year, with 2.8 surviving kittens per litter, can create 11,606,077 cats in just nine years!