Photo: Courtesy Lanai Cat Sanctuary

These days Toulouse is “fat and happy,” but Carroll says it was his painful plight that focused her attention on theferal catson the island—and became the “catalyst,” she says with a wink—for her Lanai Cat Sanctuary.
When she returned to Lanai after taking Toulouse to the vet, Carroll decided to make the thousands ofstray catsthat roamed the island — where the human population is an estimated 3,200 — her pet project.
Courtesy Lanai Cat Sanctuary

“We pulled together a temporary shelter in a horse corral in two days with $200, and that was our first shelter,” the former nutritionist says. “A lot of people thought I was crazy, but my philosophy is when you see something like that, doing something is better than doing nothing, right?”
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Now, theLanai Cat Sanctuaryis located on 3.5 acres of open land and is home to 622 adoptable cats. Carroll says she modeled the property after the Lion Preserves in Africa so the stray cats are able to roam free within the sanctuary.
“We thought wait, okay, those are big lions, these are little lions,” says Carroll, 65.
The sanctuary has an “open door” policy, meaning that any cat found on the island will be taken in, given a name, a microchip, vaccinated, and spayed or neutered.

“When they come to us, a lot of them are really fragile, on death’s door,” says Executive Director Keoni Vaughn, 46. “In the wild, a feral cat will last 3-5 years without any human intervention. We are doubling and tripling their lives because they’re getting exceptional medical care and treatment.”
While there’s still no vet on the island of Lanai, Vaughn says they bring in two technicians and a vet twice a month to tend to the cats currently residing at the donation-based, cage-free sanctuary.
The park is run with the help of seven permanent staff members—and hosts an estimated 12,000 tourists each year, who come to play with the cats and give them treats.

“I call it the Purr Seasons, because they get more attention and veterinary care than most household cats,” says Vaughn.

For Carroll, who’s retired but still serves on the board, the sanctuary has become her own slice of paradise. “Lanai’s cats will always have a home here,” she says. “I could die tomorrow and feel like I did something to make the world just a little bit better.”
To read more about the Lanai Cat Sanctuary, pick up this week’s issue ofPEOPLE, on newsstands now.
source: people.com