I hope you cat comes home. I don't have any advice to offer but a story that can maybe keep your hopes up.
I'm from the West Kootenays in B.C., if you're familiar with that area you know that the area has a ton of wildlife, and gets as much snow as anywhere in the country. The girl I was dating in high school lived in a very, very rural area (basically her family owned property on the side of a mountain and had a house there). The cat dissapeared one day in September and didn't come back until the next summer. She got home from work one day and her cat was sitting by her bedroom window. Somehow it survived all of the cougars, coyotes, bears, temperatures, and snow storms. It was a little bit skinnier when it came home, but other than that he seemed fine.
Anyway, I guess my point is that cats can be quite resourcefull when they need to, and can survive against steep odds. Keep your hopes high. Good luck.
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"Like a heat seeking missile, our objectives are very, very clear." Ken King, 29/10/2007
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