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  1. #16
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
    Posts
    9,324

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    I love everybody's silly kitty stories.

    V.
    Discipline is remembering what you want.


    TandemHearts.com

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Riding my Luna & Rivendell in the Hudson Valley, NY
    Posts
    8,411
    I saw my cat staring intently at the blank wall 8 feet away once. I got closer and closer to try to see what she was looking at.....and finally I saw a teeeny teeny speck of a bug there, about the size of the period at the end of this sentence. Wow!- from 8 feet away!

    We love our 3 kitties. They are so amusing, wise, and beautiful.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

  3. #18
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Boise
    Posts
    29

    Hmmm....

    Quote Originally Posted by Veronica View Post
    Visualization baby!

    13 pound tuxedo cat - a BIG boy - tries to fit in shoe box lying on its side. He can get his head and shoulders in. I think the shoe box is half the length of the cat.

    V.
    You need to find someone who has bigger feet to donate a shoe box!

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    My 17 lb tuxedo, Herald, is absolutely neurotic about cleanliness and unfortunatley he's allergic to flea siliva. So right now he going absolutely batty trying to get to the itchy parts on his back. He's been treated for the fleas, but that doesn't change the damage that was already done before I realized he needed treatment. Poor thing spins in vicious circles trying to get to his back, that he might reach if he were slimer.
    Beth

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    865
    I saw an albino cat yesterday while I was riding, pink eyes, white , with a stub tail. It was sitting in between corn rows waiting to pounce on me. I have never seen an albino cat in all of my days, and I have been a lifelong fan of cats. I would have grabbed it and taken it home if it hadn't run away.

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Central Indiana
    Posts
    6,034
    Sophie, my oldest cat, had a nightly ritual that she's been doing since she was young (she's now 12). Around 9 each night, she brings me one of her stuffed mice toys and lays it at my feet. The way she does it cracks me up. She usually retrieves whatever mouse is in my bedroom at the time. From there, she starts making these strange little cries as she walks from my bedroom to the family room. It's the only time that she makes that particular sound. Once she drops the toy at my feet, she will sit there until I pet her on the head and say "thank you Soph." With her work as a mouser done, she goes back to her perch on the back of my armchair. Oh, I'm sorry. Her armchair. No one else sits there but her.

    Oh, but she's also been a bad kitty of late. She started chewing on her front paw on Friday (she's had issues over the years with overgrooming). I put an e-collar on her, which usually does the trick. The paw was healing nicely, until yesterday. By the time I got home from work/riding, her paw was a bloody mess. I figured at the time that she was rubbing it against the collar. So off to the emergency vet we went. They gave her a cortizone shot and bandaged her paw. When I got up this morning, she was sitting in her armchair, no bandage in sight. Argh! It turns out that the e-collar wasn't restricting her movement enough. She was able to pull off the bandage (and a fair amount of her hair) and lick her paw again. I adjusted the e-collar to further limit her range of motion, but not before completely pulling my own hair out. She's gonna be the death of me. We go back to the vet tomorrow.
    Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.

    --Mary Anne Radmacher

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Riding my Luna & Rivendell in the Hudson Valley, NY
    Posts
    8,411
    Indy, have you tried leaving the tv or radio on softly for her when you are out? It might help distract her from her grooming/bordom/habit thingy. They do this with pet parrots who chew on their feet and feathers- music, tv, a mirror, another pet bird nearby....all distractions.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Boise, Idaho
    Posts
    1,104
    K.C. is a dinky 9.5 lb, 14 year old tuxedo cat -- but he makes up for it in attitude (woe to the 14 & 15 lb resident visitor cats we had in the house for a few months a couple of years ago. Those beatings had to be a blow to their egos!) He's a bit on the shy side, in that visitors NEVER see him, though he's strangely attracted to our daughter's fiance -- which must be a good sign, don't you think? In the last two years, he's gotten downright friendly, verging on cuddly! He also seems to think night time is the time to "holler the house," looking for someone to play with, or some kind of attention. He grew up with an older companion, who's been gone a few years, so I wonder if loneliness is the culprit here, but am hesitant to add another one to the household at this stage in our lives.

    K.C. follows me around -- from in front of me, so that he must stop where I'll trip over him on a frequent basis, because, of course, he has no idea where I'm going!

    The dog, of course, is wiser about following -- he stays alongside or just behind me, so he can tell what's coming next!

    "I see a birdie" noises -- of COURSE the birds can't hear them: K.C. is in the house, the birds are outside, on the other side of that pane of glass!

    Veronica, I think you need to keep a picture of that cat in the box on your desk at school!

    Karen in Boise

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    St. Pete, FL
    Posts
    1,101
    Indy, I have 2 boys --litter mates(one being the big boy mentioned previously). In the eveings, night and some mornings you will hear them meowing....well mroe like yowling (haunting and distrubing at times). They are carring a large blue rubber band or one of the assorted colored wrist bands (like the yellowlive strong band) around in there mouth. Some mornings we wake and find MANY in bed with us or strategically laid out down the hall. (one time perfectly evenly spaced!) We put them back in teh "toy box", but they always find their way out the next day!

    I also have to share about new 2 new kittens (found after a bike ride!). They actually watch TV. It started w/ the Tour....they watched the bike racing. Now they often stop, sit down in front of the TV and watch it. None of my other cats (and I have 4 others) have ever done this!

    My cat's just amuse me...I could talk about them all day.
    katluvr

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    2,506
    The mouse at the feet reminded me of a story.

    Years ago I lived in a duplex with the late, great Spike Kitty. One morning it was pouring rain and I was dressing for the office. Spike was looking out the bedroom window and making noises. I checked and there was a kitty outside on the sill.

    Later, as I pulled out of the drive, I looked over to see if the cat was still there. He wasn't, but he had gifted Spike with a great, big, dead rat. Laying there on the sill. Apparently he thought Spike was deprived in that giant box with a window.

    Fortunately, my landlord lived next door, so I called him and asked him if he would mind getting the big rat down after it quit raining.

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    steuben county new york
    Posts
    626
    My big 15# boy is an indoor kitty. Prior to our adoption he was an indoor/outdoor pet. He has a habit of wanting to go for rides in the cat carrier. All I have to do is rattle the carrier and say "come on" and he goes where ever I go as long as I'm not going to be in one place too long. There are times he paws and meows at the cat carrier, we take him around the block to passify him. He sprawls out in the carrier and his eyes are closed so I think it relaxes him. And I agree about the furniture thing mentioned by indy, the objects that we seem to occupy are his first. He's getting to be as much of a bed hog as I am. DH sometimes has to sleep in the recliner because the cat seems to occupy the bed, and we can't disturb him.

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    St. Pete, FL
    Posts
    1,101
    OMG Shelly....you have a cat that actually likes the cat carrier and to ride places in it in the car??!!
    I swear w/ the kittens I want to take them in the car carrier to places other than the vet so when they get older they don't yee-owl the entire way!

    Try tackilng the 17# boy and "stuffing" him into the carrier!
    katluvr

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Sillycon Valley, California
    Posts
    4,872

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    Quote Originally Posted by katluvr View Post
    Try tackilng the 17# boy and "stuffing" him into the carrier!
    That's what dog carriers are for. I have loads of experience stuffing Herald into the carrier. The real problem child was little Erin Kitty (may she rest in peace), all 7 pounds of her - that cat would do the spread-eagle thing across the opening of the same carrier, back when she was heathlier and we'd just do routine vet visits, or storm evacuations. Once she got sick, she was easier to crate - either that or she knew that she'd feel better once Drs. Erica or Michelle got to her.
    Beth

  15. #30
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Good things gro-oh-ow in Ontario!
    Posts
    382
    My parents rescued a tiny tortoise shell kitten a few years ago. She was found by a neighbor outside her house in the middle of the nasty Ontario winter and then taken to the vet. Only a few days of board were paid for so when the time came to put her down, my Mom got a call. Down she went to get this teeny little thing with a purr so loud it could be heard throughout the vet's office.

    Now she's a happy, fat, lazy cat. I figure after what she went through trying to survive as a kitten that she probably deserves it.

    My parents told me that one night they were in their bedroom with the cat and our Old English Mastiff when they heard a mouse squeaking. The cat was just kind of staring at it, semi-interested and my parent's couldn't get to it to rescue it. Well, then mouse started running around and ran right into the cat's nose. The cat chirped and sprang into action (at least as much as this cat springs) and chased the mouse for awhile. Finally, she picked up the poor, exasperated little mouse, brought it over to the dog. . .and put it on the dog as if to say "I've had my fun, now what? You take care of it"! The dog was like " what is this?!? I don't want anything to do with it!" Thankfully my Dad was able to get the mouse off the dog and put him/her outside.

    As you can see, she's not much of a mouser. Actually, I don't think she's ever killed anything. She's much more interested in sleeping, eating, and cuddling.
    "Live, more than your neighbors. Unleash yourself upon the world and go places. Go now! Giggle. Know. Laugh. And bark the the moon like the wild dog that you are!" - Jon Blais

 

 

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