Three cats (only one of them mine)
I haven't posted for a while, mainly because I haven't really had much to say. However, have some news about three cats.
Ashley has really taken till this week to get over her white-tailed spider bite because the abscess came back. She's now completely OK again and no longer having to take steroids and antibiotics to everyone's relief, ours and hers, although she was a very patient little girl. It's been six weeks. Anyway, last week when we took her in with the abscess still weeping for a checkup, Garfilly was there in reception and me without my camera or phone.
Remember Garfilly, the kitten with the thyroid problem? She's 6 months old now and when I said she'd really grown, Harriet (vet nurse and owner) said she was still too small at only 2.5kg. I pointed that Ashley at three years is only 3kg. Garfilly was running about on the reception desk eager for attention and--THIS IS SOOOO CUTE--if I held up my hand she did a high-five with one soft paw. :-D She also tapped me at one point to make me notice her when I turned aside to see how Ashley was in her Sleepy-Pod. That photo in my last post about her I now realise is showing her doing a high-five--and she's no longer cross-eyed as she was in that photo. :-)
I posted some time back about library cats and was delighted to find that there was one at St Heliers library (a couple of suburbs away), Xena. Here's her page with a lovely close-up. She was in the local paper last week when library staff organised a school holiday knit-a-thon where kids could knit a square for a blanket for her. Here's the paper's photo, not a very good one, of her in the library workroom.

The paper told us more about her. She doesn't actually belong to the library; she has a good home of her own just up the road but her owner works full time and asked the librarians to look out for her. Xena's at the back door every morning when they open up and she also visits the police station, the video store, and the fish shop. :-)
Ashley has really taken till this week to get over her white-tailed spider bite because the abscess came back. She's now completely OK again and no longer having to take steroids and antibiotics to everyone's relief, ours and hers, although she was a very patient little girl. It's been six weeks. Anyway, last week when we took her in with the abscess still weeping for a checkup, Garfilly was there in reception and me without my camera or phone.
Remember Garfilly, the kitten with the thyroid problem? She's 6 months old now and when I said she'd really grown, Harriet (vet nurse and owner) said she was still too small at only 2.5kg. I pointed that Ashley at three years is only 3kg. Garfilly was running about on the reception desk eager for attention and--THIS IS SOOOO CUTE--if I held up my hand she did a high-five with one soft paw. :-D She also tapped me at one point to make me notice her when I turned aside to see how Ashley was in her Sleepy-Pod. That photo in my last post about her I now realise is showing her doing a high-five--and she's no longer cross-eyed as she was in that photo. :-)
I posted some time back about library cats and was delighted to find that there was one at St Heliers library (a couple of suburbs away), Xena. Here's her page with a lovely close-up. She was in the local paper last week when library staff organised a school holiday knit-a-thon where kids could knit a square for a blanket for her. Here's the paper's photo, not a very good one, of her in the library workroom.
The paper told us more about her. She doesn't actually belong to the library; she has a good home of her own just up the road but her owner works full time and asked the librarians to look out for her. Xena's at the back door every morning when they open up and she also visits the police station, the video store, and the fish shop. :-)

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Glad Ashley is okay now. Garfilly sounds absolutely adorable :) How nice that the library look out for Xena. I worry about cats I see out and about especially if they are looking thin. I generally put a note on their collars, if they have one, to ask if anyone is looking after the cat to call me to put my mind at rest :)
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Then I fell for a friend's Burmese and got two who were also friends for life, one when Sigi went and the other two years later when Petra went. They were also wonderful cats and I miss Claudia and Tessa heaps; they died about a year apart three years ago. Vuc arrived while I had them and he was the first stray they accepted so we kept him while finding homes for the others.
Jasmin came from Claudia's breeder and the other two are rescues from the Lonely Miaou foster homes. Jasmin's a bit of a brat but can be very sweet, Ashley's a shy and dear little girl, and Sebastian's just a big snuggle-cat. :-) I just watched him and Ashley walking off into the garden side-by-side, very companionably.
I've heard that rescue cats can have issues if they have traumatic pasts, and in fact Sebastian's foster mother has about seven she kept as she knew they'd never trust anyone else quickly or easily. Mine have worked out very well though; I'm sure they know how lucky they were. :-)
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Later on there was Jemima, a sweet tabby and a feral kitten rescued by a local lady, Jeanette, who ran a rescue in her back garden. I remember going to choose her from the litter with the boys. She chose us by climbing up Rob's (#2 son) trousers! I had to have Jemima put to sleep when she was 11 as she was suffering from cancer of the throat and was suffering. It broke my heart and I still cry about her. Jack from the rescue (black and white) so named because he would hide when we first had him and then pop out like a jack-in-a-box. He was killed on the road near our house, it wasn't a main road but people drove too fast through the housing estate. Then there was Sid, also a rescue cat and black and white and named for Hissing Sid as he used to hiss at us when we first had him. He was killed on the same road. The heartache is terrible. Both were adorable cats, very gentle and loving with big personalities. Jemima outlived them both. Then came Tilly, a lovely tortie and a local rescue cat. My #2 son adored her, as I did. She would come running in with a prrrrup as if to say "here I am". She died on the same road. The lady driver was so upset and she took her to the local vet. We were called and we rushed there to see her but she had died instantly with barely a mark on her (head injury). My #2 son sobbed when he saw her, we both did. It breaks your to see your 6'+ son cry like that. I think it was then that I decided I'd never have outdoor cats again unless I lived deep in the country and away from roads. India and Inka came from a Cats Protection League foster home. I got them Christmas Eve 4 years ago :) They are extremely happy and playful and indoor cats. I'd love a British Blue but I live in a small flat and it wouldn't be fair to introduce another cat to the kitties' routine and space.
Some rescue cats are impossible to re-home. I know Jeanette (the rescue lady when we lived in the New Forest area) had cats that she could barely get close to let alone anyone else. At least they had a comfortable safe home and food. Mine have all been gentle cats. India and Inka have been far and away the most social, they love people and always come and say hello to visitors. I think they have a lot of Bombay cat in them which are notoriously friendly.
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A friend lost four or five cats on the road where she was living and decided not to have another cat till she moved. Then she took one of our strays, Larry, and he was very happy there with her, next to a park, till she got a dog and he moved two houses down the road. :-)
Your India and Inka are not just beautiful but also sweet-natured and friendly? Lucky you! Only Sebastian will approach visitors; the girls are shy until they get to know people.
BTW any chance of seeing that photo of your girls without the masks? They have beautiful green eyes like Sebastian's and I'd love to see more of their faces.
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https://picasaweb.google.com/112636134524896979597/Kitties03?authkey=Gv1sRgCICRzrC825ak0gE&feat=flashalbum#
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Your girls are stunning! I think I can see the difference too: has Inka got a rounder face?
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Omg poor Ashley, that spider bite sounded so nasty! 6 weeks! I'm glad she's better now <3
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pornpictures of cats? *g* Thanks for posting about yours and others; they make me smile first thing in the morning.no subject
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I'm glad Garfilly is doing well!!
And the existence of Library Cats makes me very very happy!!!
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Thank you also for Garfilly and Xena! How cute, both of them. Again, I wish I could have a cat in our library, there are so many cat lovers...but not my boss...and because I commute 25km every day, I would not be able to drag a cat with me either...
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Xena is a pretty girl, we were talking at work about how we would like a cat for our library, but I don't think we would ever be allowed.
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She's looking so good now and has put on some weight which is good; she's a light wee thing.
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Garfilly is adorable with her high-fives!
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I had a contract at an office with a resident cat, Mook (http://vilakins.dreamwidth.org/8578.html), but when he went missing one day and so many people spent time looking for him, management said he had to go and one of the employees adopted him.
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You have Tygr to welcome you home--and he might be jealous if you smelled of another cat. :-)
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Ideally someone would keep it on the unit, but I think it really might be too dangerous for a creature in that environment. Say the cat got into a cell and soiled the bed or scratched something, the owner might do something awful. Another issue would be the large number of Muslim offenders, who object to having animals inside.
I think maybe if we were a less secure prison, maybe a cat D or E it might be more likely, but for a cat (!) B I think there are too many obstacles that would make the regime unlikely to consider it.
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At least you've got your lovely ones when yo0u go home. :-)
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I'm sure the vast majority of prisoners would be fine, and many would love the opportunity to have contact with a cat, but it is the few that would ruin it for all.
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