Wild (and Sometimes Crazy) Wednesday – The Flexible Cat

One of the charms of the cat is the way she can bend and flex and twist and wind herself into some of the strangest positions.

The fact is, a cat’s spine can rotate and flex more than most animals. You might say that the cat is the Gumby of the animal world. They’re the original yoga masters.

Here’s a site showing 29 cats in some of the most unusual positions. I’m sure that number 3 in this series caused my back to seize up. Number 5 is a real Gumby impersonation. But the poses just become more incredible and almost painful to view as you go on. Ever see a kitten asleep in the bowl of a wine glass or a full-size cat scrunched deep into a small fish bowl? http://www.ranker.com/list/flexible-cat-pictures/ashley-reign

For those of you who want more cat humor, here’s a site featuring jerk cats. You must view this site with your tongue in your cheek. You’ll meet a bipolar cat, stingy cats, naughty cats and more. http://www.ranker.com/list/tweets-that-prove-cats-are-jerks/ashley-reign

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Newsday Tuesday – Are Dogs Really Smarter Than Cats? NO!

There’s new evidence showing that cats are every bit as smart (author’s note—if not smarter) than your average dog. But the really cool thing about this report is that some of the tests “may imply a type of consciousness in cats.” http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/01/25/cats-dogs-equally-intelligent-new-research/

The tests they conducted show that cats are able to “respond to human gestures, facial expressions, and emotions.” Most of us who are really into our cats already know this, right?

An interesting revelation coming from the UK: more men are choosing cats as pets over dogs. According to one source, in just one year, the number of pet cats in the UK has risen by 500,000 to  eight million. They say this is because a million men became pet owners during the year. Evidently 17 percent of men in the UK now own cats.

The UK is actually seventh country with the most pet cat population. The US is first with 74,800,000 pet cats. Next in line are China, Russia, Brazil, France, Germany and then the UK.

In the meantime, there are sites featuring why women should date men who own cats. In case you’re interested. But then you probably already know this to be true.

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Mindful Monday – What’s Happening in the Klepto Cat Mystery Factory?

Maybe Cats Are Smarter, Too

We’re still in wait mode here—waiting for a new product to share. The universe has hijacked our plans. The announcement I hoped to make this month will not be forthcoming. Yes, I’m going to place the blame on the universe and maybe my over-enthusiastic nature. I keep having to learn again and again that the world doesn’t turn on my time schedule. Some tasks take longer than I expect. In fact, this is probably true of most tasks.

I can tell you that you can order Book 23, Cattywampus Travels, in print and for your Kindle right now, right here: https://www.amazon.com/Cattywampus-Travels-Klepto-Cat-Mystery/dp/099853563X/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1495890430&sr=8-1-fkmr0&keywords=cattywampus+tra

Stay tuned for the big announcement—oh my have we been busy here in the offices. It should come mid-June or earlier.

In the meantime, I’m diligently working on Book 24—working title, “Cats in the Belfry.” Since we’ve been coming out with a book on average every two months, you can probably expect to be reading this thriller—well, cozy thriller—sometime in late July or early August.

As you may know, there’s more to writing a book than creating and fleshing out a storyline. Once I’ve written it to my satisfaction, I turn the manuscript over to a few beta-readers and my proofreader/editor. When I get it back—anywhere from one to three weeks later—I go over it another two-dozen or so times then give it to my print book format person and my ebook format person and they get it ready for publication. This can take another two or three weeks.

Of course, by this time we have a cover design—that can take anywhere from two weeks to a month or more, so I try to start early discussing the cover with the artist, so we have it by the time we go to press.

Before publication, I need to write a description of the story and design the back cover copy.

But the real work begins once a book is published. That’s when the author must shift into high gear, put on a new hat, and start promoting the book. While the production of a book may take us around two months, promotion is ongoing for as long as you want that book to sell. And if there are any budding authors out there, I want you to know that this is true for any author and any book in any genre.

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Frivolous Friday – What Cats Don’t Care About

This morning, I woke up to no Internet. It could be that our modem thingy needs to be reset—I don’t know and I won’t know until the computer expert in the house wakes up. In the meantime, I’m not a happy camper. I can’t check my email. I can’t research topics for this blog. I can’t send emails. I can’t see what’s going on in the world. I’m in a dark, dark place. Isn’t that silly? I mean, how did we get to this place where that connection is so danged important?

Perhaps we need to be more cat-like in some ways. Cats sure don’t care if there’s an Internet or not. They don’t care about the world or even the local news. Oh, they may perk up when they see a new cat out the window and they certainly like to catch up with news that you bring home on your shoes. Have you noticed how interested they are in the scents you’ve gathered on your clothing after you’ve been out and about?

Cats don’t care what you look like, as long as you feed them regularly and create a lap for them when they need one.

Cats don’t care about mundane things like grocery shopping and paying bills. However, many of them are willing to work for a cause. Some of them hunt and bring you gifts from their jungle. Just this week, Smokey (pictured here) brought my mother a bird (which they turned loose) and a lizard (which is still somewhere in the house). Lily only hunts things that find their way into the house—flies, moths, and such. But she sure takes her hunting practice seriously by bringing me small stuffed animals from her toy box (and the grandchildren’s toy box) every morning as I work.

Cats don’t care about your possessions. Lily is willing to share hers and can see no reason why she can’t enjoy batting around on the floor, my pretty sparkly earrings or eating from my plate when I’m not looking or drinking from my water glass or knocking my pen off my desk and hiding it from me.

It occurs to me as I sit here without the ability to pursue my morning routine via the Internet, that maybe humans should be more catlike. Yup, a catnap might be just the ticket this morning.

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Thoughts for Thursday – Cattywampus Travels—Book 23

Some of you have been waiting on pins and needles for Book 23–Cattywampus Travels. I get emails almost every day asking, “When will it be ready?” And I have to ask fans, “What author do you know who produces 6 books per year for your reading pleasure?”

Yes, I’m hard at work on Book 24. Once I finish with the story and numerous edits, I’ll turn the manuscript over to my proofreader. After another several rounds of tweaking, I hand it over to the ebook formatter and the print book formatter. This process can take another few weeks. In the meantime, I’ve been working with the cover designer.

When everything comes together—after a total of approximately two months—we submit the ebook to Amazon.com and the print book to CreateSpace for publication. Two months—yes, that’s basically what it takes for us to bring you, yet, another story in the Klepto Cat Mystery series.

Cattywampus Travels—Book 23—is now ready for you to enjoy in print and for your Kindle. Until Amazon can link the two books, you’ll have to order the ebook here:

https://www.amazon.com/Cattywampus-Travels-Klepto-Mystery-Book-ebook/dp/B072LWRHZ7/ref=sr_1_18?ie=UTF8&qid=1495710971&sr=8-18&keywords=klepto+cat+mystery

and the print book here:

https://www.amazon.com/Cattywampus-Travels-Klepto-Cat-Mystery/dp/099853563X/ref=sr_1_25?ie=UTF8&qid=1495711088&sr=8-25&keywords=klepto+cat+mystery

Here’s the description:

Cattywampus Travels: A rollercoaster ride of kitty-cat escapades.

Rags accompanies his human family and friends on an extended vacation and manages to find plenty of trouble along the way. But, in typical Rags fashion, he also discovers ways to help in the most unexpected manner. Follow Rags on his first book-signing tour. Get ready for his first cross-country flight. Tag along with this most unpredictable cat as he meets new people and manages to touch their lives as only Rags can do.

ENJOY!!

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Wild (and Sometimes Crazy) Wednesday – Funny Cats

One thing I love about cats is the way they can make you laugh or even just smile. They are cute and they can be downright funny. Their sense of curiosity, their penchant for play, their flexibility—it all plays into making them one of the clowns of the animal world.

Here are some links you might enjoy showing funny and interesting cats. http://www.funnycatpix.com and http://www.lolcats.com

Here are some videos reflecting cats doing some catlike, yet clever and hilarious things—so entertaining. http://funnycatvideos.net and http://badsentinel.com/category/funny/cats

You know that laughter is good medicine. Here’s a heavy dose of it. Enjoy!

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Newsday Tuesday – Cats Cleaning Up the Rat-Pack

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Chicago is known as the rattiest city in the country. Some businesses and neighborhoods are simply overrun with gnawing, disease-spreading rats. Evidently, this problem is beyond the capability of professional pest control and many business owners and home owners have called in the big guns—cats. They’ve recruited some of the 3,600 cats in 650 colonies around the city for help.

The Tree-House Humane Society, who manages the colonies, will deliver cats to the property along with a cushy crate “apartment” for the cats (so they’ll want to stick around) and they say that they’ve had nearly 100% effectiveness in ridding these areas of rats. Some of the rats are eaten and some leave when they sense there are cats about.

Makes sense. Cats were the world’s first pest control, having been relied upon for their hunting prowess some 10,000 years ago. It’s an interesting story. Read it here: http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/15/health/cats-chicago-rat-patrol/index.html

Is your pussy-cat a hunter? Or does she simply watch you dart around the room trying to chase down a lizard or a mouse that sneaks into the house? Most cats certainly have hunting instincts. Some are more keen than others. But did you know that the ordinary house-cat and yard-cat are considered better hunters than wild cats such as tigers? Here’s an interesting site on that topic: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2785323/Cats-better-hunters-TIGERS-Domestic-felines-agile-powerful-cousins-experts-claim.html

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Mindful Monday – Is Your Cat an Adventurer?

Smokey, the inspiration for this series

How daring is your cat? Does he have access to the great out-of-doors? Does he disappear for hours at a time only to return with a lizard gift for you or smelling of mint or jasmine or something funky like barbecue smoke or maybe tomato plants? (Love the scent of tomato plants.) Do you know where your cat goes every day? Do neighbors report that they’ve seen him visiting with their children, playing with their dog, climbing their tree, trotting down the street toward the fish market? How adventurous is your cat, anyway?

Rags, the star of my Klepto Cat Mystery books, is definitely an adventurer. He has escaped, been catnapped, pawed a murderer in a line-up, rescued a child, saved an ill cat who had been stolen and abandoned, and so much more. Yes, Rags is an adventurer.

If you like reading about adventuring cats, you’ll love Laura Moss’s new book. Adventure Cats: Living Nine Lives to the Fullest. It features cats who could be considered adventurers. For example, there’s a cat who surfs, one who has sailed to 16 countries, a cat who goes along with his owner when she cross-country skis. Read the interesting interview here: http://www.courant.com/features/pets/sc-adventure-cats-hike-surf-family-0523-20170518-story.html

 

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Frivolous Friday – Raising a Feral Kitten—My Experience

It was May. I stepped out into my garden just in time to see the shy black cat I’d seen many times before dash over the gate into our woodshed. I enjoyed having this young cat join me in the yard, although she always stayed her distance. I’d never touched her fur or heard her purr.

This day would be no different except that today, the shy black cat was not alone. Three perfect kittens followed her along the top ledge of the woodshed fence. When they saw me, the whole family lunged for cover into the crevices of the woodpile where unbeknownst to me, they planned to set up housekeeping.  I’d been chosen custodian for the newest generation of neighborhood feral kitties.  Now what?

I would tame them, that’s what! The kittens appeared to be about four-weeks old. If I spent a lot of time nearby talking to them, they would surely get accustomed to my voice and my presence and soon come around. A couple of times a day for nearly a week, I perched myself on a bench outside the woodshed gate and watched the kittens play chase and hide-and-seek games through the woodpile. But when I spoke, moved or came too close, they’d disappear into the dank darkness under the scattered logs.

Braveheart, the smallest and most timid, was the image of her mother with sleek, black fur. Bella, the most curious wore a long black-and-white coat. Max was adorably stocky with lovely soft brown and white fur.

Ten days later, I realized that my loving overtures were not changing the kitten’s feral ways. In order to save them, we had to capture them.

We borrowed a large cage, donned leather gloves and moved the wood piece-by-piece by piece until we uncovered the three kittens huddled under a pallet. One by one, we placed the three frightened kittens into the cage and took them inside the house.

After leaving them alone for a couple of hours, I began to make regular visits.  I spoke softly to them and touched their fur through the wire cage. They were terrified, but not aggressive. They were interested in their food and water, but didn’t seem to understand the reason for the sandbox.

Max and Lily Sharing Space

The next morning, I picked up each kitten and moved them to a bathroom where they had more room. The kittens didn’t bite, scratch, or even hiss, but it was clear that they were very frightened and that they did not enjoy my touch.

The kittens now had access to a carpeted cat tree with a circular bed on top, two sandboxes, kitten toys, kitten kibbles, and fresh water. I closed the toilet lid, removed all toxic cleaners and tied the mini blind cord safely out of reach. My plan was to visit the kittens often throughout the day every day until they were comfortable with the human touch. Then I would find them good homes.

The first time I went into the bathroom to spend time with the kittens, I couldn’t find them. I feared the worst—that they’d torn through the window screen and escaped.  But I finally found them huddled deep inside an overturned wastebasket.  This was to be their secure haven for the next seven days.

Since I work at home, I was able to keep a close vigil over the kittens. I visited them often—partly out of obligation to them and partly because I couldn’t stay away.  I loved spending time with them and did so many times every day.

After about a week, when I’d go into the bathroom, I’d find them sleeping, not deep inside in the plastic wastebasket, but in the little bed on top of the cat tree. Yet, while the kittens had calmed down, they were still not returning our affection. They allowed us to touch and hold them, but they didn’t respond until one Friday afternoon.

During a routine visit to the bathroom/turned kitten room, I found the three kittens curled up together in their bed.  I began petting them when all of a sudden, Max rolled over onto his back, looked up at me and started to purr.  I was so touched that I began to cry. This was the first time any of the kittens had responded to my touch.

To give the kittens more space and more opportunities for socialization, we’d bring them into the living room at night.  I’d also bring out things that were familiar to them like their cat tree, their food and water and, of course, their sandbox.

The kittens had a grand time playing in the larger area and we loved watching them. This also gave the resident cats (Katy, Dinah, and Winfield) the opportunity to become acquainted with the kittens under our supervision. The kittens kept a wary eye on us, though and were quick to dart for cover, should we move toward them.  This made it difficult to recapture them and return them to their safe haven.  Our goal was to make their life as trauma-free as possible, but we weren’t always successful.

When the kittens were about 7-weeks old, I took them to see the veterinarian.  He was

Max

surprised at how healthy they were, given their precarious beginnings. They got their first shots and a clean bill of health.

About the same time, I spoke with animal behaviorist, Anders Hallgren. I told him that, although I’d been working with the kittens for three weeks and that they were more gentle, they were still not really responding to us.  He said, “You’ve got to separate the kittens.  They’re bonding with each other and as long as they have each other, they may not bond with you.”

Now that made sense. I tried to figure out a way to separate the kittens and work with them myself. My first step was to bring Max out and let him have the run of the house. On that eventful day, I held Max for a while—he was beginning to enjoy petting now. I fed him a couple of small pieces of chicken by hand and then, when he wanted down, I let him go.

He played, explored, peed in a basket of firewood, and tried to get to know the resident cats. After thirty minutes or so, Max looked around the room, spotted me and came trotting over to where I was sitting. I reached down, lifted him onto my lap where he lay contentedly for a while before rushing off to pursue more adventure. By then, I knew that I could not give up on Max. Whether he was bonding with me or not, I had certainly bonded with him. That night he slept next to me on my bed and did every night after that for nearly eighteen years.

In the meantime, my veterinarian had told me about a couple of people who were looking for kittens and had homes that he felt were suited to these special needs kittens. Within a day and a half, both kittens had just the sort of homes I’d imagined for them.

Max became a lovely pet and a totally indoor cat. He was sweet, affectionate, funny, eager to please and clever. He responds when he heard his name almost every time. Except for his ability to dive for cover at top speed when hearing thunder, the garbage truck, the vacuum cleaner, or a sneeze, and the joy he derived from the blanket tents and box caves we build for him to play in, one would never guess that he had such humble beginnings.

I ask myself if I’d go to the trouble again to rescue feral kittens.  My answer came easy when I’d look down at Max resting contentedly, relaxed and trusting in my lap.  Yes!  I’d do it again in a heartbeat.

 

 

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Thoughts for Thursday – Do You Know a Feral Cat You Can Help?

Not every kitten is born into the folds of a loving human family nor will they all eventually be adopted by people who care. Some kittens grow up knowing only fear, starvation, illness and discomfort. Many of them die young. Those who survive, may never have the opportunity to eat their fill, curl up on a clean, soft bed or enjoy the soothing touch of a human. These cats are known as feral or wild cats. They’re the “alley cats” of yesteryear—the offspring of domestic cats that are living on the streets.

We’ve all seen feral cats and kittens in our neighborhoods. Each of us has known about a

Neighborhood Garden Cat

litter of untamed kittens hidden away in an auto body shop, a nursery, or in someone’s backyard, for example. And we’ve all said, “Those kittens are going to grow up wild just like that mother cat.” Or “It’s such a shame no one can touch the mother cat and take her in to get her spayed.”

Well the good news is, there are now many agencies and individuals throughout the United States working long and hard to identify and feed feral colonies, to participate in spay/neuter and release programs and to domesticate and find good homes for feral kittens.

It’s surprising to note that veterinarians can now spay and neuter kittens as young as 8-weeks old. And kittens captured at a very young age have a remarkable chance of becoming a trusting pet. I proved out that point quite accidentally three years ago.

What can you do to help the feral cat community? Locate local feral cat agencies and get involved. Volunteer to feed a feral cat colony or to help socialize kittens in shelters that attempt to place feral kittens. Donate funds and/or goods. Become a foster “parent” for feral kittens or cats. Take responsibility for domesticating and placing feral or near-feral kittens that you might find in your neighborhood.

There are estimated to be millions of feral kittens fending for themselves throughout America and, without intervention, that number can grow at an alarming rate. One pair of cats after the age of 6 months old can produce several litters per year. Over a five-year period, these two cats and their offspring can be responsible for as many as 250,000 kittens. As you can see, taking responsibility for just one litter of kittens or one kitten or arranging to have one adult spayed or neutered, will make a huge difference.

For additional information contact the Feral Cat Coalition in San Diego at http://www.feralcat.com and/or Alley Cat Allies at http://www.alleycat.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

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