When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro. - Hunter S. Thompson
18 July 2009
10 July 2009
02 July 2009
30 May 2009
29 May 2009
20 May 2009
19 May 2009
Briefly mentioned
To borrow a trope from blogfriend Buck, here's the weather forecast for Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
It has been warm enough in the middle of the day for the last few weeks that the central A/C has run pretty often.
Last night, it got down to 41 and I had to get up in the night and turn the heat on... it was either that or wake my wife up to find out where she put away the comforters.
Friend Ron came over for dinner last night. Ron, in addition to his many other talents, is a Cat Whisperer.
Mister Gato was skeptical of Ron at first.
But in the end, he gave him his highest endorsement.
11 May 2009
Morning bath
03 May 2009
24 April 2009
20 April 2009
I don't think we'll have to worry about this any longer
My only complaint, Barry, is the lack of cat and / or chow content in these photos. Don't let it happen again.Well, after recuperating at home this weekend (from nothing unusual - just the daily slings and arrows that the flesh is heir to) - I don't think this is going to be a problem.
The animals are settled into a routine of following us from room to room, occasionally taking a little time off to explore the novelty of solitude (an option only sporadically available to all of us until recently).
At any rate, Bunny - I am reasonably certain that this is the last picture anyone will ever see of this chair without a cat in it:
My desk chair (an Aeron with curiously claw-proof nylon mesh seating) was "his" chair at the apartment.
He has definitely traded up here, but to something uplholstered. Yikes.
09 January 2009
13 June 2008
Feed the cat first
"You're not going to check your work e-mail yet. You've made coffee... but didn't you forget something?"
"My dish won't fill itself with nuggets."
(See The Modulator and The Carnival of the Cats for more bloggers' cats from around the world.)
02 March 2008
Thinking Inside The Box
14 February 2008
29 December 2007
99 problems but a rat ain't one
They are the homeless of the domestic animal world -- colonies of feral cats that roam residential neighborhoods and lurk around office buildings and commercial garages, scavenging for food.LAPD enlists feral cats for rat patrol (LA Times, 29 December 2007)
Unlike other strays that might rub up against a leg hoping for a crumb or a head rub, these felines are so unaccustomed to human contact that they dart away when people approach. Feral cats cannot be turned into house pets. When they end up in municipal shelters, they have little hope of coming out alive.
But one animal welfare group has figured out a way to save their lives and put them to work in Los Angeles. The Working Cats program of Voice for the Animals, a Los Angeles-based animal advocacy and rescue group, has placed feral cats in a handful of police stations with rodent problems, just as the group placed cats in the rat-plagued downtown flower district several years ago -- to great effect.
Six feral cats were recently installed as ratters in the parking lot of the Los Angeles Police Department's Southeast Division, and another group will be housed at the Central Division early in the new year.
For more information: The Working Cats Program of the Voice for the Animals Foundation
22 December 2007
A working class hero is something to be
Across the city, delis and bodegas are a familiar and vital part of the streetscape, modest places where customers can pick up necessities, a container of milk, a can of soup, a loaf of bread.
Amid the goods found in the stores, there is one thing that many owners and employees say they cannot do without: their cats. And it goes beyond cuddly companionship. These cats are workers, tireless and enthusiastic hunters of unwanted vermin, and they typically do a far better job than exterminators and poisons.
[...]But as efficient as the cats may be, their presence in stores can lead to legal trouble. The city’s health code and state law forbid animals in places where food or beverages are sold for human consumption. Fines range from $300 for a first offense to $2,000 or higher for subsequent offenses.
“Any animal around food presents a food contamination threat,” said Robert M. Corrigan, a rodentologist and research scientist for the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. “And so that means anything from animal pieces and parts to hair and excrement could end up in food, and that alone, of course, is a violation of the health code.”
Because, of course, it's much healthier to have the rats and mice in the store. Thank God our tireless city government health inspectors are trying to rid us of the feline menace.
Idiots.
Just another instance where I'm speechlessly grateful that city government is so goddamned inefficient... if I were getting all the New York City government I'm paying for, I doubt I could stand it.
Related: Working Class Cats (a blog about store cats in NYC)
08 December 2007
Gato on guard duty
Our menagerie includes not only one irascible tomcat, but two Chow Chows.
An important part of a Chow's job description is to always be between you and the front door. They were bred as guard dogs, and those instincts run deep. Chow Bella and Chow Fun trade off on door-guard duty as a general rule.
But now that Mister Gato is a full-fledged member of the household pack (and universally acknowledged feline badass) he takes regular shifts guarding the door too.
Of course, he's not without backup. Here's a little more context on that photo:
Be sure to check out The Modulator's Friday Ark for other pictures of bloggers' pets... and the Carnival of the Cats, this Sunday, at Bad Kitty Cats.
28 September 2007
The nuggets must be guarded
See more bloggers' pets at The Modulator's Friday Ark; this Sunday, the Carnival of the Cats is hosted by Life From A Cat's Perspective.