Tag Archives: cats

A Treatise On Cats

Inspired by Jill Dennison (Filosofa’s Word) from yesterday. I would encourage you to check it out yourself.

So, she showed several ‘toons and a video about cats and their behavior. After laughing myself silly I began remembering some of the many cats in my life.

It all began the afternoon my hubby brought a cat and her 6 kittens home to our daughter. Yeah, six (6) kittens! Four of them ultimately were given to friends who remained friends afterward and two of them were kept by my 2 sons. Thumper was almost well mannered, but he was named for the noise he made galloping through the house (plus they had just watched the movie about Bambi and Thumper, the rabbit.) Priscilla was a little lady most of the time and the two of them kept us all entertained — most of the time.

The problem started when we went to bed. Pris apparently was lonely so she would jump in a bed, no discrimination there, we were all her victim–um, besties on different nights. Now I don’t know about you but I have always loved hearing a cat purr. Until the night she chose me. She curled herself around my head and purred in the exposed ear. Loudly! Without stopping! For what seemed like an eternity! So after a while I tossed her off the bed. But to quote the lyrics of an old song whose name I have forgotten, “The cat came back” — several times. After being tossed off several times though she finally chose another vict–um, close friend only to have that one do the same.

Ultimately she returned to our bed and chose my hubby. He was a cat lover, usually seen with one draped around his neck while he went about his farm work but this treatment by Priscilla was beyond what even he could endure. After tossing her off half a dozen times he finally tossed her out the door. Peace reigned for a few minutes before the alarm clock rang. Big sigh! We all dragged oursellves out of bed, did what we had to do, and then I crawled back in bed and finally slept — for about 15 minutes before, you guessed it — the cat came back. No one could help themselves, they all brought her back in the house to purr again.

While my daughter is still a cat person, I now prefer dogs. They don’t purr and they can let you know when anyone in the area dares to turn on a light or drive by the house by their bark! LOUD barking at that.

Cats and other fun

I received a message from my friend Jill about some of her cats peculiarities and it reminded me of the many, many cats we had on the farm. Since we also had dogs, some days were like living in an animal circus.

In the beginning I had a German Shepherd that my husband brought in to me one night a couple of weeks after our wedding. I have loved German Shepherds for most of my life, after taming one my dad brought home when I was about twelve. It almost became a victim of Highway 81 when he strayed too close to the road and almost got hit by one of the coal trucks that passed by us every five minutes. His name was Duke, if I remember correctly, and after that close encounter he ran up to me for the first time without his teeth bared and a growl in the throat. I held him close and spoke to him for several minutes and after a while he stopped trembling and just snuggled up to me. No one else was able to play with him, but after that incident he was my buddy — until Dad decided he was dangerous and took him back to the person who gave him to us. It broke my heart, but I was only one out of dozens who were happy to see him go.

So, anyway, my first animal on the farm was a German Shepherd puppy, named Duke after my first one. A few weeks later my hubby brought in a baby racoon that had fallen out of its nest, thinking I would be afraid of it. I named her JoJo, and now had two pets of my own. They had joined my hubs own dog, a coon hound of all things, as part of the family. Since the hound was old and just wanted to sleep all the time there were never any problems with our animal family until — the next rescue he brought was a cat with five kittens.

Samantha, the cat, was a gift for our daughter, and was kept inside the house after a few close encounters of the worst kind with the dogs. By that time JoJo had a family of her own and as soon as they were old enough they all went back to the woods and their normal wild living, so the cats seemed to be just what was needed to round out the family. The kittens were named after the favorite TV detectives. We had Stansky, Hutch, Colombo, Cannon, and Dillon. Okay, so Matt Dillon was a western sheriff, but he was also a favorite of most of us (and I still watch Gunsmoke to this day). Mama cat was named Samantha, and after the original five had outgrown house cat status and welcome they became barn cats, gravitating there each time they had escaped the confines of the house before being left out one night by mistake. Samantha was a cat only a mom could love, claws extended all the while, but my daughter was wild about her.

Time passed and Samantha’s time came round again, so one of her friends smuggled her tomcat in to play with Samantha. A few weeks later, Samantha gave birth to seven this time. Oh, daddy was a solid white cat while Sam was gray, so from that litter we got one white cat with one blue eye and one green eye. He was named Thumper. I think that was the name given after he was weaned, while one sister, who had endeared herself to us all was also kept and named Priscilla. My hubby loved to play with the cats when he came in at night, inventing all kinds of toys for them to chase, but one day he noticed that each time I used the electric can opener the cats all came running to the kitchen, thinking they were going to be fed again. The sound of the opener was usually followed by their food dishes being filled with the combination of wet and dry food I gave them, and even though they were only fed one time a day they couldn’t tell time except by their stomachs. They bolted the food in the morning and were ready for more as soon as the can opener was heard. Thumper could be heard bounding across the floor from wherever he had been hiding and into the kitchen. Pris was always a lady, making a dignified entrance. Naturally pushing the button on the can opener became hubs favorite pastime after that.

Now as for Priscilla, she was a lover. She curled around our necks and purred in our ears constantly. And I do mean constantly! Not so bad during the day when we were all awake, but at night she alternated victims, choosing from the three kids but always beginning in my bed, wrapped around my head and purring in my ear. LOUD purring! Like a buzz saw purring. After I pushed her off for the third time she would move over to hub’s head. He would shove her out into the living room and shut the door. She seemed to need to show her love for her humans though so undaunted by being shunned twice, she moved on to the kids rooms. We could only chuckle into our pillows as she picked on the boys, being pushed off with a few choice words by each of them before finally seeking refuge with her mom and a sure welcome in our daughter’s room. I’ve never understood why she didn’t go there first, unless possibly her mom pushed her off in there.

These cats also spent time outside — each time the door opened they sped out until finally they only visited inside once in a while. The number of outside cats seemed to grow, and each year we had two new white cats with one blue eye and one green eye, all tamed in some way by my husband who could be seen at all times walking around the farm with a cat on his shoulder.

The only photos I could find were of Max, my Pekinese, but none of any of the cats. So here’s Max as a puppy. Since this was his first day with me the rope was the only thing I had to tie him outside for the time I was cleaning out my car.