I am sure that you will agree with the
opinion that we cats hold our feathered friends very dearly. In fact as close
and as dearly as we can, given the opportunity.
Bearing that in mind I am sure that many of
us feel a tinge of sadness during the Winter months, as we sit indoors in the
warm while watching our birdie chums flapping about in the cold and the wet
and, most sadly, with little food, other than that which is provided via
feeding baskets which many of our human companions have the charity to hang out
for them. Often high up. Out of reach. Of those who do not fly.
I spend many an hour watching with interest
and occasional amusement as the feathered ones hover around these feeding
baskets, frequently clutching on to the enclosing mesh as they pluck a nut or
seed through the gaps.
Not infrequently the grip on the valuable
food is lost and it tumbles to the ground, where it may be scooped up by a
large wandering pigeon, or perhaps lost on the ground, to be scavenged later by
mice or rats or even a fox, all of whom soon recognise a depository for manna
from heaven and are waiting in the wings.
Noting that most of these feeding baskets are
merely round tubes with an occasional stick on the side acting as an
over-occupied perch, my human came upon a good idea (it sometimes happens) and
made a use of some now-abandoned curved plastic discs that his kittens used to
delight in playing with before they discovered the interest of just sitting
still and pushing buttons. They called these things 'Frisbees'.
His bright idea was to fix one of these to the
bottom of each feeder. Its wide dish meant that dropped food was not lost to the
ground. It also provided a platform upon which the feathered ones could stand,
rather than hover precariously,
and it also allowed small seed to be heaped upon it, seed which would otherwise
just pour through the feeder mesh.
I attach a photograph of the device in position,
which I filched off my human's computer Mac (strange name, as it never rains
indoors…). I find that a computer mouse is frequently a cat's best friend.
The feeders usually have small holes in the
bottom and I gather that it is a very simple matter to put a couple of holes
through the plastic of these 'Frisbees' using a 'drill' or a knife point. My
human first used large 'self-tapping screws' to hold the two together, but then
changed to small 'nuts-and-bolts', which he considered to be a more durable
method of attachment.
So, George, there you have it. Us cats
being kind to the birds, for without little birds in the Spring there will be
no more big birds in the Summer. Which somewhat reduces the
fun-time for us. Incidentally, the new device is so strong that even pigeons
can alight briefly to snatch a beak full.
All's fair, etc.
Love to all and remember, we should all
help each other to get by in this world.
Milly
Dear Milly,
Steady on, Milly. This isn't a good idea at all. My bird table is there so that I can enjoy watching and occasionally catching the birds on it.
I see bird tables as birder bars (burger-birder, geddit?) for felines. I prefer the food on the ground. With luck I can nab a bird while it is feeding. What's good about this human idea? It ruins the fun.
Not too much enthusiasm for human ideas, please. They don't have many and most of them are poor (like measuring out cat food rather than ad lib feeding).
Yours
George
Dear Milly,
Steady on, Milly. This isn't a good idea at all. My bird table is there so that I can enjoy watching and occasionally catching the birds on it.
I see bird tables as birder bars (burger-birder, geddit?) for felines. I prefer the food on the ground. With luck I can nab a bird while it is feeding. What's good about this human idea? It ruins the fun.
Not too much enthusiasm for human ideas, please. They don't have many and most of them are poor (like measuring out cat food rather than ad lib feeding).
Yours
George