Walls, and fencing are cat highways. As every cat knows. They allow us to travel from house to house along the back of a street. They form useful refuges from passing dogs. And they generally make life easier for urban cats.
Yet the joke is that humans think they are barriers.
They put up walls to keep people and dogs out and some are silly enough to think they will keep us out. Just the reverse. They facilitate our movements.
The real cat walls and fencing are scent marks. We leave a scent mark to tell other cats WHERE and WHEN we were. They can choose whether to enter shared territory or stay away.
Humans do not understand this because they are nose blind.
And just stoopid.
Read more on human stupidity by buying my guide here
Saturday, October 12, 2019
Saturday, October 05, 2019
The blessing of a cat
My book not hers. |
May you be blessed with a cat...
May you be blessed
with a cat,
A starving stray from
the street
Or a scruffy kitten
from a shelter,
Who hides under the
bed
For the first few days
May you be blessed
with cat fur
On the new carpet,
On your best clothes,
On your bed and
In little balls in the
washing machine
May you be blessed
with scratches,
Happy scratches on the
sofa,
Exploring scratches on
wallpaper,
Greeting scratches on
the door mat,
And sometimes even on
the scratch post.
May you be blessed
with a warm body
Close to you on the
sofa,
On your lap while
watching TV,
Spread out on the bed
asleep
Or even snuggled under
the duvet.
May you be blessed
with purring.
Loud purring
requesting food,
Happy purring when
stroked in the right places.
Gentle purring during
the night,
While both of you sink
into sleep.
May you be blessed
with that look,
The urgent look
requesting food,
The look that says:
“Play please,”
The look of loving
contempt
That says “You are not
my superior.”
You may not know if
you own or are owned
But this love too is
stronger than death.
c.. Celia Haddon
-->
Labels:
feral,
fur,
Glynn Cardey,
rescue shelter,
scratching,
sleep
Saturday, September 28, 2019
Human presumption and feline punishment....
Naturally the human publishers are anxious to stay on the right side of their best selling feline author. They sent me a package of expensive goodies. Very correct. Very pleasing.
Unfortunately, they did not check in advance about what I would like to eat... They presumed. As humans do.
I felt their presumption needed a punishment.
I gobbled up the expensive wet cat food fast. Then I felt slightly ill.
Then I threw it up on the new carpet.
* For more detail on how to maximise the impact of throwing up order a copy of A Cat's Guide to Humans, here.
Unfortunately, they did not check in advance about what I would like to eat... They presumed. As humans do.
I felt their presumption needed a punishment.
I gobbled up the expensive wet cat food fast. Then I felt slightly ill.
Then I threw it up on the new carpet.
* For more detail on how to maximise the impact of throwing up order a copy of A Cat's Guide to Humans, here.
Labels:
cat food,
cat vomit,
food,
human stupidity,
punishment
Saturday, September 21, 2019
Life of a feline artist - success.
At last... my book is officially published. A Cat's Guide to Humans from A-Z. And this time my name is on the cover. Feline friends can purchase it here. The more you know about your humans, the better.
Several years ago when I published a training manual for fellow cats (One Hundred Ways to Train your Human) my human stole the copyright and claimed credit.This time it is different. I am now an acknowledged feline author.
It's been a struggle, I admit. I needed to take a cool look at humans in general as well as my particular human. There is so much in their behaviour which is alien and sometimes disgusting to a normal cat. I needed to set aside my natural feelings and study them without prejudice.
Manipulating or managing a human is the basis of all good cat-human relationships.
Now at last there is a guide.
I hope it will contribute to better feline understanding of this strange species we have domesticated.
Several years ago when I published a training manual for fellow cats (One Hundred Ways to Train your Human) my human stole the copyright and claimed credit.This time it is different. I am now an acknowledged feline author.
It's been a struggle, I admit. I needed to take a cool look at humans in general as well as my particular human. There is so much in their behaviour which is alien and sometimes disgusting to a normal cat. I needed to set aside my natural feelings and study them without prejudice.
Manipulating or managing a human is the basis of all good cat-human relationships.
Now at last there is a guide.
I hope it will contribute to better feline understanding of this strange species we have domesticated.
Thursday, September 12, 2019
Human feet - enticing but useless
Naked human feet are tempting. They have an enticing scent, a mixture of body odour, sock, and leather shoe. Sniffing them is fun. Licking them - which some cats do - is usually not very rewarding, unless you have a human who goes barefoot and picks up interesting smells from the ground.
Those little piggy toes, which can wriggle, are fun to pounce on. Particularly in the middle of the night when your human goes to use its strange water-based litter tray. Try it. The human scream is really thrilling.
The strange thing about human feet is how useless they are for humans. True, they are flat so that humans can walk on two legs (not an advantage), but most of modern human feet are too soft to walk without the protection of shoes.
Despite being soft, flat sole of the foot is very insensitive compared with our paws. Humans cannot feel the earth vibrating through the soles of their feet. Feet are useless, therefore, for warning about predators. Just occasionally there is a single hair or two on the top of the foot among the elderly. But there are no charming little tufts of fur between the toes like ours.
The toes can wriggle a bit but are relatively immobile. They can't grasp anything. They don't have claws, either retractable ones like us or ordinary claws like a dog. Their nails don't DO anything. They can't open cat food with their feet.
In a word, human feet may be tempting to play but they are otherwise useless.
* Coming shortly, my guide to human management and training...
I am blogging early because I have sent my human to do an update day at Lincoln University.
Those little piggy toes, which can wriggle, are fun to pounce on. Particularly in the middle of the night when your human goes to use its strange water-based litter tray. Try it. The human scream is really thrilling.
The strange thing about human feet is how useless they are for humans. True, they are flat so that humans can walk on two legs (not an advantage), but most of modern human feet are too soft to walk without the protection of shoes.
Despite being soft, flat sole of the foot is very insensitive compared with our paws. Humans cannot feel the earth vibrating through the soles of their feet. Feet are useless, therefore, for warning about predators. Just occasionally there is a single hair or two on the top of the foot among the elderly. But there are no charming little tufts of fur between the toes like ours.
The toes can wriggle a bit but are relatively immobile. They can't grasp anything. They don't have claws, either retractable ones like us or ordinary claws like a dog. Their nails don't DO anything. They can't open cat food with their feet.
In a word, human feet may be tempting to play but they are otherwise useless.
* Coming shortly, my guide to human management and training...
I am blogging early because I have sent my human to do an update day at Lincoln University.
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Help for cats whose humans show behaviour problems.
This blog is devoted to the study of human behaviour. We cats, who live with this sometimes unpredictable and always feeble minded species, can benefit from seeing their behaviour in its proper scientific context. The study of feline dilemmas, training problems, and difficulties with humans, can only benefit all of us. All of us train our humans - to buy the right food, for instance, but many of us do not have knowledge of how to improve our training methods. The human species is obviously not as intelligent as the cat, but nevertheless can learn quite a lot - if properly managed. Topics of interest include the use of claw and order, purring as a human reward, rubbing your human up the right way, when to bite, spraying as a method of making our wishes known, ignoring the human, human harassment, human inattention and sheer human stupidity. I welcome your questions. Photos can be sent via my secretary's website, www.celiahaddon.com This blog has been chosen as one of the top 50 feline blogs by Online VetTechprogramms.org