keelime-pies:

mystisnykoto:

kittehkats:

     “Cats are cold, detached & unloving.”

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     “Cats are not loyal.”

     “A cat will not greet you at the door.”

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     “You can not train a cat”

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     “Cats aren’t that smart.”

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     “Cats aren’t that good with children.”

     “Cats don’t miss you when you’re gone.”

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     “Cats don’t comfort you when you’re feeling down.”

What a load of crap !!!  One thing for certain… cats don’t give a rat’s ass what B.S. you tell about them. They refuse to care less, either about what you think of them, or about the people they love.

“Cats don’t miss you when you’re gone” is a ton of bs. Whenever I leave to go anywhere, I can hear my cats meowing at the door within moments trying to find me. They sit in the window watching for me to come home and they are at the door to greet me almost every single time.

Cats also grieve.
This cat watches a video of their owner who had passed away and he tries to cuddle up with the phone. The look on his face when they zoom in on him brings me to tears every time.

One of our cats comes and sleeps next to me when he sees that I’m not feeling well. If he’s in the kitchen when I come down for food with cramps or with a cold, he’ll follow me back upstairs and lay down on me and purr.

Cats are aloof animals who don’t put up with nonsense, will defend their boundaries with claws, and sometimes like to push things down to see what happens, but they aren’t jerks.

soselfimportant:

one time i fell asleep with a half eaten bag of chips on my chest and while i was napping one of my cats jumped up on me and chewed up the bag and sent the chips flying everywhere and a bit later i woke up completely covered in shredded bag and chip pieces and the last thing i remembered i had started eating some tasty chips so for a short while i was convinced i had blacked out and gone into some sort of uncontrollable chip frenzy

Why must we walk dogs but cats, who naturally have territories miles wide, are perfectly fine indoors forever? Because you’re an animal abuser, that’s why.

drferox:

talkyblogthing:

drferox:

You’re funny Anon. Why don’t you show your face and we’ll have a civil discussion, and meanwhile I will continue to keep my cats indoors and advocate against letting them free roam.

Okay, so fuck anon for being shitty in framing, but I am kind of curious, why do dogs seem to get restless and want to go outside/exercise in general more? It seems dogs generally have a higher activity level in their preferred lifestyle, does that have something to do with how they “naturally” are or is there some confirmation bias going on where cats are more active and I just don’t know?

Well, my dear anon decided to not come back, so I guess we’ll have to have this discussion without them. There is a lot to talk about, in both your question, the anon’s phrasing and the whole picture, so bear with me in this essay. 

Cat territories

Let’s start with ‘cats have territories miles wide’. It’s true that feral and entire (not desexed) cats will roam over multiple kilometers, this is particularly true when resources are scarce and less true when resources are abundant. In areas and times when there is lots of food and shelter available (eg mouse plagues) the area of perceived cat territories actually shrink. This suggests that what’s important to the cat is not how big the territory is in terms of space, but rather how much stuff is in it. In non-desexed cats, one of the resources they seek is potential mates, so their territories will be larger than a desexed one.

So what does this mean for indoor cats? That potentially being restricted to indoor only will be an adequate territory, providing the house is equipped with enough of what the cat needs.

Dog territories

While conventional wisdom is that dogs do require more space, that seems to not always be the case. With the rise of apartment living we do see more indoor only/mostly dogs and with adequate socialization and exercise they don’t seem to be any worse off. 

Taking a dog for a walk isn’t really about extending or establishing its territory. It’s about physical and mental stimulation and you could manage both without going for a walk, it’s just that walking the dog is easy, enjoyable, socially acceptable and ingrained in our psychology as ‘what you do’.

Dogs are not permitted to free roam

We walk our dogs on leads, except for designated off-leash areas. Society’s dogs are, or are expected to be, under control at all times.

The way we’ve traditionally treated cats, just opening the door and letting them do whatever they like, going to other people’s houses, hunting and killing, fighting each other, etc, would be unacceptable and outright prosecutable if we did it to dogs.

Cats can be leash trained

Nothing stopping anyone from teaching their cat to walk on a leash and take it for a walk, nothing but effort really. Some cats though do not want to go out, but that can also apply to dogs.

Toilet habits

Dogs tend towards walking then pooping, while cats tend towards finding somewhere discrete for pooping. So we humans have developed this habit of taking the dog for a walk to make it poop, while for cats we seem perfectly happy to let them poop in somebody else’s garden.

Tradition

An awful lot of how we perceive the needs and care of our pets is based upon tradition and what we’ve always done. This doesn’t necessarily mean it’s best for them. Dogs and cats have different characters in the eyes of society. Think of how often we head ‘this cat is like a dog!’ or vice versa when it’s really not, the cat is like a cat, it’s just the person telling the story has a particular preconceived notion of how cats and dogs are and was surprised.

Cats are predator and prey

A dog of any decent size is going to walk through the world like it owns the place, barking at anything, chasing anything (even cars!) and generally not being concerned about being eaten, because other than for very small dogs there are usually not things about that will eat them.

Cats are both predator and prey species. They hunt and kill huge numbers of small mammals and birds when given the chance, but they will also be hunted and killed themselves: dogs, hawks, owls, snakes and other larger carnivores to name a few. You wouldn’t let your bunny free roam, it’s just as dangerous for your cat.

Free roaming cats are at bad for the environment

Cats which are permitted to freely roam have significant effects on wildlife (feral cat autopsies revealed they may be killing up to 50 small birds, mammals or lizards a day and they’re not just hunting because they’re hungry, they only eat the tasty bits when they’re hunting this much), can transmit toxoplasmosis (pooping in the neighbors garden or veggie patch), they will fight each other and stress each other out with unwelcome presences at windowsills.

Free roaming is bad for the cats

The world is not kind to cats. Road vehicle accidents, some deliberate and some accidental, deliberate and accidental poisonings (paracetamol in milk, lily plants, antifreeze), altercations with wildlife, extreme weather and getting washed down storm water drains, getting accidentally locked in garages and not found for days…

And all the cats that just Never Come Home.

I am a working vet. We see the cats that come home injured, poisoned or sick, the dead ones off the side of the road, and all the phone calls from hopeful owners wondering if anyone happened to bring their cat in. The world is not kind for cats.

Alternatives

Preventing your cat from free-roaming outside might mean a strictly indoor lifestyle, but it doesn’t have to be. Leash training is an option, as is securing your yard or part of it in an enclosure so you cat can still be ‘outside’ but remains protected and secure.

Some cats are more active than others. Trash Bag likes t play fetch for hours each morning, which is a nice bonding activity for both of us. I’d much rather play with my cat and take responsibility for him than let him roam free and let Dog knows what happen to him.

drferox:

Your cat, Trashbag reminded me so much of my cat, Sterling Mallory Archer. He’s the black one. The long-suffering fluffy creature with him is our other cat, Meeka. They are both very very soft. Do you notice that some cats are softer than others? Does food quality affect a cat’s coat? I know the food bags claim to but they make big claims that don’t seem to have much actual science behind them.

Aside from beautiful Australia, are there any other places you would like to live if you could live anywhere with the guarantee that you’d find a suitable job and place to live, etc.?

Nutritional deficiencies will alter the coat, but some cats naturally have a softer or denser coat than others.

I think New Zealand might be interesting to live in, and Mexico actually has a certain appeal. For a while I did want to try out Canada and the UK, but I suspect I will always call Australia home.

I know someone who has the softest cats. Like, nearly rabbit-soft. They foster cats pretty frequently, and whenever they do, the cats gradually turn incredibly soft.

Thing is, a couple of times they’ve had to re-home the cats to a relative, who lives about 30 miles away. The relative feeds the exact same food, but all the cats that go to her gradually lose their softness. 

They’re pretty sure it’s the combination of the food and something in the water, maybe a trace mineral. Whatever it is, they have one cat who’s naturally soft already, and now petting him feels like petting a giant rabbit. His name is Dragon and he’s a giant fluffy baby.

thatsthat24:

megbiediger:

queeringfeministreality:

hollowedskin:

sysichi:

did-you-kno:

The largest cat in NYC, and possibly
the world, is a 28 lb., 4-foot-long
Maine Coon named Samson. He’s
bigger than most bobcats (and most
toddlers), and every day he likes
to sit on his owner’s chest first
thing in the morning. Source Source 2

@hollowedskin

him big

i want to cuddle him ❤

WHAT THE FUCK

i want this cat to sit on my chest first thing in the morning

The bodest of the bodes.