conuly: (Default)
What do you know! If this keeps up, we may get a white Christmas for a change.

Removing DRM increases sales

http://news.techeye.net/business/removing-drm-increases-sales

We are very, very bad at washing our hands, says science

http://bit.ly/18OfLMw

Judge's word on NSA program won't be the last

http://abcn.ws/1bc45mV

If this judge doesn’t buy the legal basis for the NSA’s intrusive phone snooping, no one should.

http://slate.me/1fB9Pvx

Study finds evidence of domesticated Chinese cats 5,300 years ago

http://bit.ly/1hYMxTL

A brief history of African click words

http://bit.ly/19aqfvz

Autism hits Somali kids harder, University of Minnesota study finds

http://strib.mn/IZXAN7

Freedoms for Saudi university girls end at gates

http://wapo.st/1hYMTJZ

The NSA: An Inside View [blog-post]

http://bit.ly/19aquab

The Odd Rise of Anonymous Sources

http://bit.ly/19PH5dK

Paul Dini Tells Kevin Smith about Hollywood’s Fear of Girl Cooties

http://bit.ly/18KQa7r

Barbie and Elevator Guy: science and sexism

(Yes, I know it's old.)

http://bit.ly/19veuxT
conuly: (Default)
So I was ironically a little happy when I found the mama cat enthusiastically shredding the crap out of a cardboard box. Sure, it still has furniture in it, at least I know what she likes. Those things can be costly.

So I went to the store, bought some cat food, and picked up a cardboard scratching pad. It came with a little sachet of catnip. Note to self: never apply that stuff when the cats are nearby. They're likely to forget themselves entirely and eat your hand.

I am pleased to report that they all love that thing and spent the entire night scratching it up. In related news, I got no sleep last night. I need to find a new place to put that....

Also, the mama cat seems to finally be building a new rapport with her erstwhile kittens, and it only took her a year after weaning. Not only does she now occasionally rest on the opposite side of the same bed as they do (without interacting) but you can sometimes catch her grooming Callie or accepting a friendly nudge from same. She still won't interact at all with Sandy, but if you give him an inch the next thing you know he's decided to curl up on top of you and suck his own tits, so I can't really blame her for that. He's a very huggy cat. She is not. Baby steps, guys, baby steps.
conuly: (Default)
Cats at Hemingway Museum Draw Tourists, and a Legal Battle

http://nyti.ms/XZuDSd
http://nyti.ms/VWfwaG

Read more... )

300 Cats, Yes. Craziness, No.

http://nyti.ms/WPpivU
http://nyti.ms/Vsio0F

Read more... )

For Feral Cats, a Few New Places to Call Home

http://nyti.ms/10mH0yG
http://nyti.ms/TNA6NM

Read more... )
conuly: Dr. Horrible quote: All the birds are singing, you're gonna die : ) (birds are singing)
Boy, is this ever a production! First I had to get the carriers (and a ride) from Michele. Luckily she was willing to do so, her youngest was sick this weekend. Then I had to borrow a second friend because she's on food stamps, saving me $115 per kitten. (They're "her" kittens today, though sadly she's not interested in them in real life.) Given that she's excessively pregnant, this was a huge favor of hers.

Then I get there and the van's not there. It showed up right as we were about to give up and leave. And we stand out in the cold and the woman goes "Oh, if it's three cats the third one has to be full price." But, happily, another person there only had ONE cat, so she signed the form for him.

So, in total, it took four people to manage getting these three cats fixed, and I still have the girls to do. They're going Friday, I can *walk* down. *thinks* Well, picking them up isn't so bad, but dropping them off might be a problem. I should ask Jenn or my mom to do that, otherwise I'll have to go some other day.

Oh, and their mom. She's last because she's still nursing. Logically, you'd think she's most urgent, but it's not the right time of year for kittens, so I'm not overly worried.
conuly: Quote: "I'm blogging this" (blogging)
I have no new pictures, sorry.

Many people would be giving them away at this point. Indeed, if you go to google you can find people recommending that YOU (not mama - you!) start the weaning process at one month or six weeks so they're totally off milk and ready to be parceled out at two months.

As I've said before, I don't think is the right thing unless you have a compelling reason to do so, say, if they're unhealthy. I say that the kittens really *need* an additional month with their mother and littermates to be emotionally healthy, and also physically healthy. Weaning is the most dangerous time in the life of a kitten, after all.

The thinking person might ask why humans have to force wean kittens. And the answer is that kittens really don't wean that early. These guys still nurse several times a day. Even in just the few hours between me dropping Eva off at school and then going to pick her up, Mom calls for her kittens (she calls for them! this isn't even bringing up the times they go to her as she's resting and start nursing on their own!) about once an hour or so. Maybe a little less often.

As a kid, I wasn't a very responsible cat owner. I don't like this fact, but it's the truth. However, the one benefit of this is that I had an opportunity to observe a lot of cats, and many many litters of kittens. The truth is that kittens don't, on their own, leave their moms at three months either. I call it an "extra" month, but only because if they get any bigger than that they get increasingly difficult to give away. On their own, they still have occasional nursing sessions another month after that (more if there's a new litter around, as many cats would nurse any kitten who comes by (a helpful bit of information if you happen to find an abandoned newborn, they're much better off if you can get them with another mama cat, even if the kittens aren't the same ages), and I actually had one who managed to keep it up until he was a year old that way!) and don't generally leave home until they're grown or very nearly. Females especially might NEVER leave if their mother and other older cats don't mind their company. Even the males sometimes stay in the whole group, or go and come back.

I'm still giving these kittens away at three months (or at least, I'm starting a real push then. I hope to give them away fast!) In the long term, it's better if they get given away, and that gets hard once they're big.

The point I want to make here, and reiterate until it sticks with all of you :) is that there is simply no good reason to separate a healthy, non-feral kitten from its mother and littermates at two months. Even if it's a feral cat situation and the mother WILL not stay around so you can socialize the kittens without separating them, it's better to keep the littermates together as long as possible. (Feral kittens are a difficult situation, as it's generally best for them to socialize with humans, and their mothers won't like that at all. But if you can convince the mom to stick around for the free food, you may be able to make it work that the kittens aren't separated as soon as they could've been. In truth, I'm inclined to think that the best thing for feral cats is to get them fixed and then let them be. It's easier than trying to acclimate them to people, anyway.)

People do hand out kittens at that age, but it's not developmentally appropriate, and it's not at all good for them. Psychologically it's like tearing a kindergartener away from her family and giving her to a new group of people. They still even have all their baby teeth! And it's not even good for their health. Kittens who are weaned too early are much more prone to disease, and being so little they're less able to fight it.

And six weeks, as you hear sometimes, is absolutely not justifiable at all. Anybody who suggests that to you, ever, you have my permission to smack them hard on the head.
conuly: Picture taken on the SI Ferry - "the soul of a journey is liberty" (boat)
This is a cool article about a shelter that lets you play with the cats ONLINE.

Adoptions are up, btw.

Now, many strange and false things are said about cats (gotta bulk this post up). One of the strangest is that cats aren't social animals. This is certainly not true! Cats aren't pack animals like dogs, but they are social. One way you can tell is by simply counting up the many ways they have of showing affection and bonding with each other. Humans have more, probably... but that's because we can bond and show affection with small talk, and cats generally can't.

With cats, though, it's all body language. They might groom each other (these kittens I have always prefer that method, and I often come across them licking each other's ears, stomachs, tails, and, on multiple occasions, private parts), sleep together, butt heads (I've seen head butting between kitten and mama that is amazingly perfunctory, as though the kitten wanted to say "yup, I love you, but food counts more!" and get right down to the nursing!), play with each other (you can tell it's playing because nobody gets hurt and they spend an amazing amount of time setting up their pounces), walk against their friend and brush sides with each other (this only works with friends. I've seen cats do it with other cats that tolerated but didn't altogether approve of them, and it ended with a swat on the head), share food with each other, and (usually with kittens and their mothers - I've seen kittens continue to do this even after they were quite large) walk under the other cat's chin and brush their tails there.

Non-social animals don't need so many ways to bond with each other. Social animals do. And of course your cats modify this behavior to deal with you - they groom you as gently as they can manage (but there's too much of a good thing, and if you start to get a rash, make them stop!), they run between your legs so you trip, they play catch-the-mouse with your feet, and leave mice on your pillow.

The whole point of that commentary is to say that if you can, it's usually better to have two or three cats instead of just one. Cats like company, in general. (Unless they were raised alone, in which case... probably not.) I'd like to give these kittens away in two groups instead of to five homes, but that probably won't happen.

The other thing you hear even those who should know better say is that you can't train cats, or that it's very difficult. This is nonsense. Training an animal is mostly communication, and we KNOW cats can communicate with ("train") us. This one I have runs in front of me to lead me here or there, or to ensure I give her food or water or whatever she wants. She knows how to call so we let her in, and she knows how to ask for snuggles. So if she can communicate with me, I can do the same with her.

Every single cat I've ever had learned how to come when called. This is basic, and I never really trained them to do so. Never used treats or any method. Just, when they started walking or I first met them I clicked my tongue at them and tapped my fingers with each other or on the ground. This got their attention, and if they came even a little bit close to me I pet them on the head and rubbed their ears. And pretty soon even the slowest kitten figured it out. Shaking a box of dry food works too, but this is less silly. And it didn't take any effort at all to teach them this!

This cat we've got learned very quickly that if I clap my hands and point, she needs to move. I never did anything harsher than pick her up and take her away from where she's not allowed to be.

She learned very fast she's not allowed in my bathroom (because, due to poor design, it gives access for her to the downstairs bathroom and she terrorizes THEIR cat). All I had to do was close the door and carry her out if she came in. Now she looks at it and doesn't go near. We're working on "she's not allowed upstairs", but this isn't helped by the fact that the children, in contrast, are slow to learn "don't reward her for coming upstairs".

None of this is very difficult. I've never taught a cat any silly tricks like people teach dogs, but if I wanted to and the cat didn't mind, it'd be just as easy. Wait for them to get it even a little right, and then reward them when they do. So long as your cat likes you, it's not as hard as some people think. Bit silly for tricks, but there are basic things you can teach any cat if you have patience.

(And some things you can't. If you're in the habit of leaving your meat out, your cat WILL eat it. Your own silly fault for leaving it out!)
conuly: (childish)
Warning. Kittens in pictures are every bit as adorable as they appear )

I'm sorry for the bad picture quality. And you know, I had more, but I can't find them on my computer now! I'll take more later.
conuly: (can't)
THEY'RE NOCTURNAL!

So when you finally finish what you have to do in the evening, and hop into bed, and turn off the light - guess what? You're only going to get 10 or 20 of your winks because at 4:30 on the dot the kittens are going to start racing around madly in a fight to the death. My alarm went off at 6:10 (yeah, like that was gonna happen) and by 6:20, when I absolutely HAD to get up, the kittens had decided to curl up and sleep again. Great timing there.

Did I mention they did this on my bed? Yeah, a few weeks ago mama cat figured out they couldn't jump up onto that bed, so she started hanging out there. But then the kittens learned how to climb up there, and now they stay on the bed as much as possible, which is GREAT when they're sleeping and quiet and cuddly, but not so much when they're trying to kill everything that moves, and also me.

Also, they can't get down on their own, which means their mom likes to climb up there, mrowp so they follow her, and then jump down and leave them stranded while she goes about her day. Guess who gets tasked with kitten retrieval?

The obvious solution here, of course, would be to lock the kittens in the kitchen for the night. But then I wouldn't be able to snuggle them right before bed!

Man, whoever domesticated cats.... I like cats just fine myself, but what genius first thought "Hey! A nocturnal killing machine! I'm gonna bring it into my house and see if it'll sit on my lap and lick me with its icky mouse breath!"?

(Logical punctuation is a fine thing, but sometimes it looks really funny. Not that the standard way would look any less funny.)

Cat update

Sep. 9th, 2011 10:40 pm
conuly: (Default)
She moved them upstairs after one too many visits from the nieces. I was going to do that if she didn't, for the same reason.

I would've picked a better spot than the well overcrowded yarn room, though. The first place she picked was surrounded by such precarious stacks of boxes of yarn (and books!) that it was actually unsafe, and I spent half an hour clearing the boxes out. But then she felt they weren't hidden enough (because they were no longer hidden at all, although just getting in that room is a challenge) and moved them again. And now they're actually inaccessible for the moment. I mean, I could move all the boxes out of the way, but I figured I'd give her a day. I want to make sure I've cut off all unacceptable locations first!

Now, every time I post about the kittens you guys give me scads of advice, and while I appreciate it (and a lot of what you say is helpful and stuff I either don't know or hadn't remembered, it being a while since we've had a cat for any long term), I do want to let you know that I actually know a lot about cats and kittens, both through lots and lots of reading and personal observation. (In my middle school years, certainly, I felt (rightly or wrongly) that my understanding of cat behavior and body language far outstripped my understanding of human behavior and body language*, but this is because cats make sense.)

The nieces love nothing more than opening a can of food for the cat. This cat prefers dry food, which ought to be NO PROBLEM but I like the nieces to feel they can help out. So I went out today and bought a week's worth of little cans instead of the big cans we'd been using. Used the chance to a. get a higher quality cat food (now, THAT is something I urgently need advice on!) b. talk to the cat adoption people in case I fail to find five (!) homes for these kittens when they hit three months and c. snag a box top (for education!) from the box of hefty bags on the table. Yes, I do ask total strangers if they need those. (And yes, you can mail some to me and I'll pay for the stamps!)

Of course, the real problem with having a cat is that once you saved one pregnant kitty you start seeing cats everywhere that could use your help. I've had no luck re-tracking down the 3-legged one. Ana saw a mama cat with her three semi-feral kittens the other day, about four months, and asked if I could help them too (I'd like to, they're at an age where it's still easy enough to acclimate them to humans and it won't harm them to remove them from their mom, but I had nothing to lure them and they wouldn't come near. At least they seemed healthy). And it gets ridiculous. I really couldn't bring one or four new cats into the house. I still haven't worked out where I'm shifting the ones I've got! And all the shelters have waiting lists, and waiting lists for their foster owners too. There are cats all over the place. I'm starting to remember now why I gave up on the whole having cats concept. I could easily become the crazy cat lady, and this block already HAS a cat lady. (I need to talk to her about these kittens. She'll know the cheapest place to get their shots done, and is better able to find homes for cats than I've ever been.)

Anyway, you don't want to hear this, you want to hear how cute they are. The answer? Very, and they all have their eyes opening. One has them ALL the way open!

*It's important to remember that cats, even if you intend them to live in a one-cat household for their entire lives, need to be socialized with other cats as kittens. When I hear people talking about giving away kittens at two months, or six weeks (which is positively criminal and there is NO justification for), I get so mad. Kittens are in the most danger during the weaning period, health-wise, and they need those last months to learn how to act as cats. They shouldn't be separated from their mothers at that age unless there is a truly compelling reason to do so and it can't be avoided. Cats that aren't socialized properly or aren't weaned properly will show any number of behavior problems, and even if YOU think it's cute that your cat chews on all your shirts while sitting on your lap, it's not. It's sad.

Of course, all pet animals have to be socialized from a young age with humans as well, so they can be bilingual in a way (except for the lingual part - and yes, this is why, if you're saving a wild animal, you should give it to the trained professional who knows how to raise it so it doesn't get too attached!), but they still need adequate time with their mother and littermates to grow properly.

Sorry for the rant there, I'm sure you all know this already, but there are so many people who think kittens are adoptable when they're still just babies, not even, like, preschooler kittens! And it's not right.

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conuly

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