Other people who watch the weather have already commented on the weird, unpredictable weather we’ve had, including days this month and last that wanted to be spring-like. Even though they didn’t take hold, those days allowed for at least one “robin convention,” as I describe them, in my neighborhood, and an unusual number of squirrels, including what looked like squirrel babies in training.
Then
there are the decidedly wintery days (including a now-novel snowstorm), when
there are myriad ways to assure our pets’ comfort, indoors and out. The first thing that comes to mind is straw –
never hay! -- as the best ingredient for outdoor pet and community/feral cat
shelters, with doorways covered with waterproof burlap or heavy plastic.
No
passport for her (please!)
“She weighs less than three pounds, she makes you go aww, and she’s one of the best killers on the planet.”
Introducing Gaia (please see story for image), a virtually unknown cat native to Africa who is bth tiny and terrible, yet terribly cute. (When you learn about her, you’ll want assurance that she’s safely secured in a US zoo.) And you can drop any impulse to cuddle her or other black-footed cats, some 30 of which live in other US zoos.
Weighing a trace more than 2-1/2 pounds, Gaia is part of a breeding-for-conservation effort. Because numbers of black-footed cats in the African wild are declining, they’re classified as “vulnerable,” heading for “endangered.”
And since “conservation” is becoming a
more common word and practice, Gaia and her cat compatriots may help build
their numbers back up, motivating more such programs for other animals. http://tinyurl.com/28pwxnva
Look! Up in the sky!
With a wingspan of about six feet and glowing fierce orange eyes, little wonder that Flako, the Eurasian eagle-owl who escaped from the Central Park Zoo last year, has become the talk of Manhattan. Besides merely tracking and watching him, his fans take pictures, create art, write poems and sport Flako tattoos.
While they busy themselves honoring Flako, the bird himself has toured the city and learned to hunt, apparently deciding this is the life for him. It’s not an easy life, either, as the deaths of other big birds due to city traffic and rat poison prove.
Details on “The Life of Flako” filled
more than two pages of a recent Sunday NYTimes story, complete with
numerous photos. http://tinyurl.com/5b6n4he7
They’re coming, they’re coming!
Yes, the [many-colored]coats are
coming! That would be spring’s
crop of kittens, coming soon. During “kitten
season,” winsome baby cats effortlessly win hearts merely by existing.
But please remember: kittens quickly
grow into cats, when you can really know about them. Only then will you see adult looks and
experience adult behavior.
An easier, better way to get the pet cat you hope for is to start with a grown-up cat! Adult cats have “been there, done that,” and they come with experience and savvy that will save you working from the ground up. Much more important, adult and senior cats appreciate having a home and can fit in faster.
It’s
almost the time of year when would-be adopters race right past smart,
beautiful, adult cats to seize kitten(s).
Getting to know some adult cats could change all that.
So meet Reggie, a “male
model” adult cat now at the EASEL Animal Rescue League shelter, Ewing. Estimated to be about 7 years old, Reggie’s
looking for a home. While he has no
teeth, that doesn’t inhibit his enthusiasm for food. And get that gorgeous coat he’s wearing!
(Specs on visiting and adopting cats are available at EASELNJ.org. And there’s more to come here on adoptable adult cats.)
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I've seen coats and foot covers on many dogs this winter, especially in NYC.
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