Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Keeping Us On Our Toes

He was so cute when he arrived. A tiny little grey kitten who had been returned to the shelter because his new owners left him alone they day they got him, and he peed in a corner. Knowing that, as soon as he headed for a corner, I showed him a litter pan. We didn't have any trouble convincing him to use the pan after that.

He was a very normal little man, and although there weren't any real issues with him, he loved to nuzzle my neck, which Betty said was an unadoptable trait. I just couldn't discourage him from the habit, so we kept him. His previous owner's loss, our gain. But..... perhaps the previous owners weren't telling the truth about why they brought him back. Perhaps they knew he had another side. He wasn't just another cute kitty. He was Drew the Destructive.

As soon as he won our hearts, he began to get into mischief. If there was something new, he had to investigate no matter how much trouble it led to. Every bang, crash, or tinkle, had Drew behind it. At one point he leapt to the mantle, knocking a clock to the floor. When we got to him, he had both paws around a mirror that was hanging over the fireplace. I don't know if he wanted to check himself out, or pull it off the wall, but we weren't waiting to find out. I became good at repairing broken knick knacks, and filling holes, while Betty became adept at matching paint colours and doing touch ups.

One evening while having dinner I heard a kitten crying off in the distance. Instinct told me to follow the sound, and I wound up in the kitchen, astonished to find our fridge was meowing. Opening it, I discovered Drew looking up at me from the lower shelf. He must have hopped in when I'd had the door open a few minutes earlier. One would have thought that might cure some of his curiousity seeking ways, but no.

Our boy soon discovered the rafters in our enclosed porch. He did so by running up the side of a wicker book case. It was a bit unnerving at first, but we got used to him charging around the supporting 1"x 8"s at break neck speed. Soon he taught a few other cats how to do it. Unable to come down using the book case the way Drew did, Brighton would simply drop to a table with a very big bang. That had to hurt, so I wound up attaching some shelves at staggered heights on the far wall in an attempt to find him, and the others, a safer path. These were all immediately used for napping on instead.

When we bought a new entertainment unit, well, a picture says a thousand words doesn't it? Usually he preferred to find his way to the back of the tv and drop behind the unit. I would have to pull the tv to one side and hold it, while Betty hauled him out. This became a habit, and his timing was less than perfect - particularly when he started pulling out cables. I wound up installing small walls on either side of the tv so that we could watch our shows in peace. Not to be out smarted, he learned to open the glass doors that led to the lower shelves, and video machines. Now, instead of pulling out the tv, I was removing shelves full of electronics. Of course other cats started to follow his lead on this as well, and one day I found Squeak trapped inside with a bunch of cables wrapped around her. We now put the basket of cat toys in front of both doors to stop him.

Drew then taught Dartmouth how to jump on the fireplace insert, bounce to the mantel, and leap to the top of the unit. Dartmouth would then drop down behind the unit and we wound up hauling the tv out a number of times to retreive him. Fortunately winter arrived and the heat from the insert managed to dissuade both of them. Although we can't be sure what goes on at night, we don't think they go up there as much as they used to.

We always know when trouble is going to hit. Drew will come into the living room and start his "I'm bored" howl. The water spray bottle became my only weapon, and I had to use it so often that now simply shaking the bottle can stop him in his tracks. Most of the time anyway.

Ten years later we're thrilled that his curiousity has lessened somewhat. He still gets on top of the fridge in the kitchen and bats at passing heads, but he's not breaking the amount of stuff he used to.

During summer evenings, Drew can be heard in the rafters howling at the moon. He can't see it from there, but he howls anyway. We leave him alone out there. It keeps him busy.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

My Cat Lips Me Off

Brighton the pest. He's always into everything if he feels I'm not paying attention to him. I want to play Wii; he tries to knock stuff off the telephone table. I'm working on the laptop; he's got to walk across it. I'm watching a really good movie; he's got to bat knickknacks off the lamp shelf. If I ignore him, he'll get onto the entertainment unit right in front of the TV so that I can no longer see anything but my chubby feline.
Scolding him results in a look of disdain along with a breathy "Ka ka ka ka ka" sound. It doesn't have to be the Queen's English - I know what it means. Then he ignores me and does what he wants anyway. I can shoot him with water from my spray bottle if he's not near electronics, but his fur is so thick it usually takes a number of shots to get him to notice. He will leave for a minute, then return to the trouble he was getting into as if nothing's happened. He's incessant and has caused me to lose my temper so many times! Not that my anger does much good. After I've shoo'd him out of the room, screaming at him, he's back within 30 seconds rubbing against my legs, knowing I can't stay mad at him.


Sometimes when he wants me to notice him, he sits on the table and rises up on his back legs like a gopher. It's such a cute look that it's hard not to go over and give him a hug, but this is just his ploy. As I lean in, he claws his way over my shoulder and onto my back, at which point I'm stuck. He's a big boy - about 15lbs - and any sudden movements will result in him clinging to me like a stunt man to the hood of a car. The car doesn't scream in like I do. So I'm stuck, bent over, with a big ole purring furry lump on my back, until he gets bored and moves on.


His need to stand on me continues when I go to the kitchen. He leaps to the counter then demands my attention, refusing to take "no" for an answer. Like a couple of other cats, he will walk back & forth in front of my face while I'm doing the dishes. Nothing like a tail up the nose when your hands are full of soapy water. Many a time I've turned my back on him to read the paper only to have him crawl over my shoulder and into my arms. I have no choice but to hold him while he purrs. The cake-taker was when he attempted to stand (all 4 paws I might add) on my head. It didn't go well for either of us.

Soon it will be winter and we'll be warming the living room courtesy of our fireplace insert. We will have the wood bin open. He will try to get into it, something I discourage. I will tell him to get out of it and he will "Ka ka ka" me. I will be forced to physically remove him, and he will "Ka ka ka" me over his shoulder. No respect. Not a one.

Monday, September 14, 2009

You have how many????

For a long time I was hesitant to tell people just how many cats we had. Then it became fun. As one acquaintance put it "You like the shock value don't you?" Yes. I do. Then there's shock value #2 "They're all inside cats???" Yup.

We don't have 23 anymore, but the largest actual number we've had living with us at one point, including foster kittens, would have been about 30. A quick tour of the web will tell you that we're relatively small compared with some other multi cat homes. I once saw a tv story about a fellow who owned over 350. He was cutting up a Christmas turkey he'd cooked just for them, while they all obediently sat around him meowing as he tossed bits at them occasionally. There's no way I could do that with this group. The turkey would be gone in seconds, along with parts of my arms.

So how does one acquire so many little beasties? Well, first you foster, then you discover that some of them have problems and would be deemed unadoptable by the shelter, so you keep them. The rest you fall in love with and make up reasons why they'll be deemed unadoptable by the shelter. In our case, the numbers grew like this:

I had Squeak, and Betty moved in with her 6 cats. We began to foster other shelter kittens. The first few came and went, although Betty would take them back to the shelter when I wasn't around because she was having too much trouble prying my fingers off them. Then we had a string of what we call "SPCA Rejects":

Jesse - a little wild kitten that we socialised, but remained aloof. Wild cats are unadoptable, so we had to keep him.

Oreo - bowel problems that no one else would want to foot the bill for. Trust me on this one...

Drew - liked to nuzzle in my neck, a supposedly an unadoptable trait I thought was adorable.

Little Darlin' - got along so well with Drew that I said if he stayed, she had to as well. They haven't been friends since.

Scooter - needed socializing, but a rhinovirus ran through the shelter when she was due to go back, so we wound up keeping her.

Sugar - an adult cat who nearly pined to death after being surrendered to the shelter. Betty had fostered her years earlier, so she brought her home to die. Sugar bounced back, but we didn't think she'd survive going back to the shelter.

Martin - actually went back, but there weren't enough shots for him and he had to come home for a day. I called it "a sign" and he stayed.

Frasier - Needed to be force fed when he came to us, but seeing as he was Marty's twin, I knew right away he wasn't going back. The "I Love You Mommy" look in his eyes as he gazed into mine didn't help.

Brighton - an adorable kitten. He got accidentally slammed in a door. He survived without any problems, but we deemed him unadoptable just in case....

Dartmouth - Brighton's pure white brother, and buddy. He was fascinated by a candle, leaned too close and his whiskers curled, so I deemed him unadoptable. I know, but how could I send Brighton's brother back?

Precious - an older cat with tons of attitude - long story, but again we kept her rather than have her catch the rhinovirus.

Tasha - was a foster who went back to the shelter but developed massive diarrhea. No one would adopt her like that, so we brought her back home. Lucky us.

B.G. - a foster who went "Kachoo!" the night before she was to be shipped to another shelter. She never did catch a cold.

Dot - arrived at the shelter with a flipper shaped back foot, a broken tail, and a ton of tiny snails caught in her fur. At the time she might not have made it through the system, so we kept her.

Cisco - another cat who started to go into liver failure, so we just kept her.

Duncan - a very tiny kitten who we fought hard to save, but were unsuccessful.

Fritzie - an elderly cat who we took in because he supposedly had only a couple of months to live. Ha ha ha ha ha ha.....

Along the way there were a number of foster kittens who we housed because they either needed a bit of socialising, or there was no room at the shelter for them. Many of the kittens were transferred to other shelters and adopted out. Some, sadly, we weren't able to save. Initially we buried them in the back yard Pet Cemetery, but now cremate the ones who pass on.

Betty also moved in with a dog - Lane. He has since passed on, but we now have another dog - Rogan. Rogan's a puppy mill rescue, and doesn't like to go outside. Occasionally Betty takes him for a drag to the mailbox and back just for some exercise. We also have 2 little field mice, Soloman & Stewart, in cages in the basement (the cats aren't allowed down there). Outside we have the carport squirrels, one of which lives in our attached greenhouse.

Along with the two stupid humans, these are the inhabitants of our Ark.


The Family Grows

Perhaps it was getting tossed from a car, perhaps it was the return to the shelter for a few days, but it soon became apparent that I had a cat with separation anxiety. No matter where I was, she followed. If I left the couch to change a CD on the other side of the room, she joined me. Without fail, 15 minutes before I had to leave the house, Squeak would crawl into my lap and comfortably doze off, causing me endless guilt when I had to move her.

I was renovating the house back then, and preparing to wallpaper a wall above the stairwell. I'd built a scaffold to hold my weight, but fearing my little one might fall off the deepest end, I covered the lot with plywood. I'd left a small hole at the top of the stairs so that I could still get to the basement. It became a game for her. She was nowhere to be found as I squeezed through the gap, wrapping my body carefully around the scaffolding so as not to dislodge any of it. She would wait until my arms disappeared and I was completely defenceless with just my head exposed, then leap at me, gleefully batting me from all angles. I think she loved to hear me scream.

Squeak helped with everything. Painting the kitchen cabinets resulted in a few new colours added to her tail. Ladders were always a curiosity. The air vent had to be explored - much to my horror. She screeched like a banshee when I hauled her out by her tail which was just about to disappear into the bowels of the house with the rest of her!

The following Spring, the routine in our lives changed. The house was renovated, and Betty was about to move in with her six cats. Belle, Minute, Josephine, Lucky, Zoe, and Bunnies each had their own issues. Lucky and Minute were sisters who had been born in the wild. Lucky preferred to hide from most of humanity. Her sister, Minute, was mentally challenged. Belle, a foster kitten, wanted absolutely nothing to do with humans, and little to do with other cats. She did, however, idolize Minute. Zoe, a beautiful Calico foster, was what we called our paranoid schizophrenic. She had her reasons, having been locked in a closet for the first year of her life. Josephine's head had been stepped on by a cow when she was a kitten, and she too was mentally challenged. The evening before she was due to return to the shelter, she had an epileptic seizure, making her virtually unadoptable. Bunnies, the most normal of all, had recently become diabetic.

First came Belle, who was about a year old. Betty brought her over alone, to explore the new digs. What a horrible error in judgement that turned out to be. Squeak's two toned purring had nothing on the wailing that began almost immediately Belle searched for Minute. Unable to do anything to placate her, I had no choice but to listen to her cries. All. Night. Long. The next morning Squeak & I both looked like we'd been on benders. Minute was immediately shipped over.

The rest followed in the days to come. Bunnies, the oldest, immediately took to the new surroundings, and thought the back of the couch was wonderful. Unfortunately her joy was soon dampened by a trip to the vet when Betty accidentally gave her an overdose of insulin. Having spent the night hooked up to an IV at the clinic, Bunnies was not amused.

Squeak was not amused either. Suddenly having to share her house with unwanted cousins really upset her apple cart. Despite the fact that she wasn't the oldest, she did claim the number one spot though. She also grew much larger than we expected. To this day we figure that there must be a touch of Main Coon in her.

Along with the 6 cats, came Betty's dog, Lane. So we were now up to 8 critters, and ready to foster.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

In the beginning....

It was 12 years back that I got a phone call bright and early one morning from my friend at the shelter. My groggy mind barely registered the words "need a clean home", "foster for awhile til she's better", "euthanasia list" - the last words finding my heart of course. By the end of the day I had unwillingly taken in a small, noisy little charge.

She was a scrawny, little brown tabby who had been tossed from a car. She needed some meds, both for an infection, and cuts on her eye lid and chin. I wasn't really up to doing all this, but, her little life had become my responsibility. She crawled into bed with me the first night, nestled in the crook of my arm, and two-tone purred loudly into my ear. Hours later, staring bleary eyed into the darkness, I tried to go to my happy place - an island in the Pacific. I was fishing from small motor boat, with a two-toned engine. Eventually drifting off, I began to wonder what I was getting myself in for.

Little one needed a name. I stared at her. She had Cleopatra type markings around the eyes, but didn't suit the name. I tried a number of possible cutesy names, but none fit her. All she did was squeak at me. That and pass a lot of very stinky gas. Since I really didn't want the neighbour's hearing me call "Fart! Come Fart!", I settled on "Squeak". Her future owners could change it as they saw fit, after all I was just a foster parent.

A week later I had to head out of town for a few days, so Squeak was returned to the SPCA for a brief stay. I popped her in her crate, looked into her pleading, hurt eyes and my heart rip right out of my chest. Uh-oh. As I drove out of town, I knew this fostering thing wasn't going to work. Squeaky was mine.


Or more accurately, I was Squeaky's.

And so it began......