ramtops: (Default)



take three cats and an old rug

Originally uploaded by ramtops

This old Ikea rug had been in front of the back door since we moved, until we finally bought a new mat in the wonderful Boyes, an emporium of cheap (mostly) tat.

Having washed it, I had no idea where it might live, so stuck it on the landing between bedroom and study doors; the Tribe approve of it mightily – not as a rug to stand or lay on, oh no. They roll themselves up in it, pounce on it (and whoever it under it), drag it around, and generally have a high old time. Good for them to get some exercise!

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

cat grass

Soon after we moved here, I caught Mustrum chomping at the aloe vera plant in the bathroom; further surveillance found that other cats were having a go at the big spider plant in the living room. We tried to dissuade them, without much success, until I had a lightbulb moment …

We had a garden in Long Ashton, with grass; here we just have a back yard, and nothing much has been planted yet. And the Tribe were missing the grass. A quick trip to Pets at Home, and the expenditure of a couple of quid, and we were in possession of a cat grass plant thing, which I placed on the front windowsill.

They love it, and my house plants are now in recovery mode!

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

Rhode Island Cat

A cat with an uncanny ability to detect when nursing home patients are about to die has proven itself in around 50 cases by curling up with them in their final hours, according to a new book.  Story from the Telegraph.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)



Lilith

Originally uploaded by ramtops

It’s cold again, which means many cats decide that the bed with the warm, goosedown duvet is the place to be overnight. Of course, it’s the place *we* want to be too, so there is an element of shoving, and territorial squabbling, between cats and blobs.

Lilith has decided that where she wants to be overnight is *under* the duvet. This doesn’t work for all sorts of reasons, not least because she’s remarkably sharp at the moment – I think her claws could do with a clip, but I’m not volunteering, thankyouverymuch.

Thus, for the past couple of nights, I’ve spent what seems like half my time either blocking her or removing her, only for her to return immediately for another assault.

The rest of the Tribe battle for space and warmth too, of course, but they do that _on top_ of the bedclothes, so it’s marginally less fraught.

Roll on spring …

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

Henry is prone to paddling in his water bowl (no, I don’t know why). He also likes to do an Arthur on his food, spearing bits on an elegant claw and eating them from there.

This morning, I put a load of dried kidney beans in to soak, preparatory to making a batch of chilli this weekend. Imagine my feelings when I caught sight of Henry dabbing his paw into the bowl of water, hoiking out beans and flicking them round the worktop.

BAD Henry.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

a welcome

Jan. 15th, 2010 02:54 pm
ramtops: (Default)

Pete and I went out last night, and when we got home, circa 10 p.m., Iggy was sitting on the back of the armchair, watching out of the window.  I tapped on the glass, and over 15 seconds or so, Henry, Ron and Lilith all turned up – they swarmed over the chair and the window sill, looking for all the world as though they were pleased to see us.

When we got in, the food bowls were empty, so there’s the cause of their delight in seeing us.  ”Feed me ….”.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

Don’t try this at home.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

The weather is cold, cold, and the cats are In.  Iggy, in particular, hates the cold weather, and won’t go out unless we put him on the other side of the front door, where he rowls mournfully for several minutes before travelling round to the back door, (hopefully) doing his business en route.  Unfortunately, we missed him this morning, and he left a puddle in our office :(

Here is a picture of Lilith assisting us with a jigsaw, just to keep you going.

Jigsaw. Lilith helping.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

Apologies for the lack of cameras for a few weeks – we needed to wait till the Tribe had found their favourite places before we installed the photographic equipment.

Two catcams are now online, and the other two will follow real soon.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)



Iggy in the study

Originally uploaded by ramtops

He seems to be settling in reasonably well now :)

Mirrored from the Tribe.

Moving cats

Dec. 6th, 2009 02:00 pm
ramtops: (Default)

On 21st November, we moved house from North Somerset to Kingston-upon-Hull, in East Yorkshire. This involved someone – me, in fact – drawing the short straw and driving the five cats 230 miles.

We put the older two in a cattery – I felt that if they were around while the removal was going on, they’d leg it.  I bought a big dog cage for the younger three, but in the event, they were quite happy, and had to be fished out of the lorry on a regular basis.  So when we were packed up, I looked for Henry, Ron and Lilith to enbox.

No Lilith.  She was, inevitably, in her second home, a house which backed on to ours.  I went round with a basket and knocked on the door, and the mother opened it.  ”Can I have my cat back, please?” I said.  ”We’re moving to Yorkshire and I need to take her with me”.

She was aghast – “my daughter loves that cat”.  I knew that, but Lilith is actually *our* cat.  ”Why not get her one of her own?”, I asked and was told that she worked irregular hours.  No idea what that has to do with it.

Then she asked me not to tell the daughter that we were taking Lilith away for good.  In my haste, and against my better judgement, I went along with it, but oh – how I wish I hadn’t.  When she asked why Lily was going in  a basket, I said we were going away for a few days, to friends, and that they wanted Lily to come with us.  I can’t begin to imagine how that girl must feel now, and I feel I betrayed her.

Anyway, EnRon went in a box together and were as good as gold.  Lilith went in the small box, and I went off to the cattery (which was in the wrong direction)  to collect the spotty boys. I couldn’t get anybody to answer the phone, or the doorbell, and stood in the rain for 25 minutes in an increasing panic until the woman who was looking after the place for her son finally realised there was someone there when she looked through the window …

She yattered and yattered, gave me a bill for the wrong amount, and I just wanted to get the boys, and get going, as I had a 4.5 hour journey ahead of me.  Eventually I got them in their separate boxes, and into the car, with Lily between them, and off I went.

It was a *vile* day – sideways rain, and really dark, and Iggy and Mustrum shouted – screamed, at times – the entire way.  I’m sorry to say that Iggy was so distressed that he disgraced himself in his basket, and so I had a Smell to content with too. We let them have the run of the house and yard as soon as we arrived, and while they weren’t happy, they seemed to be settling.

And then, the next evening Sunday), Iggy disappeared.  We tried not to worry, but we did worry.  And as the days went by, we worried more.  I went out often calling him, but we now live in a part of the city which is a grid of Victorian terraced streets, and they all look the same.  I didn’t see how he could find his way home.  I phoned the Identichip people, and reported him as missing.

Since I arrived here, it’s been my habit to come downstairs early – about 6 a.m. – make a cup of tea, feed the cats, and catch up with some stuff on my laptop.  And on the Thursday morning, as I was making the early tea, there was a rowl from the living room, and Iggy strolled into the kitchen.  He wasn’t thin, he wasn’t hungry, he wasn’t stressed, but he was home.  I can only assume that he’d gone to check out the neighbourhood.

He came in through a cat flap that wasn’t even fitted when he left – what a clever cat.

We now have five stay at homes, which suits me fine, but my word – what a lot they’re eating.  I knew they dined out and about, but we’re getting through more than twice the amount of food we used to!

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

Henry and Ron had been showing particular interest in the shelves in the kitchen for a couple of days.  We put this down to an unfortunate frog/toad-related incident on Tuesday night which I haven’t had time to tell you about yet.

However, on Friday night, as I sat watching mindless television while stuffed up with flu, I swore I heard Pete say “there’s a rat in the kitchen”.  Obviously, I was hallucinating.  But no .. he did say it.  And when I went to look, I could see its bright beady eyes and little black nose where it was perched behind the spice rack on the worktop.  This is marginally better than Pete’s first encounter with it a couple of minutes earlier, which was when he lifted up the big soup mug from the draining board and found the rat (admittedly smallish, but still – a rat ..) underneath it!  The rat scuttled off and took refuge behind the spice rack.

We weren’t sure what to do – it wasn’t very big, but they can bite, and we couldn’t have got hold of it anyway without dismantling things, by which time it would be off.  By the time we’d discussed it, the rat had taken steps to relocate itself behind the washing machine.

All five cats seem totally disinterested – even Lilith, who is a prodigious ratter.  This morning, two days later, I can hear the bloody creature scuttling about under the kitchen cupboards, which is quite creepy.  Not quite sure what to do next …

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

I think we can safely say, at last, that the cats are no longer using litter trays.  This is the first time in our 12 years of joint cat ownership that we haven’t needed trays, and we’re not about to get rid of them just in case it’s a flash in the pan (as it were).

They haven’t been used in three weeks, though, which is a very good sign. However, as we are moving house shortly, I think we’ll keep them going for a while, until the Tribe find new places to do their business,

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

We are moving house soon, and have to empty the freezers. Upon investigating the Freezer Under the Stairs at the weekend, I found a sealed plastic bag of what looked very like liver, presumably obtained as part of the half a salt marsh lamb we bought a while back. Now, I like liver, particularly lamb’s liver, but ‘im indoors does not. And as we have masses of stuff to eat, I thought I might give it to the cats. Iggy, Lilith and Mustrum were in the kitchen when I started cutting it up, and expressed great interest, but turned up their collective nose at the raw meat when offered. So I bunged it in a pan with a bit of water, cooked it for about 13 minutes, then let it cool and chopped it small, and offered it for their delectation. Nom, nom and indeed nom. We knew EnRon would like it, as they had disposed of the Xmyth goose innards with great enjoyment, but the older chaps loved it too. I might start doing them a bit of liver once a week, because they seem to have mostly gone off canned food, for some reason.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

Shout!

Sep. 26th, 2009 10:06 am
ramtops: (Default)



Shout!

Originally uploaded by ramtops

I was bottling a load of home made wine the other evening, using up the new bottles I bought when we ran out.

Being extremely fond of cardboard, as soon as there was a suitably sized gap, Iggy placed himself upon it and complained loudly until all the bottled were removed. Then he curled up and slept on the cardboard for some time, rendering the chopping board utterly useless.

Result, really.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)



nom nom nom

Originally uploaded by ramtops

Not often we see Iggy and Mustrum together at the trough* – yesterday’s trip to the vet must have been more traumatic than we thought.

*Unlike Ron, who’s rarely away from the food bowls

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)
leaves

Autumn has arrived here in Somerset all of a sudden; the evenings are drawing in, and there’s a lovely nip in the air.

This seasonal change is confirmed by the Tribe; Mustrum is often indoors when I get up, cats are sharing the bed with us, more food is being eaten at home as the neighbours’ doors are shut.

And the final sign last night was Henry chasing his tail in the kitchen; to be more precise, he chases the shadow of his tail.  He did this a lot when he was a kitten, and then stopped – we assumed he’d grown out of it, but I think it was just because the light wasn’t on in the kitchen when we were cooking supper.  And now it is, and he is again, which is just ace – he’s a joy to watch :)

Mirrored from the Tribe.

ramtops: (Default)

In a stunning act of collaboration, we find that both the cats’ bikkit bowl, *and* the lid to the swing bin in which we store bulk bikkit, are broken.

This looks like a conspiracy to me. I shall dock their pocket money.

Mirrored from the Tribe.

Profile

ramtops: (Default)
ramtops

March 2016

S M T W T F S
  1 2345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags