by Tdarcos » Fri May 19, 2017 5:36 pm
Let's go back about 24 years.
My sister Joann owned an adorable white Persian cat. She wanted him to have an elegant name, so she called him Bijou. My sister was a bit of a cat person, although nowhere near as bad as my mother, but she owned six cats. Plus two bitch cocker spaniels, an all black and a caramel brown.
During the mid 1990s I was between jobs and staying at my sister's place, recovering from problems and writing my first book. Since I wasn't doing anything (of significance or value), and the (legally prescribed) medications I was on made me feel terrific with lots of energy, I walked her dogs every day.
What was my sister doing (for a living) at the time? Running a dog walking service where she walked other people's dogs.
So I walked her dogs all the way around the block to the back of the tennis court for the houses in the development, then back on the other side Probably the equivalent of a 1/2 mile. By then the dogs were tired out and empty.
She had a cat door in her back door, so when I took the dogs out, all, and I mean all of Joann's cats would follow along with us. They'd trail us like a security detail, close enough to watch but not close enough to be in range if the dogs became aggressive. Amazing to watch as a tall, heavy-set man walking two dogs on leashes has an entourage of six cats (not on leashes) trailing him.
So this meant that the cats generally went outside to do their business. Except for one. One of her cats liked to take a dump at the bottom of the stairs from the basement. We had to leave an empty litter box in that exact spot just past the bottom of the staircase to keep the cat from crapping on the floor.
By then, my sister was also watching other people's dogs at her house when the owner didn't want to leave them alone, they'd socialize with her dogs and the other guests and get attention. So, as soon as the cat who liked to do its business on the basement floor walked to her spot, all the dogs - my sister's and visitors - would hover around the space like shoppers at a mall near Christmas hovering in their cars around someone about to exit a parking space. Once the cat finished her business, the dogs would proceed to clean up after the cat, sharing the fresh, warm snacks she left behind. The dogs would actually share. Sometimes the cat had diarrhea, and apparently the dogs enjoyed the rich gravy and chunks of meat she provided.
By the time they finished the plastic litter box was totally polished and cleaner than when the cat used it. And putting kitty litter in the litter box didn't help, the dogs would eat the remains she left and whatever cat litter stuck to it, too. Seems that according to my sister, cats have very primitive digestive systems, and require high fat and high protein, which, of course is irresistible to dogs, probably also because of the flavoring the cat adds.
The extra snacks did not stop the dogs from enjoying a full dinner. In the case of my sister, she had to ration how much food her two cockers would get, because they have an appetite with essentially have no "off" switch. My sister told me how one time she decided to see what would happen, and gave her dogs all the food they wanted. They kept eating and eating until they threw up. This was how she discovered they do not have an "off" switch.
Then there was the time, probably around 2011 when I went to visit during the thanksgiving week, and because my sister had used a shock collar on one of her dogs to stop her from barking, it beeped before shock and the dog was scared of my power wheelchair because it beeps, so she drove the wheelchair out in the hall.
She made the mistake of putting nothing out for me to use if I had to go to the bathroom. I knew she would go nuts if I shit on her couch, so I lowered myself to the wooden floor where I had a bad incident, but at least you can mop up a sealed wooden floor and completely remove the smell no matter how strong it is, as opposed to it soaking into the cloth cover and cushions of a couch.
Also, I knew that it meant that she would have to call 9-1-1 eventually because when I'm on the floor I'm dead weight - I have no strength - and she can't lift me, it takes about 4 firefighter-paramedics, possibly with lift harnesses, to lift me off the floor, even just 6 inches to the bed or a foot to a wheelchair.
And I discovered that the dogs didn't just love the warm, freshly made snacks and rich gravy manufactured by the cat, I could do nothing but lie on the floor as the dogs proceeded to clean up after me, too.
So anyway, going back to the 1990s and Bijou, at some point a neighbor's cat died. Bijou decides to "two time" my sister by just casually walking over to the other house, using her cat door too, eat the cat food the woman had left, then crawl up and sleep on the woman's bed.
Then after a few hours, Bijou would wake up, refreshed, and come back to Joan's for another meal. Now, cats again have very picky digestive systems and changes in food can cause vomiting or diarrhea, except by sheer coincidence the other woman was feeding her cat the same kind and brand that Joanne used.
Later, the woman told my sister how Bijou's staying in her bed over a week or so comforted her during the worst parts of her mourning her late feline. Bijou decided to move in permanently with the other lady, apparently finding that he liked the idea of exclusive attention from a single person who had nobody else he had to share them with.
My sister decided to let Bijou go, since she could still see him.
Let's go back about 24 years.
My sister Joann owned an adorable white Persian cat. She wanted him to have an elegant name, so she called him Bijou. My sister was a bit of a cat person, although nowhere near as bad as my mother, but she owned six cats. Plus two bitch cocker spaniels, an all black and a caramel brown.
During the mid 1990s I was between jobs and staying at my sister's place, recovering from problems and writing my first book. Since I wasn't doing anything (of significance or value), and the (legally prescribed) medications I was on made me feel terrific with lots of energy, I walked her dogs every day.
What was my sister doing (for a living) at the time? Running a dog walking service where she walked other people's dogs.
So I walked her dogs all the way around the block to the back of the tennis court for the houses in the development, then back on the other side Probably the equivalent of a 1/2 mile. By then the dogs were tired out and empty.
She had a cat door in her back door, so when I took the dogs out, all, and I mean [i]all[/i] of Joann's cats would follow along with us. They'd trail us like a security detail, close enough to watch but not close enough to be in range if the dogs became aggressive. Amazing to watch as a tall, heavy-set man walking two dogs on leashes has an entourage of six cats (not on leashes) trailing him.
So this meant that the cats generally went outside to do their business. Except for one. One of her cats liked to take a dump at the bottom of the stairs from the basement. We had to leave an empty litter box in that exact spot just past the bottom of the staircase to keep the cat from crapping on the floor.
By then, my sister was also watching other people's dogs at her house when the owner didn't want to leave them alone, they'd socialize with her dogs and the other guests and get attention. So, as soon as the cat who liked to do its business on the basement floor walked to her spot, all the dogs - my sister's and visitors - would hover around the space like shoppers at a mall near Christmas hovering in their cars around someone about to exit a parking space. Once the cat finished her business, the dogs would proceed to clean up after the cat, sharing the fresh, warm snacks she left behind. The dogs would actually share. Sometimes the cat had diarrhea, and apparently the dogs enjoyed the rich gravy and chunks of meat she provided.
By the time they finished the plastic litter box was totally polished and cleaner than when the cat used it. And putting kitty litter in the litter box didn't help, the dogs would eat the remains she left and whatever cat litter stuck to it, too. Seems that according to my sister, cats have very primitive digestive systems, and require high fat and high protein, which, of course is irresistible to dogs, probably also because of the flavoring the cat adds.
The extra snacks did not stop the dogs from enjoying a full dinner. In the case of my sister, she had to ration how much food her two cockers would get, because they have an appetite with essentially have no "off" switch. My sister told me how one time she decided to see what would happen, and gave her dogs all the food they wanted. They kept eating and eating until they threw up. This was how she discovered they do not have an "off" switch.
Then there was the time, probably around 2011 when I went to visit during the thanksgiving week, and because my sister had used a shock collar on one of her dogs to stop her from barking, it beeped before shock and the dog was scared of my power wheelchair because it beeps, so she drove the wheelchair out in the hall.
She made the mistake of putting nothing out for me to use if I had to go to the bathroom. I knew she would go nuts if I shit on her couch, so I lowered myself to the wooden floor where I had a bad incident, but at least you can mop up a sealed wooden floor and completely remove the smell no matter how strong it is, as opposed to it soaking into the cloth cover and cushions of a couch.
Also, I knew that it meant that she would have to call 9-1-1 eventually because when I'm on the floor I'm dead weight - I have no strength - and she can't lift me, it takes about 4 firefighter-paramedics, possibly with lift harnesses, to lift me off the floor, even just 6 inches to the bed or a foot to a wheelchair.
And I discovered that the dogs didn't just love the warm, freshly made snacks and rich gravy manufactured by the cat, I could do nothing but lie on the floor as the dogs proceeded to clean up after me, too.
So anyway, going back to the 1990s and Bijou, at some point a neighbor's cat died. Bijou decides to "two time" my sister by just casually walking over to the other house, using her cat door too, eat the cat food the woman had left, then crawl up and sleep on the woman's bed.
Then after a few hours, Bijou would wake up, refreshed, and come back to Joan's for another meal. Now, cats again have very picky digestive systems and changes in food can cause vomiting or diarrhea, except by sheer coincidence the other woman was feeding her cat the same kind and brand that Joanne used.
Later, the woman told my sister how Bijou's staying in her bed over a week or so comforted her during the worst parts of her mourning her late feline. Bijou decided to move in permanently with the other lady, apparently finding that he liked the idea of exclusive attention from a single person who had nobody else he had to share them with.
My sister decided to let Bijou go, since she could still see him.