My cat Cayce loves to hunt mice in boxes.
March 4, 2007
February 25, 2007
Saturday = Beer
February 16, 2007
February 11, 2007
Inventory
Inspired by Ele’s Bird People post and the upcoming Great Backyard Bird Count, I thought I’d take inventory of our backyard birds. We’ve been feeding the birds for about two years now and we’ve had lots of different species pop by. Sadly, we’ve never yet seen a Cedar Waxwing. Ele, I can’t explain how jealous I am!
Here’s our list of birds viewed at our feeders:
American Goldfinch
Cardinal
Chickadee
Common Grackle
Eastern Bluebird
European Starling
House Finch
Indigo Bunting (female only)
Mourning Dove
Northern Mockingbird
Northern Yellow-shafted Flicker
Pine Warbler
Purple Finch
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Red-headed Woodpecker
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Slate-colored Junco
Tufted Titmouse
Here are some pictures we’ve taken of birds at our feeders. Most are taken through the window screen.
November 15, 2006
On Becoming a Grownup
It’s funny to me how I mark the signs of my adulthood. Some of the things that have made me feel very grown-up in the past are obvious: managing my own money and purchasing a house, for instance.
But what about the other things, the less obvious ones? Getting up for an early morning run because it’s the right thing to do. Spending 1% of your income on charity. Becoming emotionally attached to your best friend’s baby. Washing your grandmother’s bedclothes while she recovers from a bout of stomach flu. All those things that were never on my radar when I was younger, but are responsibilities I’ve taken on as part of my adulthood.
Today, I think I did the most grown-up thing I’ve ever done. I took my mom’s cat, Molly, into the vet to have her euthanized. Molly has been sick for some time. She had a tumor, along with her ear canal, removed last year. More recently, she had a cancerous tumor removed from the area near her ear, and most recently she had her left eye removed. She was quite a handsome kitty, she even looked cute with her eye missing!
After all that money out of mom’s pocket and pain and energy on Molly’s part, she was doing pretty well. She was getting around OK with her limited vision and still wanted love and affection and turkey (her favorite). Unfortunately, she had a little stroke about 2 weeks ago and had been going downhill ever since then. She seemed to have lost the use of the left side of her body. She was pitiful to watch.
Mom and Gene couldn’t take it anymore, and really felt like her quality of life was in the pits. I spent time talking with both of them, and providing input from the vet and Tracey, our cat sitter. They decided they didn’t want her (or themselves) to suffer any more. I felt like it was my duty to take Molly into the vet. I didn’t think they could do it, and I thought the only thing I could offer them beside condolences would be this act of kindness. As I type this, my felineforeverfriend Cayce is on the desk next to me, gently squeezing his eyes open and shut and breathing in and out. I hope he keeps on breathing in and out. I expect him to be around for another 5 years or so. I don’t know what I’d do without him and I don’t know if I could take him in to be put down. Maybe one day, not at all in the near future, Mom can repay the favor for me.
So I made an appointment this morning and took her in at 2. Mom said goodbye before she left for the airport this morning, and Gene said goodbye when I picked her up this afternoon. Everyone in the vet’s office came in to pet her and say goodbye as well; it seemed she was a favorite there because of her sweet, gentle personality and her ultrasoft fur. Everyone was crying, even the girl at the front desk that I didn’t know.
They gave her a shot to make her sleep and left me with her for a few minutes. I used that time to kiss her whitewhite belly as much as I could. She laid her head down on my wrist and sighed a few times. They came in about 5 minutes later and then gave her a shot of something to stop her heart (“overdose of euthanasia” is what they called it). You could tell when the shot took effect because everything that makes a kitty a kitty just… disappeared.
There were physical changes. Her inner eyelid relaxed and half-closed. Her tongue, in mid-lick, stuck out of her mouth cutely. Her chest no longer rose and fell. But the spark of life was so obviously gone, in a way that was different from all these other signs, that you couldn’t feel too sad anymore. She’s up in kitty heaven with Pookie and Corky and Floyd and all the other cats who have passed over the Rainbow Bridge.
They wrapped her up in a towel and took her in the back. I cleaned up my face and came home. We’ll get her ashes in a few days, and Mom can scatter them where she will.
Here are some pictures of Molly, one of the sweetest, gentlest cats you ever knew.
Mom playing the ever-entertaining “bunny ears” impression game. Molly’s back legs were so long she resembled a jackrabbit, so this look isn’t too far off base. It was not one of Molly’s favorite games, though. 🙂
Here’s me trying to convince Molly that it’s OK to be held and cuddled. She remained unconvinced.
Molly taking a nap, curled up into a little ball of warm soft fuzzy. Or maybe she’s hiding from the Paparazzi.
April 25, 2005
Let Sleeping Cats Lie
Cats look so amazing comfortable and content when sleeping. I don’t get that kind of relaxation or refreshment from sleep. I get jealous when I see them with their faces smashed into pillows and their bodies twisted into uncanny stretches when they’re 4 hours into their 12 hour nap. Little bastards. They’re lucky they’re so soft. 🙂