T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
523.1 | Clipping that trublsome middle claw. | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Mon Mar 23 1987 12:22 | 9 |
| OK, I'll start. Argus, who has huge paws and is probably tripple
pawed, had the typical problem of the claw growing into the pad on
his foot, making him very grouchy, and naturally, it wouldn't wear
down and he wouldn't let me trim it. Finally I resorted to having
just the middle claw removed from each paw, and his personality changed
from lion to pussycat. Panther also had this problem so when I had
him "fixed", I had his middle claws taken care of also.
Deb
|
523.2 | Cali too! But not Cleo, or Kitty! | NEBVAX::BELFORTE | Never try to out-stubborn a cat! | Mon Mar 23 1987 12:31 | 6 |
| My mother's cat Cali (she's a calico, can you tell?), has the double
paw. As a kitten she use to suck her thumb. Now she can pick anything
up, including a pingpong ball, and not have it drop. Mind you,
she does this with *one* hand, not two.
M-L
|
523.3 | Double Paws from incest | MPGS::THORPE | | Mon Mar 23 1987 13:27 | 2 |
| I have been told (I don't know how reliable this is) that "double
paws" on cats are a result of incest.
|
523.4 | | KRAKAR::WARWICK | Village tours start here | Mon Mar 23 1987 15:12 | 5 |
|
Could you explain what "Double Pawed" means - I can't quite visualize
it...
Trv
|
523.5 | | 25175::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Mon Mar 23 1987 15:51 | 19 |
| Re .4:
It would be similar to a human with two hands coming out of a single
wrist. Actually, it's a bit more complicated (_really_ being like
a person with 8 or 9 fingers on each hand, but the effect's like
having two paws).
Re .3:
Not exactly incest, but certainly inbreeding. The polydactyl gene
was apparently a mutation that might have disapopeared, except that
the cats (originally from England, if memory serves) inbred enough
for it to get established.
Re .0:
Our cats aren't polydactylic, but our next-door neighbor's is.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
523.6 | Becky's got 'em | COSBY::ROMBERG | Kathy Romberg DTN 276-8189 | Mon Mar 23 1987 17:42 | 6 |
| Becky has 2 spare toes - one on each hind foot. On her front
legs, her dew claw is down with the other 4. Her hind feet each
have 5 toes. Her brother Josh is 'normal'. It looks as though she's
wearing catcher's mitts!
|
523.7 | | 25175::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Mar 24 1987 10:28 | 9 |
| Having extra toes, especially on front _and_ hind feet, is particularly
good in wintertime for outdoor kitties, Acts kinda like snowshoes...
My neighbor's cat has some trouble, though, in that his extra toes'
claws don't wear away as the "notmal" ones do, so they have to be
trimmed periodically (*which he detests).
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
523.8 | We have it in California too | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Tue Mar 24 1987 15:34 | 8 |
| Polydactylism is also common out here on the west coast. It is
cause for disqualification in purebred cats at shows, but any household
pet in competition that has extra toes can expect to do very well
in shows, because the extra toes are regarded as a plus. None of
my cats has extra toes, but I have a friend whose cat does.
She named the cat Lotta La Feet.
Jo Ann
|
523.9 | mutants? | VIDEO::OSMAN | Eric, dtn 223-6664, weight 146 | Tue Mar 24 1987 16:36 | 12 |
| > My Argus and Panther are both "double pawed". Having grown up in
> New England where there are so many polydactyls, I never thot much
> of it (except thinking that it was neat to have cats with hands),
> but from talking to people that aren't native New Englanders it appears
> that these cats are common only in New England.
Yes, apparently the nuclear power plants have something to
do with it. @-{
|
523.10 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Mar 24 1987 17:45 | 30 |
| RE: .8
Joanne,
That is interesting that there are a lot of them on the west coast
but it sort of makes sence. I remember reading some where that merchant
ships always had cats on them to take care of the rats, and the double
pawed ones were especially prized by sailors since they are such good
hunters. No doubt some of them hopped of the boat and decided that
sunny California was a comfortable place to raise a family.
I also remember reading that historians have used the dates
of the first reports of polydactiles seen in/passing through a
community to trace the migration paths of our pioneers.
Personally, I've always found the topic of double pawed cats
fascinating and I've often wondered why the cat magizines have never
done a major article on them (a few months ago Cats magazine had
a small blurb but nothing worthy of these creatures).
RE: .9
SET /FLAME=TI:ON
I don't find that even mildly amusing. Flaming replies to me, not
to this note.
SET /FLAME=TI:OFF
Deb
|
523.11 | Double paws and hiking | PARITY::WHALEN | Denise | Tue Mar 24 1987 20:40 | 15 |
| Yes, our Kitty, the Chief Mascot of the Tewksbury facility has
double front paws. The extra toes are bunched together the equivalent
of where our thumbs are. In fact when he stands, they kind of hang
off the ground. His back feet also have one extra toe each. Luckily,
he was declawed sometime before he became employed at Digital, so
he doesn't have any trouble with claws.
I don't think they hamper him too much, he loves to go on very
long walks. He always did "tours" with us security folk. Now he
is at home with me, and loves long hikes in the woods.
The only thing I've noticed, is kind of a growth, like a hangnail,
from the pads of the extra toes. It's like dead skin and can be
trimmed off. Once in a while it shows up. Anybody know what that
might specifically be?
Denise
|
523.12 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Mar 24 1987 20:50 | 7 |
| re: -1
Argus has that growth on his toes also but he was never fully declawed
(just the middle claw was removed). The vet said that it was nothing
to worry about and but it is sometimes seen in double pawed cats.
Deb
|
523.13 | Paws Galaws | VICKI::BULLOCK | Living the good life | Tue May 05 1987 16:38 | 2 |
| I couldn't resist this note as I just heard what a friend named
her new TRIPLE-pawed cat--"Maxi-pads"!!!
|