T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1041.1 | 9.5!! A new record!! | JAWS::COTE | 0 for 15 | Fri Jan 15 1988 08:38 | 6 |
| Your cat wants attention. I suggest you fulfill his request by
inviting some friends over. When he starts the diving act, you
can all hold up cards with a number (1-10) on them and rate his
performance.
Edd
|
1041.2 | | BUSY::MAXMIS11 | Serendipity 'R' us | Fri Jan 15 1988 11:13 | 16 |
| re: .1 - Invite friends :^)
I disagree. I find that one sure way to stop a behavure in a cat
(especially a cute one) is to invite a few friends over, tell them
about it, and suddenly your cat will become unable/unwilling to
do it anymore. No kidding. Try it. Invite a group of, say, ten
people over to your house. Be sure to include your boss and at
least one inlaw. Then put your cat in the middle of the livingroom
floor and say something like "Ok, Muffy, show these nice people
how cute you look when you <insert pet trick name here>". At that
point the cat will look at you as if you are on designer drugs,
cough up a furr ball the size of a toaster oven, and leave the room.
Does anybody remember the old "looney toons" cartoon about the guy who
found a frog who could sing and dance?
Marion
|
1041.3 | Where's the switch, Mom? | 40101::COCHRANE | Send lawyers, guns and money. | Fri Jan 15 1988 11:34 | 12 |
| Well, if you have a brain damaged kitty, then so do I!!
I have noticed the "lamp trick" being performed by Niniane
on every lamp I own that sits on a table. I have no idea
what is so facinating about the light bulb. I've checked for
flickering, bugs, etc. but to no avail. I gave up. I figure if
it amuses her that much, it just means she's not getting into
anything she's not supposed to ;-) !!
Besides, this is also a kitty that chases dust specks in rays
of sunlight!!
Mary-Michael (Ninny's mom)
|
1041.4 | Maybe... | JAWS::COTE | 0 for 15 | Fri Jan 15 1988 13:04 | 7 |
| Maybe the cats can *hear* the light bulb...
Don't laugh. My kitchen lights are on a dimmer circuit and if the
house is very quiet I can hear a buzzing/whistling sound that changes
pitch in proportion to how bright the lights are....
Edd (Possibly_brain_damaged_cat_pet)
|
1041.5 | OW..,... | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Fri Jan 15 1988 15:41 | 10 |
| Landing on his back ??? That DOES sound like it would hurt. Hope
there is a VERY thick carpet on the floor.
I remember when Lightning would come into the room, THROW herself
down on her side (what a loud PLOP) and beg for attention. I could
have sworn she was breaking her ribs.
Sandi ( LIghtning's Mom)
|
1041.6 | then again, maybe it's a microscopic gnat | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Fri Jan 15 1988 15:49 | 12 |
| Re: hearing the light bulb
I wonder if he has something here. Do you know that women are more
likely to be bothered by the high-pitched sound that dimmers make,
because our hearing sensitivity is shifted wrs men's -- we hear
high frequencies better and low frequencies worse? I wonder what
a cat's is like?
signed,
former possessor of dimmer switches who ripped them all out.
|
1041.7 | | BUSY::MAXMIS11 | Serendipity 'R' us | Fri Jan 15 1988 16:00 | 11 |
| RE: dimmers
WOW! That might just be it. In my diningroom I have a dimmer.
For quite a while I have heard a very high pitched whistle in the
area. In fact it has been driving me crazy. I can hardly wait
to get home and see if turning the light off is what stops it.
Thank you. I just might not have to have the house exorcised after
all!
Marion
|
1041.8 | I heard that! | LAIDBK::RESKE | Life's a mystery & I have no clues | Mon Jan 18 1988 10:29 | 16 |
|
Hmmmm ... maybe it is the sound of the bulb. I still would think
that the bulb would be hot enough that he wouldn't keep touching
it. That's my guy though. Yesterday he discovered the clothes
dryer for the first time. He jumped in and curled up for a nice
winter's nap. I had to run and get my camera because he looked
so funny. When he saw I had the camera (he's such a ham) he popped
his head out the door to pose. I hope those pictures come out
good! I'm going to bring one to work and put a caption below it
saying "My kitty's all washed up in this town!".
Ooops, just remembered that I suppose to be working!
Donna --- T.C.'s mom
|
1041.9 | Be CAREFUL!! | FIDDLE::HTAYLOR | Cat lovers are a special breed | Mon Jan 18 1988 11:33 | 7 |
| Donna,
Please, be VERY careful of the dryer with the cat. A friend
of mine had a VERY unfortunate accident with a clothes dryer. I
ALWAYS check the dryer before I close it.
Holly
|
1041.11 | DEJAVU | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Wed Jan 20 1988 18:00 | 15 |
| Talk about deja-vu...
One of the girls that I drive to school in the morning told me how
her 7 month old kitten got into the dryer without her knowing.
She turned on the dryer and left the room. She didn't know anything
until her older sister shouted to her - Did you turn the dryer on
with the cat in it? - 10 minutes later. The kitten was crying but
she couldn't hear it over the stereo. My daughter laughs when I
tell her to watch our DejaVu to make sure she isn't in the dryer
before turning it on. She may laugh but she would be devasted if
something terrible happened to DejaVu - her cat- especially if she
was the one emptying the dryer.
Sandi
|
1041.12 | "never try to out-stubborn a cat" | URBAN::JOHNSTON | I _earned_ that touch of grey! | Thu Jan 21 1988 08:08 | 13 |
| My sister has had to put a removable block on the dryer door as
her 18-month-old daughter [this is a human child] likes to curl
up for cat-naps inside with one of the dogs or kittens. Carly likes to
crawl in with one of her warm fuzzy buddies and pull the door almost
closed. The cats love it, the dogs are resigned. The block is
attached in such a way that the child can't remove it and the door
will not close and trap her, but my sister can remove it when actual
clothes need to be dried, much to the consternation of Carly and
the kitties. [this block also serves as a handy reminder to check
inside before operating...a much less child-proof on would serve
in the case of a cat]
Annie
|
1041.13 | Why is the dryer door not latched? | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Jan 22 1988 14:27 | 8 |
| I don't get it....
Do you all leave the dryer door open when you aren't using the dryer,
or something??
My cats never get a chance to try the dryer out as a hide-out; it's
always left with the door latched unless someone is putting laundry
in or taking it out. It's downstairs right next to the workshop,
and this way it stays nice and clean inside even when we are doing
something dusty like sanding wood.
|
1041.14 | Washers and dryers. | FIDDLE::HTAYLOR | Cat lovers are a special breed | Fri Jan 22 1988 16:30 | 9 |
| It is not that the dryer door is not latched, it is just that most
(if not all) cats are very curious. You could be loading the clothes
from the washer to the dryer and not even see your cat climb into
the dryer. It is very easy escpecially if you are trying to get
something out of the bottom of the washer. Please, be careful.
I dread the thought of getting into this notes file one day and
hearing such a tragic story.
Holly
|
1041.16 | Please DO be careful! | PARITY::TILLSON | Sugar Magnolia | Mon Jan 25 1988 18:03 | 20 |
| Do check! This happened to one of my sister's cats!
The kitty crawled into a pile of WET clothes when mom went to answer
the phone. She never knew the cat had crawled in.
A little bit after the dryer had been started, she heard "kthunk,
kthunk, meeooow" form the kitchen.
She got the cat out (as she said at the time, "lucky it was the
'delicate' cycle" and the cat did live. However, 10 minutes on
the dryer's lowest cycle caused severe dehydration, and the cat
lost all its hair (it grew back). The cat's tail was also limp
for several weeks.
And experience didn't teach the kitty. Mom started to check each
time before she ran the dryer, and removed the cat on several
subsequent occasions.
Rita
|
1041.17 | Cat helpers! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Jan 26 1988 16:25 | 15 |
| My kitties don't usually get to go into the laundry area since it
is the same as the workshop area, which often contains fragile or
harmful stuff - sometimes I let JFCL in there when I am doing something
harmless like assembling one of those big metal shelves (since she
always cries if no one is home but HER human, who is on the other
side of a closed door - like the bathroom door!), but she has never
shown any particular interest in the dryer, even when it is running.
What they like, both of them, is the big basket full of nice, warm
clothes that their pet human hauls upstairs and sometimes doesn't
get around to folding and putting away right away - if I don't don't,
the basket soon has a cat inside, sometimes two, and the clothes
get cat hairs on them right away instead of a bit later.
My cats do other dumb things, but they don't seem to be interested
in the laundry until it is finished.
|
1041.18 | BRAT..... | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Wed Jan 27 1988 14:42 | 11 |
| I always check my dryer before I close the door after putting clothes
into it and do keep the door closed when not in use but Deja still
manages to climb in on occasion. She doesn't really care if the
clothes is wet or dry. She just loves the dryer. It reminds her
of a cave. Thank goodness I saw her the first time she did it.
Now I know to check it each time. She also loves the clothes basket,
with or without clothes. She's such a BRAT...
Sandi (Lightning's & DejaVu's mom)
|
1041.19 | Turn on them lights to answer the phone! | EMIRFI::KEENER | | Sat May 07 1988 20:21 | 21 |
| Wow - I'm not the only one with brain damaged cats (I also watch
B. Cosby's video about kids occasionally). Do you have one of those
brass 'touch' lamps? I have two that turn them on in the middle
of the night (wonder how much it adds to my power bill). I also
have one that sleeps on the pillows of the bed during the day -
there is a phone on the bookcase headboard and more than once I
have called home from work to tell my kids something and I interrupt
Chris' nap and I hear clunk, rattle, MEOWWWW. I know it is Chris
- he 'sings' off-key and sounds like a wounded lamb insted of a
cat.
I also agree that a cat will NEVER do their 'stunt' when you want
them too - I think they are related to small children, they both
do that (obviously in a concentrated effort to make you look like
either a fool or a liar).
Love those furry, purry creatures in spite (or because?) of it all
Ellen
|
1041.20 | SMART KITTY-Knows the phone needs answering | LABC::ALLEN | Equestrian Lady | Tue May 10 1988 17:58 | 22 |
| I also have a kitty that answers the phone. It started several
years ago with Sy knocking the phone off of the counter. So I started
putting the phone on the floor. That didn't stop the little rascal.
A couple of times I had my mom phone me and I would watch. Sure
enough, only after 1 or 2 rings, Sy would run up to the phone, grab
the coil piece from the receiver and sling it as far as he could.
I used to have to unplug the back of the phone (phone still rings
to whoever is calling).
About 2 years ago, I got an answering machine. Figured that would
stop the phone answering by kitty. NOOOOOOO, The answering machine
picks up after two rings, Sy will pick up after one ring or while
the answering machine is talking. Its so fun to listen to people
who talk to Sy, the answering machine tapes the conversations.
"MEOW", "Sy, is that you? Linda your blankety-blank cat answered
the phone again." "MEOW-moms not home-leave a message at the tone"
Only major problem is that once the caller hangs up, the phone is
busy.
Linda
|
1041.21 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Tue May 10 1988 18:17 | 8 |
| Re: .20
What happens if you turn the ringer off when you go out? On some
phones there is a gizmo on the side or bottom to let you do this,
so that you aren't bothered by wrong numbers on terminal phones,
for example. (If the ringer is turned off, test to make sure the
answering machine still works.)
|
1041.22 | | EDUC8::TRACHMAN | | Wed May 11 1988 11:13 | 5 |
| Linda, that's really funny! I can just see your cat answering
the phone!! All my brats do is chew the D*^n cords. That is
really cute.
E.T. (still smiling)
|