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#1
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You'll never guess ...
If you guessed for a week you'd never guess where I found Chloe this
morning: in the heating duct under the kitchen floor. When I walked into the kitchen this morning, I immeditely saw that both floor vents had been pulled out and CJ had his head and shoulders down one of them. I pulled him out and put the vents back. Latter, I noticed one of them was bouncing up and down. I removed it and Chloe climbed out. Actually, my office mate almost guessed on the first try: he guessed the return duct instead of the delivery duct. I'm prettu sure they can't remove the return duct grill - it's steel and heavy while the delivery ducts in the kitchen are plastic and light. -- T.E.D. ) |
#2
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You'll never guess ...
Heh...reminds me of when Tripper and Mouser were "teenagers".
I walked in the kitchen, and saw Mouser sitting next to the heat register hole. "Hole" because some little cleverclaws had pulled the register vent out and it was sitting next to the hole as well. I looked at Mouser and said "Where's your brother?" Mouser looked at the hole. Getting visions of having to cut the ceiling open to get one errant black cat out, I looked down the hole in time to see a black tail tip going the "good" way in to the duct (as in towards another vent, *not* towards the heat/AC unit). I said "Tripper, get your furry black butt out of there!" Amazingly enough, he listened, and wiggled backwards until he could pop his head out of the hole and climb out, a little dusty, but otherwise more annoyed that I'd interrupted his adventure than anything else. Those two are why I had to put child proof latches on the kitchen cabinets... Purrs- Chris, Katie, Hazard and Oreo Ted Davis wrote: If you guessed for a week you'd never guess where I found Chloe this morning: in the heating duct under the kitchen floor. When I walked into the kitchen this morning, I immeditely saw that both floor vents had been pulled out and CJ had his head and shoulders down one of them. I pulled him out and put the vents back. Latter, I noticed one of them was bouncing up and down. I removed it and Chloe climbed out. Actually, my office mate almost guessed on the first try: he guessed the return duct instead of the delivery duct. I'm prettu sure they can't remove the return duct grill - it's steel and heavy while the delivery ducts in the kitchen are plastic and light. |
#3
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You'll never guess ...
On Fri, 02 Apr 2010 18:11:08 -0400, Chris H wrote:
Those two are why I had to put child proof latches on the kitchen cabinets... Cabinets and some drawers. Fortunately, my duct is large enough, and Chloe is small enough, that she can turn around. All the vents were in place when I got home from work. -- Ted Davis ) |
#4
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You'll never guess ...
Chris H wrote:
Heh...reminds me of when Tripper and Mouser were "teenagers". I walked in the kitchen, and saw Mouser sitting next to the heat register hole. "Hole" because some little cleverclaws had pulled the register vent out and it was sitting next to the hole as well. This, in turn, reminds me of how Frank and Nikki used to remove the cover from the floor drain in the shower stall and stuff toys down the drain. -- Marina, Miranda and Caliban. In loving memory of Frank and Nikki. |
#5
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You'll never guess ...
On Apr 2, 5:58*am, Ted Davis wrote:
If you guessed for a week you'd never guess where I found Chloe this morning: in the heating duct under the kitchen floor. When I walked into the kitchen this morning, I immeditely saw that both floor vents had been pulled out and CJ had his head and shoulders down one of them. *I pulled him out and put the vents back. *Latter, I noticed one of them was bouncing up and down. *I removed it and Chloe climbed out. Actually, my office mate almost guessed on the first try: he guessed the return duct instead of the delivery duct. *I'm prettu sure they can't remove the return duct grill - it's steel and heavy while the delivery ducts in the kitchen are plastic and light. -- T.E.D. ) Reminds when I opened the cabinet under the bathroom sink to get plastic bags to change the litter boxes. When I was done changing them, i shut the cabinet. Few minutes later I was at my desk when i heard a tapping sound. Coming from the bathroom. I look in the bathroom and one of the cabinet doors was bouncing open and closed. I opened the cabinet and Mischief walked out. silly cat.... Kristi |
#6
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You'll never guess ...
Marina wrote:
Chris H wrote: Heh...reminds me of when Tripper and Mouser were "teenagers". I walked in the kitchen, and saw Mouser sitting next to the heat register hole. "Hole" because some little cleverclaws had pulled the register vent out and it was sitting next to the hole as well. This, in turn, reminds me of how Frank and Nikki used to remove the cover from the floor drain in the shower stall and stuff toys down the drain. I'd like to hear you explaining that to the management at your apartment building when your drain backed up. Joyce -- Remember that not getting what you want is sometimes a wonderful stroke of luck. -- the Dalai Lama |
#7
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You'll never guess ...
On Fri, 02 Apr 2010 07:58:10 -0500, Ted Davis wrote:
If you guessed for a week you'd never guess where I found Chloe this morning: in the heating duct under the kitchen floor. When I walked into the kitchen this morning, I immeditely saw that both floor vents had been pulled out and CJ had his head and shoulders down one of them. I pulled him out and put the vents back. Latter, I noticed one of them was bouncing up and down. I removed it and Chloe climbed out. Actually, my office mate almost guessed on the first try: he guessed the return duct instead of the delivery duct. I'm prettu sure they can't remove the return duct grill - it's steel and heavy while the delivery ducts in the kitchen are plastic and light. Time to glue, screw or tape the delivery duct down, so a kitteh doesn't wind up down in the furnace, or trapped in the duct inside a wall ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^..^ "Life without cats would be only marginally worth living." -TC, and the unmercifully, relentlessly, sweet calico kitty, Kenzie. Every day is a treasure with Kenzie; I try to treat them that way. There will only be so many, and then there will never, ever, be any more. How you behave towards cats here below determines your status in Heaven. - Robert Heinlein --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 100402-1, 04/02/2010 Tested on: 4/3/2010 2:39:30 AM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2010 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#8
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You'll never guess ...
"Marina" wrote in message ... (snip) This, in turn, reminds me of how Frank and Nikki used to remove the cover from the floor drain in the shower stall and stuff toys down the drain. -- Marina, Miranda and Caliban. In loving memory of Frank and Nikki. That really strikes me as funny, I can just see them perched around the drain, shoving toys down the pipe, wondering where they are going and how many will fit. Not in those words of course, or even in those thoughts, but in the cat equivilant of "isn't this a wonderfu world!" Karla |
#9
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You'll never guess ...
On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 08:39:30 +0000, Gandalf wrote:
Time to glue, screw or tape the delivery duct down, so a kitteh doesn't wind up down in the furnace, or trapped in the duct inside a wall Agreed - the question is how? The original metal ones had screw holes, and that style was what I wanted to replace them with, but only the highest end fancy scroll pattern ones seem to available in steel these days, at least where I shop. These appear to be thick, but it's mostly air with a few ribs under the top surface - if I run screws through the top I;ll just be setting up for cracks and breakage. I suppose I could make some sort of clip. I don't think glue can be made to work. -- Ted Davis ) |
#10
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You'll never guess ...
Ted Davis wrote:
On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 08:39:30 +0000, Gandalf wrote: Time to glue, screw or tape the delivery duct down, so a kitteh doesn't wind up down in the furnace, or trapped in the duct inside a wall Agreed - the question is how? The original metal ones had screw holes, and that style was what I wanted to replace them with, but only the highest end fancy scroll pattern ones seem to available in steel these days, at least where I shop. These appear to be thick, but it's mostly air with a few ribs under the top surface - if I run screws through the top I;ll just be setting up for cracks and breakage. I suppose I could make some sort of clip. I don't think glue can be made to work. I saw this done once (hope I can explain it): Add a shim along the side of the opening making it a tight fit. It should be wide enough and thick enough to accept the screw. Good luck. MLB |
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