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#1
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Okay - Furry stories
How I got Sweetie was pretty straight forward... every time my sons and I
went to the Humane Society and fell in love, the cats were pre-reserved and taken. (Sidenote - I hate kittens. Well, to own. They are cute to play with and give back to whomever. I just never want one in my house again ever. They are vicious nasty flying claw farms that keep a person up all night, and I've been there done that. I was looking for cats about 1-2 years old.) So... we reverted to the Internet and found Sweetie early one morning, jumping in the car and almost flying to the Humane Society. We were thrilled to get her and we loved her like crazy. She has always been a banister walker. No rail too thin. Her first day she discovered my railed loft over the living room. Unfortunately, a sudden fright gave her a small flying lesson from the rail....thankfully right onto the couch! She's a spelunker. She's loves under the covers. She has the quietest purr ever, for the longest time I thought she didn't purr at all. She learned pretty fast not to use claws on humans, though she still licklicklicklickbites. She's very delicate and quiet and reserved. Just enough curiousity to prove she is feline. Soft as soft can be. (I spend the extra bucks on Science Diet.) That's Sweetie. TBird ---- next installment, Joe....godhelpyouall |
#2
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"TBird" dumped this in
ink.net on 27 Apr 2004: I'm with you - kittens are fun but you have to be ready for the activity level of them. Maybe some other time but I prefer adult cats, too. She has always been a banister walker. No rail too thin. Her first day she discovered my railed loft over the living room. Unfortunately, a sudden fright gave her a small flying lesson from the rail....thankfully right onto the couch! Shamrock is one of these. I have a split foyer house and the upstairs has a bannister overlooking the foyer, and there is a halfwall between the two stairs going up, and the 8 or so going down and Shamrock always jumps from the bannister to the halfwall. One day he is going to overshoot and I just hope I'm here! Thanks for the story of Sweetie. -- Cheryl |
#3
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"TBird" dumped this in
ink.net on 27 Apr 2004: I'm with you - kittens are fun but you have to be ready for the activity level of them. Maybe some other time but I prefer adult cats, too. She has always been a banister walker. No rail too thin. Her first day she discovered my railed loft over the living room. Unfortunately, a sudden fright gave her a small flying lesson from the rail....thankfully right onto the couch! Shamrock is one of these. I have a split foyer house and the upstairs has a bannister overlooking the foyer, and there is a halfwall between the two stairs going up, and the 8 or so going down and Shamrock always jumps from the bannister to the halfwall. One day he is going to overshoot and I just hope I'm here! Thanks for the story of Sweetie. -- Cheryl |
#4
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On Tue, 27 Apr 2004 20:30:18 GMT, "TBird"
yodeled: How I got Sweetie was pretty straight forward... every time my sons and I went to the Humane Society and fell in love, the cats were pre-reserved and taken. (Sidenote - I hate kittens. Well, to own. They are cute to play with and give back to whomever. I just never want one in my house again ever. They are vicious nasty flying claw farms that keep a person up all night, and I've been there done that. I was looking for cats about 1-2 years old.) So... we reverted to the Internet and found Sweetie early one morning, jumping in the car and almost flying to the Humane Society. We were thrilled to get her and we loved her like crazy. She has always been a banister walker. No rail too thin. Her first day she discovered my railed loft over the living room. Unfortunately, a sudden fright gave her a small flying lesson from the rail....thankfully right onto the couch! Oh, Stinky does that, too! He's never fallen, either, although it makes me nervous when he does it. It looks so hilarious, though. I wish I could put a little parasol in his tail. Theresa alt.tv.frasier FAQ: http://www.im-listening.net/FAQ/ Single-mindedness is all very well in cows or baboons; in an animal claiming to belong to the same species as Shakespeare it is simply disgraceful. (Aldous Huxley) |
#5
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On Tue, 27 Apr 2004 20:30:18 GMT, "TBird"
yodeled: How I got Sweetie was pretty straight forward... every time my sons and I went to the Humane Society and fell in love, the cats were pre-reserved and taken. (Sidenote - I hate kittens. Well, to own. They are cute to play with and give back to whomever. I just never want one in my house again ever. They are vicious nasty flying claw farms that keep a person up all night, and I've been there done that. I was looking for cats about 1-2 years old.) So... we reverted to the Internet and found Sweetie early one morning, jumping in the car and almost flying to the Humane Society. We were thrilled to get her and we loved her like crazy. She has always been a banister walker. No rail too thin. Her first day she discovered my railed loft over the living room. Unfortunately, a sudden fright gave her a small flying lesson from the rail....thankfully right onto the couch! Oh, Stinky does that, too! He's never fallen, either, although it makes me nervous when he does it. It looks so hilarious, though. I wish I could put a little parasol in his tail. Theresa alt.tv.frasier FAQ: http://www.im-listening.net/FAQ/ Single-mindedness is all very well in cows or baboons; in an animal claiming to belong to the same species as Shakespeare it is simply disgraceful. (Aldous Huxley) |
#6
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"TBird" wrote:
She has the quietest purr ever, for the longest time I thought she didn't purr at all. You know what I think would work for this? A stethoscope. I've considered buying one so that I can hear the soothing sounds of Betty's breathing while she's sleeping on my lap. |
#7
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"TBird" wrote:
She has the quietest purr ever, for the longest time I thought she didn't purr at all. You know what I think would work for this? A stethoscope. I've considered buying one so that I can hear the soothing sounds of Betty's breathing while she's sleeping on my lap. |
#9
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in article , Takayuki at
wrote on 4/29/04 7:28 PM: "TBird" wrote: She has the quietest purr ever, for the longest time I thought she didn't purr at all. You know what I think would work for this? A stethoscope. I've considered buying one so that I can hear the soothing sounds of Betty's breathing while she's sleeping on my lap. Wow. You really are a slave |
#10
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Karen Chuplis had some very interesting things
to say about Okay - Furry stories: She has the quietest purr ever, for the longest time I thought she didn't purr at all. You know what I think would work for this? A stethoscope. I've considered buying one so that I can hear the soothing sounds of Betty's breathing while she's sleeping on my lap. Wow. You really are a slave We knew he'd be a natural once he got an owner. :-) -- "Don't mess with major appliances unless you know what you are doing (or unless your life insurance policy is up-to-date)." - John, RCFL |
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