I love reading your cat stories. This one is especially sweet. Just last week a tiny tuxedo kitten was crying and the catch basin of the storm pipe in front of my house. My neighbor pulled up the grate, and pulled her out. She was so tiny, smaller than any kitten I've ever seen. I took her to the vet and she weighed a pound and a half. I…
I love reading your cat stories. This one is especially sweet. Just last week a tiny tuxedo kitten was crying and the catch basin of the storm pipe in front of my house. My neighbor pulled up the grate, and pulled her out. She was so tiny, smaller than any kitten I've ever seen. I took her to the vet and she weighed a pound and a half. In the bed. Said that she should be at about 3 lb so she had some weight. The game. She likes to climb up her head on my shoulder and her little tiny body next to my ear. It's the best feeling in the world, especially when she has a motor running. She goes back to the vet in a few days for a follow-up. She looks bigger to me already, and she's very active. Doing zoomies in the morning after a morning. Nap and zoomies in the evening after an evening nap. I hope you're cookie is around for many more years, because I know how it feels to lose one that you're so close to. You never know, sometimes just being close helps , so maybe now that she's sleeping with you again, she'll perk up a little bit
Have you ever lived with a Tuxedo Cat? I read some things about them last night and one article said they only live 12 to 16 years, are intelligent, and like interacting with people.
I have three of them right now. 12-16 years is about right in my experience. They are certainly intelligent, and as Roscoe and Sweetie demonstrate every day, love interacting with people.
This is my first Tuxedo, and maybe the youngest stray I've brought in. She's isolated as a precaution, so I spend a lot of time with her. First time in the room, she went to a chifforobe and tried to pen the door, figured out how to get into a chair that she couldn't jump into, by grasping the underside and climbing upside down and around the edge, to get to the top. seemed pretty clever for a kitten that the Vet said probably left her Mom a little too soon. I remember Sweetie, I'll have to go back and read your Cat posts againto check out the others.
I love reading your cat stories. This one is especially sweet. Just last week a tiny tuxedo kitten was crying and the catch basin of the storm pipe in front of my house. My neighbor pulled up the grate, and pulled her out. She was so tiny, smaller than any kitten I've ever seen. I took her to the vet and she weighed a pound and a half. In the bed. Said that she should be at about 3 lb so she had some weight. The game. She likes to climb up her head on my shoulder and her little tiny body next to my ear. It's the best feeling in the world, especially when she has a motor running. She goes back to the vet in a few days for a follow-up. She looks bigger to me already, and she's very active. Doing zoomies in the morning after a morning. Nap and zoomies in the evening after an evening nap. I hope you're cookie is around for many more years, because I know how it feels to lose one that you're so close to. You never know, sometimes just being close helps , so maybe now that she's sleeping with you again, she'll perk up a little bit
That's a nice story too.
Have you ever lived with a Tuxedo Cat? I read some things about them last night and one article said they only live 12 to 16 years, are intelligent, and like interacting with people.
I have three of them right now. 12-16 years is about right in my experience. They are certainly intelligent, and as Roscoe and Sweetie demonstrate every day, love interacting with people.
This is my first Tuxedo, and maybe the youngest stray I've brought in. She's isolated as a precaution, so I spend a lot of time with her. First time in the room, she went to a chifforobe and tried to pen the door, figured out how to get into a chair that she couldn't jump into, by grasping the underside and climbing upside down and around the edge, to get to the top. seemed pretty clever for a kitten that the Vet said probably left her Mom a little too soon. I remember Sweetie, I'll have to go back and read your Cat posts againto check out the others.