Re: free offer (beginning on May 20)
Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2012 6:26 pm
Beautiful kitties!!!
Mark
Mark
Are they trained in instrument repair?bloke wrote:while supplies last, free kittens with any blokepiece picked up in-person (limit three kittens per mouthpiece)
These are THE BEST for keeping rats/mice/etc. out of your sousaphones and tubas.
bloke wrote:Mark, If you drove A-L-L the way down here from Erie, I MIGHT have to offer you two free bags of kitten chow.jonesmj wrote:Beautiful kitties!!!
Mark
"Who is this jerk?"fairweathertuba wrote:Cats are jerks! But they do keep the rodent population in check when need be.
Sounds to me like cats are more useful than dogs. This has been my experience.bloke wrote:I'm 55 years old. Ever since I was 5, I've had a cat. The cats have always been treated like family members, and it has always been made clear to the cats what they were allowed to do and what they were not allowed to do (to the point of which pieces of furniture were "not OK" and which even which rooms were "not OK") . They have always been given plenty of attention and affection. I've had a "shy" cat or two, but never a "jerky" cat. The second cat that I ever had (my age: 20 - 40) was astonishingly intelligent and astonishingly loyal.fairweathertuba wrote:Cats are jerks! But they do keep the rodent population in check when need be.
Here's a copy-and-paste of a story that I told on TubeNet in July of 2005:
FWIW, we've always picked out the "bright" and "engaging" kittens, and end up with smart, people-oriented cats. They actually follow us around the house (and yard) and want to be where we are. Here is one (albeit long) cat story...our first cat - lived 20 years:
- Squirrels were in the attic of our first house because the previous "hippie" owner thought they were "cute".
- I borrowed the neighbor's pellet rifle to try to pop them off as they entered the eves at the end of the house at dusk, but couldn't get off good shots - because of the severe angle and sudden movements that the squirrels would "pop" around the corner.
- My cat came up and started "whatcha doin'?" me when I was sitting there waiting for the squirrels to show up at dusk. When she heard me discharge the pellet rifle, she looked up and saw the pellet bounce off the top of the house and saw the squirrel dart into the attic. She immediately ran around to the other side of the house to check out the squirrels' complete path of entry (involving a tree, etc.).
- The very next day, there was a dead squirrel right where my chair had been on the driveway.
- Each of the next three days after that, there was another dead squirrel in that same spot - where my chair had been.
- I had thought there were five squirrels, and figured that the fifth one had gotten away...until I looked over the fence into the neighbor's backyard. There was that last dead squirrel (the fifth day) on the neighbor's side of the fence - as close as possible to where my chair had been!!! (The cat simply couldn't quite climb the fence with the dead squirrel in her mouth.)
So:
- The cat obviously didn't give a crap about killing any squirrels until she saw that I wanted them dead. At that moment, she accepted the long-term (five-day) job of taking care of the situation, and delivering all of the evidence of her efforts to my workstation...
If the squirrels in question are like the English Grey Squirrel that is a common infestation around here, it's equally remarkable to me that a cat would take one of these critters on. I suppose, in the city, the squirrels get bigger and the cats get flabbier.bloke wrote:story
I don't care about the sidewalks or the lawns. That's just my shoes. What really ticks me off is to be working in my flower garden and come up with a handful of fresh, slimy cat $#!+. My next door neighbor has 5................count 'em...............5 cats that he lets roam the neighborhood. The just described situation happens about once a week. When I asked him to keep the cats up he said, " That's not God's plan. Cats need to roam free." My dog never goes out unattended and is not allowed off my property. Why can't he do that with his cats? Because he is to lazy to watch them, that's why. End of rant!Mojo workin' wrote:How many times have you stepped in cat s*** on public sidewalks, lawns?
Touche'Donn wrote:Really it boils down to this - there are two types of people: those who believe there two types of people, and those who don't.