Ruby, who was first named Sylvester, is our latest addition. I was not in the market for another cat, but as you can tell, I’m a sucker for a hard luck story. Ruby was like a tiny sprite, dashing across the parking lot near a very busy street. She was very wild at first and I had to trap her just to get her to the vet. They didn’t think she could ever be domesticated. It took a couple of months, but it was a great day when she jumped on my bed and let me pet her for the first time and started purring. She’s been a breath of fresh air for my lazy older cats. She loves to chase them, and they get a lot more exercise since she’s arrived.
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Every Rescue Has a Story
Ruby, who was first named Sylvester, is our latest addition. I was not in the market for another cat, but as you can tell, I’m a sucker for a hard luck story. Ruby was like a tiny sprite, dashing across the parking lot near a very busy street. She was very wild at first and I had to trap her just to get her to the vet. They didn’t think she could ever be domesticated. It took a couple of months, but it was a great day when she jumped on my bed and let me pet her for the first time and started purring. She’s been a breath of fresh air for my lazy older cats. She loves to chase them, and they get a lot more exercise since she’s arrived.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
How to Style Your E-Collar

Bella, my Coon Hound who is recovering from a tumor removal on her front paw, has found many clever ways to wear her surgical collar.
Labels:
coonhound,
dog,
e-collar,
elizabethan collar,
pet
Tortie the Migrant Cat

Tortie has probably had more homes than lives. She was left behind by a less-than-responsible neighbor about 10 years ago and has roamed our street ever since. Plenty of people had tried, but Tort refuses to give up her migrant lifestyle and be an indoor cat. So she squats at whatever home will take her in until they move out of the neighborhood. It may sound cruel that she is always left behind, but we’ve had many neighborhood discussions about this. We inevitably decide it’s best that she stay on our street since she knows it so well. And she’s probably safer because it is a short dead-end street. So she continues her transient ways and knows that there is chow 24x7 on my porch, which yard has the best sun in the afternoon, and if she’s ever in trouble, one of us will be rushing her to the vet. Every cat should be so lucky!
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Snow Dog
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