Strange Brew by John Deering for November 16, 2009

  1. Lady with a bow
    ejcapulet  about 15 years ago

    This is the exact reason my mom got a cat door.

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  2. D and d bed 03sc
    Ray_C  about 15 years ago

    So this is what’s going through that little walnut-sized brain when she stands there and ponders. I now have more respect. It’s amazing how certain and insistent they are until that door opens.

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  3. Missing large
    eardroppings  about 15 years ago

    I TOTALLY don’t understand this.

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  4. Smiley tongue
    Smiley Rmom  about 15 years ago

    eardroppings - Let me guess. You’ve never had a cat?

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  5. Avatar02
    jpozenel  about 15 years ago

    eardroppings - I agree. I’ve had cats but this doesn’t make any sense to me.

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  6. Foxhound1
    bald  about 15 years ago

    cats can be so fickle..

    but then again my son does the same thing while holding the fridge door open

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  7. Snowleopard
    GJ_Jehosaphat  about 15 years ago

    Cats can be So Calculating (and sneaky too)!

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  8. Buddy
    lalas  about 15 years ago

    I made a cat porch and cat ladder down from a 2nd story bedroom window. The porch is kinda like an AC unit. sticks through the window, the sash closes on top of it to help hold it in place. It has In and Out flaps of screen to keep the bugs out. And the ladder leads down the side of the house to a little platform.

    It took Buddy a little while but he got the hang of it… and it greatly reduced the amount of door holding. Problem is it gets cold here and winter is a different story.

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  9. D and d bed 03sc
    Ray_C  about 15 years ago

    jtpozenel and eardroppings: A cat will cry for you to open the door, but then when you open it he will just stand there as though he is trying to make up his mind. then, just as you decide to close the door, he’ll meander out. Deering is showing his take on what is taking the cat so long to make his move. He is doing a tradeoff, figuring in the weather, what potential prey is out there, and myriad other things before he will commit. He can’t do this with the door closed. It’s a survival trait for a small animal that is both predator and prey, and we just have to let them go through it. Hope that wasn’t too didactic.

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  10. Deficon
    Coyoty Premium Member about 15 years ago

    Schroedinger’s cat would be both.

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  11. Simpsonized me close up
    mrprongs  about 15 years ago

    This is the exact reason I’ve picked my dog up and thrown him (gently) out. He just ran right back in again.

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  12. Avatar02
    jpozenel  about 15 years ago

    Ray C:

    We had one cat that loved to be outside and, at the same time, another that was strictly an indoor cat that never went out (cat #1’s mother). The outside cat never hesitated to leave or to come back in when we opened the door.

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