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2008.05.09

final catblogging friday

Evander (pic here) adopted me in Portland in 1998.  Only weeks later, he had the last ear-shredding fight that made his name, and once we'd patched him up he seemed content to retire.  I blogged about him here, with several pics, in 2005.

Continue reading "final catblogging friday" »

2005.07.30

still alive, eh?


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When I bought a house in Portland, seven years ago, he came with the house.  "Evander," the previous owners had called him, after the boxer Evander Holyfield -- which dates him already.   Evander ruled his neighborhood with a twitch of his well-shredded ears.  He was surer of his authority than any cat I've ever met.  He didn't bluster, as my younger cat often does.  He didn't actually fight much; he didn't seem to need to.  And when he decided he wanted into the house, I let him in. 

Dscn0219A neighbor there remembered him being around in the early 1980s, which would make him well over 20 now.  He's moved with me twice, and each time, he's given up more control, retreated to a smaller circle of concern. 

In this last, most wrenching move, from San Francisco to Vancouver, he stayed calm, the master of his pet-carrier, while my younger cat went catatonic with terror.  Today, Evander cares what happens within a radius of barely a foot.  But there, don't mess with him.

Happy catblogging Friday, Evander.  Thanks for sticking with me.

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2004.12.25

Photographing a Purr

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Cody has an industrial-strength purr, something like the sound that huge heating and ventilation systems make when you're right next to them in the basement.  If I close my eyes, I can imagine that the womb might sound something like this.

It makes me want to photograph him.

But Cody is the Heisenberg Principle incarnate.  A cat who normally likes staring at me won't look at me holding a  camera.    So I have to surprise him. 

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Sibilants seem to work.  I use them to call him in at night.  A little hiss always makes him perk up for a moment.   I wonder this is hard-wired into cats ... a universal sound of predators or prey in the grass. 

His survival to his current age is amazing.  He endured unknown numbers of days declawed and abandoned in a suburban trailer park before my mother's friend found him there, huddling under a van in the rain, yowling.  Today, a decade later, he still has abandonment issues.  And of course we can't imagine what the loss of front claws must feel like.  We history- and future-minded guys may fret about castration, but for a present-minded cat, I doubt he notices what he lost in back.  But something's missing in front, and it matters every day.

Pc240099So he's more skittish than most cats, but can also be aggressive.  I've seen him bluff his way through fights with other cats, getting them cornered and desperate without ever letting on that he doesn't have claws.  He can also motivate me by forsaking the litter box.  Indeed, he won his current right to be outdoors through a very effective strike action timed to embarrass me.  He gets his needs met. 

Up close with a person, he sniffs, then licks vigoriously for a few strokes.  The lick is a miniature flogging.  His tongue is a field of suction cups, all dragging abrasively across your skin.  It keeps my nose shiny.

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2004.11.28

Evander etudie le français

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Who's to say
cats
can't learn French
in their sleep

2004.11.20

Friday Post-Cheshire Catblogging

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He's actually scarier than he looks here, though not as scary as he looked there.

And that's him in my arms in the pic over there --> He's digging his back legs into my stomach to make me smile.

2004.11.12

Cheshire Catblogging

Suddenly, you're intrigued by the bright blue color in the rug ...

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2004.11.06

Les chats de vendredi

 

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catblogging
should be
like a
good
striptease,
no?