Valentine being winsome.
He'd probably enjoy it. His favourite game is lying on the tiled kitchen floor for Lee to swing him round a few times and then give him a shove which sends him sliding off some twelve feet or so. A moment later he's back for more.
One of our long gone moggies liked to be slid up and down the empty bath on her back, which sounds a very similar pass-time.
Another one liked to jump off the bungalow's roof onto my back, as a halfway 'stop' to the ground.
Cheers - Phil
It is well know that cats have an even bigger ego than their owners.
IanS
Quote from: ianrs54 on 11 June 2016, 11:08:19 AM
It is well know that cats have an even bigger ego than their owners.
Cats don't have owners, they have servants.
Cheers, Martyn
--
That's right. It's the Cats that are the owners... ;)
Time for a Warband army of Fierce Kitties?
I've seen a recruiting poster from WWI showing a pouncing cat. People tend to forget that pound for pound, a kitty will wipe the floor with any other land mammal. If that seems silly, ask yourself whether you'd rather face a wolf or a puma in single combat.
Was it Balzac who remarked that cats were a way for a man to caress a tiger? And now that the tiger temple in Kan'buri is out of business....
"Touch not the cat without a glove"
Tha''s reet the noo!
Not a typo. One's an apostrophe, the other a glottal stop.
Here he is.
And since we're the only two up, Kitty, here is a link that's pretty interesting although you likely you already know it:
http://www.thegreatcat.org/cats-20th-century-history-cats-war/
Seen the catboys before, but it still cracks me up every time.
Quote from: d_Guy on 12 June 2016, 03:34:04 AM
And since we're the only two up, Kitty, here is a link that's pretty interesting although you likely you already know it:
http://www.thegreatcat.org/cats-20th-century-history-cats-war/
Thanks. Those were new to me. True to form, when the French caught a cat that was in the habit of visiting the lines on both sides, they shot her as a spy.