Tag Harry

The Moving Finger Writes, And Having Writ, Moves On

If I can manage to do so without turning into a total loser, I wanted to say just a couple more things about my cats, and then I promise we’ll move on. Back to usual business next week.

When I realized that Harry was gone forever and not just MIA, it wasn’t hard to start thinking about him in the past tense, and it wasn’t hard to frame our relationship in that mix of golden hazy memory and crystal-clear anecdotes. The subject had not been too far from my mind ever since Maynard died last year. The two of them were close enough in age that Maynard’s loss meant Harry’s would come sooner than later. Not that I was waiting for Harry to die, but there was a readily-transferrable set of feelings and thoughts. Indeed, I sort of had this sense of Harry’s invincibility, and as last week dragged on I was still not convinced that he wasn’t going to show up at the door, tired and hungry. On Friday, though, when I got out of the car and Murray wasn’t waiting at the door, the whole bottom dropped out of everything. It was the proof of one unthinkable scenario and the sudden shocking appearance of another. Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

It is much, much harder to find the right context for Murray. He brought me so much happiness in this past year, which was otherwise so mindbogglingly unhappy, but that time is the blink of an eye to me. I can remember how sure I was when Maynard came to live with us that this tiny kitten would not survive, and Harry’s beginnings were equally uncertain, but I never gave so much as a fleeting thought that Murray would be anything other than forever. And now, instead of collecting years of memories of him, he is consigned to be nothing but a footnote: “Remember that kitten we had that got eaten by the coyote years ago, what was his name?” We are all forgotten eventually, of course, but the transition is especially abrupt this time, and so undeserved.

I have shared my life with over a dozen different cats, and I’ve realized that the one I had the most in common with was Lola. Lola was a tough room. She didn’t like many people, she didn’t like the other cats foisted upon her by us, and she was generally unhappy about her situation most of the time. She lived in the shadow of her sister Esme, and then Maynard, and finally Harry, all of whom were better loved and more interesting cats. Life was thrust upon her without much consideration for her own desires, and she was usually asked to put up with something inconvenient or uncomfortable for someone else’s benefit. As she grew older, her resilience for these things grew thin, and she spent most of her last months avoiding the world. Finally, she simply opted to get sick and die, but even then it did not go smoothly. Just like Murray, she deserved more than she got, especially from me.

My own broken heart won’t mend much more, but I know that nothing ends here except the time of Harry and Murray. That other cats will arrive and find cherished places in our personal history. That even though Murray will never have much of a story of his own, he basks in Harry’s reflected glory. And my Harry, my big orange galoot, will abide with me until all of us are long, long forgotten.

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Til Valhalla, My Friends

UPDATE 8/6: It is worse than I ever imagined. Murray is also gone. I am certain it is the work of the coyote that we have seen in the past. The neighbor’s cat also disappeared a few weeks ago.

When I posted this, it was with the acknowledgement that Harry had died as he had lived: in a world of hunters and prey. He had been the successful predator for years and years, and what little solace there was to be had in thinking about him being gone came from the idea that his turn in that circle had come.

But I am simply crushed to lose little Murray. He was still a kitten, really, only a little more than a year old. I let him out yesterday because I could not be sure about Harry’s disappearance, not expecting that something might happen in the middle of the day. But two cats do not wander off in the space of a couple of days, especially not these two cats, who never ventured out of the sight of the back door, and my suspicions about the animal in the woods have been confirmed in the most horrible way.

Harry was 13 years old. I will always cherish and celebrate the life we had together. For Murray, though, I will never be able to atone for the guilt of cutting his life so short.

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Varmints

Apparently there’s a family of foxes living in my mother’s backyard. My brother Tim got some cute pictures of the kits. I don’t know if Billy The Exterminator makes house calls to Maine, but at the very least it’s time to call the local animal control officer. Having happy woodland creatures stop by for a visit is one thing, but when they move in for keeps it’s usually bad news for everyone, including the happy woodland creatures.

This is our neighborhood turkey. He has been in our yard a couple of times, but we see him all around our neighborhood. He usually appears when we’ve had rainy weather, so I’m a little surprised we haven’t seen him more recently. What always amazes me about wild turkeys is how completely unafraid they seem to be of people and/or cars. On the morning I took that picture, he walked right up in front of the car, and even as I slowly drove past him he showed no signs of fleeing.

On warm days, I often leave my car windows open when it is parked in our driveway, and Harry likes to climb into the car and nap there. One morning as Charlotte and I were leaving to take her to school, I caught him trying to sneak back out and got this photo. Since Maynard died, Harry has become an almost exclusively outdoor cat. He’ll even go outside in the pouring rain of his own volition. I had been calling him into the house at bedtime, but recently he started waking me up at 3:00 a.m. to let him back outside, so now I just leave him out.

Here’s a clip of a couple of morning news anchors in Michigan freaking out when a raccoon wandered into their studio through the open loading dock door:

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The Cruellest Month

all-he-ever-wanted

While we’ve all been riding the rollercoaster of March weather, it seems that the one who has taken it the hardest around here has been HarryHarryHarry. Now that both of our cats are getting a little long in the tooth, their resiliency in the face of unpleasant weather has ratcheted down a notch or two. Maynard, who is two years older than Harry, and officially a feline senior citizen, took one look at our very first snowfall, said “fuck that bullshit” and has spent the winter pretending that the outside world doesn’t exist. But Maynard has never needed outside time the way Harry does.

Harry was simply born to be an outdoor cat. Letting him spend time outdoors was a life-changing experience for him and for us. It’s been his fortune and ours that most of the last several winters have been below-average in snow accumulation, so that going out during the winter months was easily done except in the coldest times. Even Maynard was usually willing to spend a little time outdoors if the ground was bare. But this winter has given us well over the average snowfall, with lots of cold weather and little melting between storms. That is, until the last week or two, as the tendrils of spring have started spreading into our corner of North America. At some point in February, Harry’s overwhelming need to go outdoors finally bested his intense dislike of walking in the snow, and he had resumed taking his morning constitutional every day after eating his breakfast, for which he was rewarded with enough days with temperatures above 40 that the snow was mostly gone.

Then we got pummeled with that snowstorm over the first weekend of March that covered the whole eastern half of the country. When he meowed for the door that Monday morning, I knew it was going to come as a rude shock to Harry. It was a rude shock to everyone, but at least most people had been a little prepared by the endless panic-mongering of the weather reports. Harry doesn’t pay attention to weather reports. So I went with him to the back door and swung it open for him.

His whole furry orange body froze with shock and then visibly slumped with dismay. The snow on the steps was so deep and so fluffy that the one step he took sank him up to his shoulder. He thought about it for a long time, stepping backward and forward and not finding any spot where he would not sink, then turned to the doorjamb and scratched the side (even though he has no front claws), which is his signal that he has changed his mind about the whole thing and really only wanted a stretch in the first place.

The temperature rebounded quickly after that storm, and by last weekend we were once again flirting with 60-degree temperatures and bare ground, so he didn’t let himself be too defeated and was once again going outside of his own volition, if a bit grudgingly. Maynard even decided that it was enough like spring that he could risk it. Then on Monday, three inches of gloppy wet snow. Those of us who have lived here a long time will tell you that this is SOP for March — a meteorological schizophrenia with occasional psychosis, but we know that the outcome is weighted in favor of spring. I didn’t even bother to clear the snow from the back steps on Monday, knowing that it would be gone in a day or two. But I think Harry took it personally when he asked to be let outdoors and the wet white glop was back again.

And now another weekend is upon us, and for the third straight in a row, we’ve got bare ground and moderating temperatures. Harry has even gone outside TWICE today, probably thinking that he’d better get it in before he gets snowed on again. I don’t blame him, but I also can’t say with 100% certainty that this time he’s wrong, even though the forecast is in our favor. Only Monday morning will tell him for sure.

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Adorable Jones

Poor Harry and Maynard. Lately it feels like they’re getting the bum’s rush to the Big Sleep. Maynard is 12 years old now, which is officially the beginning of the 4:30 Senior Buffet years for pussycats, and Harry is 10, which is the “Hey You Kids Get Offa My Lawn” age. By the standards of today’s veterinary medicine, cats who are primarily indoor pets like H&M easily live into their late teens with proper care, and we happen to have a really outstanding vet, so it’s not like either of them has one foot in the grave. Indeed, I’d say just the opposite. You might not even guess that Maynard is a senior citizen to see him in action, and the only real signal that he is aging is that he sleeps even more than the average cat. Harry, who never really stopped being a kitten, has a bit of middle-age spread like the rest of us, but he, too, is active and healthy.


Maynard, in repose

So why the expectations of imminent demise? Well, I don’t think it’s so much that anyone is in a hurry for either cat to cross the Rainbow Bridge, but for the last several months all three of us have developed an acknowledged hankerin’ for a new kitten, and the party line is that we would not consider getting another cat until the day comes when Maynard or Harry is no longer with us. Which has given Charlotte license to start many a conversation with “When Harry and Maynard die…”, something that sounds like what Wednesday Addams might say.

It’s all the fault of the damn LOLCats, of course. We’re regular imbibers of “I Can Haz Cheezburger”, and that has led us down the slippery slope of sites like Cute Overload and The Daily Kitten. Last week I wrote about the infamous Rule 34 and its implications, but the equally perverse number of cute kitten and cute miscellaneous animal photo websites is sort of the counterbalance. Indeed, our informal motto at the Site Whose Name Must Not Be Mentioned is “Kitties and Porn”, because between the two categories they account for probably 75% of all the content posted.

It is my personal opinion that kittens are simply the cutest living things on Planet Earth, and I am a complete sucker for “baby pictures” with or without “LOLcat Speek” captions. So every time Charlotte and I sit down to peruse “Cheezburger”, we ooh and aww over the kittens. That inevitably draws Bridget out of the bedroom and into the den to see what we’re seeing, and then at least one of us will say “I want a kitten!”

Both Maynard and Harry came to us as foundling kittens years ago. Each was separated from his mother at about four weeks old, about half the age at which most kittens are considered old enough for adoption. We had to bottle feed them, teach them how to use a litter box, and then wean them on to solid foods. The two or three weeks of feedings and trainings seem to go by very slowly, but kittens raised by hand from a very early age become exceedingly bonded with people, much more so than kittens who spend their first eight weeks bonding with Mama and their siblings. When the does indeed arrive when our household is ready to welcome home a new cat, it’s my firm hope that we’ll be able to do the same thing again.


Harry reclines in bed

For now, as much as I know we would all enjoy a kitten, I am very glad to have Harry and Maynard. At this stage in their lives, they’ve grown out of most of their rambunctious behavior. Maynard, who was always a bit aloof and standoffish as a younger cat, now loves attention and more nights than not will sit in my lap while I read Charlotte her bedtime stories. Harry prefers to get his cuddle time snuggling up in bed. Half-alseep this morning, my last dream of the night was that I was pregnant and having a hard time moving around. I opened my eyes to find Harry stretched out on top of me, effectively pinning me to the bed. We’ve had our ups and downs over the years, but I know it will be a sad, sad day when they aren’t with me anymore. The cutest kitten in the world can’t fix that.

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Beauty And The Beak (And Other Animal News)

Remember the video about Beauty the Eagle, who’d had her beak shot off?

Here she is with her beak prosthesis in place:

He Doesn't Look Jewish

Jews around the world can rejoice now that rabbinical authorities in Israel have officially decreed that giraffes are kosher. It’s a little late now if you were looking for something special to serve for a traditional Shavout feast, but maybe you can get a nice giraffe brisket for the High Holidays this year.

Harry the Hunter

Our cat Harry is off to a roaring start for his 2008 hunting season. He’s already bagged two moles and two chipmunks, and it’s still early yet. I don’t know if he’ll score another full-grown squirrel like last year, but he’s on a pace to deverminize the entire neighborhood by Independence Day. Meanwhile, the people at MAKE:blog had a couple of must-have cat-related DIY projects to talk about recently: first is this electronic controller that will turn your bathroom faucet into a kitty fountain (check out the video of this gadget in action), and second is this RFID-controlled cat flap that works with those subcutaneously-embeddedd pet RFID identity tags. It only opens for the pets it recognizes, meaning that rodents and other critters like raccoons and skunks can’t get into your house. Harry and Maynard are both big fans of drinking from the sink, so I think the faucet controller is a must for us, and at this time of year it would be awfully nice to let the boys come and go as they please.

Cheetah

On Charlotte’s birthday I briefly mentioned that she did a big report on cheetahs for school. It was really quite an elaborate project considering that these were first-graders. They had a choice of making a poster board or a diorama, and Charlotte chose the poster board. She read five or six books about cheetahs (reading-level-appropriate, of course) to do her research, downloaded pictures from the Internet (which Bridget printed at CVS on photo paper so they looked like real photos), watched some YouTube videos about cheetahs, and then did a presentation in front of her whole class about what she learned. When I was in first grade, I painted a rock. Shows you how times have changed.

Anyway, my reason for bringing this up is to link to this blog post at tingilinde about how the limits of human running speed may have been reached due to the way our muscles work. Steve Crandall found some relevant studies about cheetah musculature vs. human musculature that explains why the cheetah can go from 0 to 60 in just a couple of seconds but a human can’t. I think this would have been a bit too technical for Charlotte’s report, but it’s interesting none the less.

Never bring a gun to a lobster knife fight

And lastly, the Bangor Daily News reports that PETA has petitioned the commissioners of Somerset County, Maine to turn the old Skowhegan Jail into an “Empathy Center” for lobsters. The prison is the “perfect setting”, says the petition, to demonstrate the cruelty shown to lobsters who are kept in overcrowded restaurant tanks and then boiled alive.

PETA envisions an interactive environment where visitors are caught in inescapable traps, have their hands immobilized with huge rubber bands, then thrown into filthy, overcrowded holding tanks, and kept there for an hour. No word about boiling the tourists alive, though many a Mainer has wished for just exactly that every summer for decades. Drawn butter would be extra, of course.

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This Should Have Been Invented Years Ago

I definitely need to be buying one of these: it’s a cat perch that mounts right on your desk, so your cat can keep you company. It comes in a variety of wood stains to match your desk and will hold up to 20 pounds. Even HarryHarryHarry weighs less than that!

The website claims that the high sides and soft felt padding will entice the cat to sit down. Our cats, especially Harry, are all about sitting in empty boxes. But if you ask me, they should skip the padding and tell you to stack all of your paperwork in the box, since I have never met a cat who could resist sitting on whatever papers I might have in front of me.

Of course, I’ll probably need to buy two, because Harry is so jealous that he would spend all his time chasing Maynard out of the box.

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Does The Name Pavlov Ring A Bell?

Not Avon Calling

Now that winter has started a few days early and we’ve got snow and ice on the ground, our cats Harry and Maynard have decided that they like being indoor cats just fine thank you. Well, Maynard has anyway. I coaxed him into going outside last night in the rain, and when he came in a couple of hours later he wouldn’t even look at me. Harry, on the other hand, still WANTS to go outside, but once he gets there he’s ready to come back in after a few minutes. So for the last week or so, he and I have been playing that perennial feline favorite game, “In-Again-Out-Again”. He’s very direct about letting me know when he wants to go out — he walks right up to me and meows expectantly. If I don’t respond within whatever interval he thinks is appropriate, he starts misbehaving until I open the door. He’s equally insistent about wanting to come in. He paws madly at the screen door, making a racket easily heard all over the house.

Yes, my pets do have me well-trained, thank you. So I’m not sure if I’m ready to step up and buy them their own pet doorbell. Frankly, I’d rather buy an electric-eye setup like they have at the supermarket so that they could open the damn door themselves. For now, though, I’m going to have to settle for sub-contracting the work out to Charlotte.

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Helping Harry

HarryHarryHarry

I never thought I would say this about our cat Harry, but he needs to fatten up a bit.

He’s lost a couple of pounds this summer, which is rather a lot in cat terms, and his appetite is off. We took him to the vet a couple of weeks ago when I noticed that he hadn’t eaten at all for several days. The vet x-rayed him and found the remains of some critter in his intestines, rehydrated him a bit and told us to force-feed him. Force-feeding involves taking some canned cat food and making it really loose, then filling a syringe with it and squirting it down the cat’s gullet. Fun times for everyone, let me tell you.

He’s eating again now, but not with his customary gusto. He’s turning up his nose at cat food that he used to prefer, and not eating as much of the food that he will eat. I’m working through a variety of new flavors and different brands to see if we can find one he likes enough to eat readily. So far, though, he isn’t showing much enthusiasm.

I wish I knew what the triggering event was. Personally, I don’t believe that eating some dead mole or chipmunk is the cause. Cats tend to simply barf up whatever upsets their stomach and move on to the next meal. His blood work at the vet came back normal, but I am not convinced. His vet visit cost upwards of $400 at a time when we can ill-afford the big expense, but I’ll take him back if his improvement doesn’t seem a bit more robust. I don’t know if I could bear having him die right now.

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And A Good Morning To You, Madam!

I Barfd

Nothing says “Good Morning” like getting out of the shower and having to hand your towel to your wife so she can barf all over it, since she already spewed all over the carpet.

For reasons I do not totally understand, my entire family treats the master bedroom like a contemporary version of the ancient Roman vomitorium. It seems like whenever someone needs to puke, the destination of choice is our bedroom. Maynard the cat, who, you will recall, is already on my black list for waking me up several times a night is a serial barfer and is known for leaving piles of yakk all over the house but especially prefers to hurl right in front of the TV armoire. Charlotte, on the other hand, likes to heave in the bed itself, preferrably on MY side. Harry the cat, who really doesn’t upchuck all that much comparatively, tends to quietly deposit hairballs in the more obscure corners of the room. And now Bridget adds the contents of her stomach to the formerly off-white but now multi-colored carpet right in front of my bedside table, perilously close to where I keep my shoes.

Hmm? What’s that you say? Puke into the toilet? Or at least the tile floor of the bathroom? Pshaw! Why puke someplace where it can be quickly and easily cleaned up when you can hork up right on some nice partial-shag carpet?

(Me? Well, I haven’t vomited in years, and I’d like to keep it that way, thanks)

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