The worst part is that sometimes she doesn’t do it so then you can easily lose track of time.
Anyway, this is currently preventing me from making tea.
The worst part is that sometimes she doesn’t do it so then you can easily lose track of time.
Anyway, this is currently preventing me from making tea.
Welp. That’s that then. Tea isn’t happening this morning!
She left without force. My Earl Grey is steeping.
I hope it was hot.
Like a Betazoid.
Can I ask you all cat’s friends how do you handle seasonal hair change and hair loss?
Do you brush them daily?
Maybe you teached them to do this?
I’m trying with no luck, but I guess is something in the non-opposable thumbs…
That, as well as cat hair thimbleweeds — pardon, tumbleweeds — making their way around the house. It’s the litter they traipse around the house that bothers me, not the hairs.
Same problem here. I’m not sure there’s a great deal you can do about it apart from brushing them regularly.
Those are indeed the worst. I thought wooden floors would help, but it just means running around chasing them instead of picking them out of the carpet.
I suspect vacuum cleaning the cats might help a lot better than brushing. I knew a cat once who really enjoyed being vacuum cleaned.
I thought cats would be scared of vacuum cleaners. But my friend said her cat was happily napping in the living room while they were doing the hoovering!
Yeah I’ve known that too. Ours (and most?) hate the sound of it though.
Maybe Mr Dyson could make a silent pet model.
The last time I turned on the vacuum cleaner the cats reacted as if the sky fell down.
I don’t like that noisy thing either. I normally just sweep the place with a broom.
Yeah, if only they weren’t scared by noise. A little suction nozzle for vacuum cleaners could be designed with a massaging surface for their skin. They would love that! And we would be free from tumbleweeds everywhere! A win-win!
it looks like a Sphinx!
The markings are lovely. A bit like Roxy (a calico).
The sunlight is hitting her perfectly in that last shot.
It was actually just the barest remaining trace of sunlight. It looks a lot better on the picture than it did in real life. It’s the kind of magic you can’t get on your phone; only your DSLR can do it. On the flipside, the sunlight did its best to disappear in the 10 seconds I took to change lenses.