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| Thread ID: 87613 | 2008-02-27 18:24:00 | Psychology of cats | Greg (193) | PC World Chat |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 644350 | 2008-02-28 23:11:00 | This might explain some cat behaviour, i245.photobucket.com | ubergeek85 (131) | ||
| 644351 | 2008-02-28 23:27:00 | I remember about 25-30 years ago a rumour went around Mosgiel that a local Fish & Chip shop was using cats and at the time a lot of cats were going missing. That Shop almost went broke overnight, nobody went there anymore apart from out-of-towners that knew no better. |
Bantu (52) | ||
| 644352 | 2008-02-29 04:35:00 | Great stories and thanks for sharing them everyone. Wratterus, your diary tale is one of my favourite jokes and that is a particularly good version. :D When my dad was a baby, grandma used to put him in his pram out in the sun. She'd regularly come back and discover the big marmalade tom cat in the pram, purring and a dead bird or mouse beside the baby. Cats aren't social animals but they do have strong family bonds. The reason a cat brings its prey in is because you are its family. Puss is providing for you so don't be ungrateful - mouse-kebab is delicious........ :) |
Winston001 (3612) | ||
| 644353 | 2008-02-29 09:47:00 | I don't know why, so long as they eat it all. Once my cat brought home a mouse (yay! less mice about), ate the skin, and left the rest of it (nothing like cleaning mouse parts off the doormat, esp. when it falls apart on you, ick!). Was that mouse optical or mechanical (remember - no cleaning required if it's optical :lol: :lol: |
jwil1 (65) | ||
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