Cat pic(s)

   / Cat pic(s) #421  
I sat down on the waiting chair in the exam room, he had already jumped to the top of the exam table, then to a shelf ... jumped to a high corner shelf and was already swatting the little cat that is a cut-away statue showing all the internal organs.
By any chance was his most recent visit there, to neuter him? :oops:
 
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   / Cat pic(s) #422  
I found an old photo I posted in a different thread here in 2020, of the same Bobcat in post #311. Or maybe this one is the daddy of that recent one.

p1930243rbobcat2-jpg.677336


My comment the first time I posted it: "Enlarged out of a 20x zoom, actually 60 yards down an orchard row. Unconcerned that I saw him. He just wandered off".
 
   / Cat pic(s) #423  
I don't know if the cats we occasionally see watching gopher holes in the orchard are feral, more likely they come over from neighbors.

But come to think of it with my critter cameras showing the Bobcat visiting about once a week, and a pair of foxes patrolling down the deck nightly, this may explain why we haven't seen any housecats for a while.

I'm reminded of the sad story of the little girl who finally figured out why she kept losing beloved pets: "Daddy - all you're doing is going back to the pound to get more cats to feed the coyotes!!"

It surprises me to see the skunk, raccoons, possum, bobcat, foxes, cross in front of the cameras sometimes separated by minutes and they don't seem to bother one another.

1329562988-jpg.782894
 
   / Cat pic(s) #425  
Very mischievous, with an above average energy level. He likes to swat everything on counters or tables onto the floor. It’s all bearable because of his loyalty and kindness. Follows me around like a puppy and wants to play fetch everyday. Needs to be involved in every indoor project. ... gets to cruise to his personal appointments in the Subaru or F250 with sunroofs open to the sky. I think the F250 is his favorite ride because it sounds like a tractor! 😻
TK(?) sounds like a great friend! Great personality, interested in everything you do. You're lucky to have him.

My daughter's cats were loyal to them, like that. We have photos of Taters in one daughter's bicycle front basket, she loved to take the cat around the block. A notable event my cousin's wife still talks about was when both daughters, quite young, served up an elaborate mock dinner made from mud pies and grass clippings. The principal dish, brought out last, was a big casserole dish. When the lid was opened to serve the relative, there was Taters! She loved to participate in the kids games.

That cat lived to 20 years old, eventually our responsibility after the kids left for college. Her favorite perch then, was spread out on top of my warm computer monitor.

Younger daughter's cat PurryCat (we let them name their cats) was selected at SPCA to be mature, we knew the pet for a small child had to be more durable, and more capable of self defense, than just a small kitten. Soon proven by seeing PurryCat dangling from a stranglehold. But she never bit or scratched. We have cute photos of both of them in bed, the kid and her cat, just two heads peeking out from under the covers with PurryCat in the child's arms.

Occasionally I would come home late from work and just crash on the bed face down. Then soon find Purrycat curled up on my back.

Cats are great pets! We now run back and forth from home in town to ranch (orchard), 100 miles each way, so it's not a good time for pets. Setting up security cameras for pictures and videos of all the wildlife at the ranch has become a minor hobby. That place is hopping, we are just guests of all those permanent residents.
 
   / Cat pic(s) #426  
Black cats have the ultimate stealth technology! Invisible until they want to be seen!
I'd say that's true for all cats. Countless times I've looked everywhere for the cat & can't find it anywhere. 5 minutes later, it's right there somewhere underfoot.
 
   / Cat pic(s) #427  
This is the cage I built for feral cat recovery after neutering or spaying.
It’s just cheap shelving with chicken wire wrapped around with large washers and self tapping screws. I welded some wheels on the bottom so I could move it around.
I also have moving blanket that I can throw over the top so they can feel a little more secure. They are more calm if they think they are hiding.

That looks great, thoughtful, comfortable for the feral cat.

But how in the world do you get the cat to go in there?

Without you getting shredded?
 
   / Cat pic(s) #428  
must admit though, it makes me quite angry when they get into my shed and piss on my hot rod! :mad:
!
My wife had been chasing off a neighbor's cat that stalked the birds she was putting out birdseed for.
Darn cat retaliated, he went and pissed on my tractor seat. 😈
 
   / Cat pic(s) #429  
Question: I've taken quite a few wildlife photos, both with a good camera (bobcat photo above) and on the security cameras that are set up for that purpose (fox photo). I initially set up the critter cameras to learn what was making the racket on the deck waking us up. Now I also have a couple more cameras looking out into the orchard where the real show is, night and sometimes day.

Is there another forum on here more suitable for sharing these photos? Sorry, we don't presently have a cat!
 
   / Cat pic(s) #430  
View attachment 2180829
My wife uses a small animal trap like this one. This is what the shelter requires for each cat being transported to the care center for surgery. Putting an old shower towel over the cage during transport helps keep them calm. There is a lady that crochets little blankets and donates them to the care center for all the stray/feral cats to go home with. The care center operates from donations. My son gave us his older Subaru when he bought his new car so we decided to donate it to the shelter. They sent it to auction and mailed us a receipt for a tax deduction. I thought that was kinda cool. It seems like a good service they are providing. It was explained to me that, even though feral cats have a low survival rate, they still multiply like bunnies. It’s important to keep the population down without gathering them up and euthanizing. Just letting them live out their lives without reproducing. I suppose that’s the most humane choice. I must admit though, it makes me quite angry when they get into my shed and piss on my hot rod! :mad: I bought a car cover to help reduce the effect. My wheels have been stained.
A "fixed" male cat will not have the desire to piss on your car wheels. An unaltered male marks his territory so other males know, and females know.

Feral cats serve an ecological need in reducing mice, rabbits, and apparently some bugs. Releasing TNR cats helps keep this balance.

Had a TNR in my neighborhood that I'm sure was not feral born. A feral born cat stays wild. This one only let me touch her twice but enjoyed our chats while I gave her dry Purina Cat Chow and water.

It got to the point she would sit in my bedroom window. I'd speak her name, she would speak my name. I know my cat name is "meow"! Would go to the front porch, call her, and she would come running around the house.

A few years later she was bleeding at a neighbor's house in her patrol territory. Required my small animal trap similar as pictured in a post above. Lots of sutures and antibiotics, vet wasn't sure the cat would live. But from then on she became one of my neighbor's indoor-only cats and is happy and well integrated with the other cats.
 
   / Cat pic(s) #431  
Should be ok to share them here, it’s not a busy thread, or start a new one? I’d follow it.
I’m interested in different game cameras and the images they capture. I’ve been considering purchasing one with cel phone service for transmitting pics as text message.
Ok!

This photo below is kinda pet related. Twice now tame peacocks have 'adopted' us, like cats do. I assume they got brought out and abandoned in the country when they became mature and noisy, since they can shriek like a woman with her arms being ripped off.

But each of these birds must have been a beloved pet at some time. The first one shyly followed us around as we harvested apples then accompanied us back to the house and hung around. At nightfall he camped outside the guest cabin door and screeched to be allowed to go in there for the night, as obviously had been his custom before. No way, buddy. He eventually went up in the Redwood tree, then the next morning started his custom to warn us of the impending sunrise every morning. Loudly.

He obviously missed us when we shuttled back and forth to our primary home in the Central Valley. Wife took a cute picture when we returned after a week away. He came out of his nest in the flowerbed as soon as I got out of the car, to greet us and have a face to face conversation - obviously happy to see us back. He clearly felt he was part of the family.

This is a photo I've posted on here previously of the second peacock on the deck rail, a couple of years later. He wasn't so personable but he was clingy. And the does, settled down in the grass on a quiet winter day. Life is good. If anyone's interested I'll go look for my photos of that first friendly peacock.

p1920412rpeacock-anddeer-jpg.460430
 
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   / Cat pic(s) #432  
Should be ok to share them here, it’s not a busy thread, or start a new one? I’d follow it.
I’m interested in different game cameras and the images they capture. I’ve been considering purchasing one with cel phone service for transmitting pics as text message.
I have a Browning high resolution game cam and love it. Cats for sure but also other critters. Mine does not link to my phone but that's OK for me. High resolution is a must if you want discernible photos.
 
   / Cat pic(s) #433  
Ok!

This photo below is kinda pet related. Twice now tame peacocks have 'adopted' us, like cats do. I assume they got brought out and abandoned in the country when they became mature and noisy, since they can shriek like a woman with her arms being ripped off.

But each of these birds must have been a beloved pet at some time. The first one shyly followed us around as we harvested apples then accompanied us back to the house and hung around. At nightfall he camped outside the guest cabin door and screeched to be allowed to go in there for the night, as obviously had been his custom before. No way, buddy. He eventually went up in the Redwood tree, then the next morning started his custom to warn us of the impending sunrise every morning. Loudly.

He obviously missed us when we shuttled back and forth to our primary home in the Central Valley. Wife took a cute picture when we returned after a week away. He came out of his nest in the flowerbed as soon as I got out of the car, to greet us and have a face to face conversation - obviously happy to see us back. He clearly felt he was part of the family.

This is a photo I've posted on here previously of the second peacock on the deck rail, a couple of years later. He wasn't so personable but he was clingy. And the does, settled down in the grass on a quiet winter day. Life is good. If anyone's interested I'll go look for my photos of that first friendly peacock.

p1920412rpeacock-anddeer-jpg.460430
Yes, look for the first pics. Great picture.
 
   / Cat pic(s) #434  
I’m interested in different game cameras and the images they capture. I’ve been considering purchasing one with cell phone service for transmitting pics as text message.
I think real game cameras are more expensive than what I'm using. Mine are all the kind of wifi video recording cameras advertised to watch your driveway, front door, as a baby monitor indoors, etc. About $20~$35 each.

With what I've read about dismal security, (easily hacked) I don't use them indoors, and don't care if some hacker sees the wildlife.

First set was a pair of Arlo Pro v1 battery-operated video cameras with the needed hub/router. I saw this set at Goodwill for $12 and couldn't pass it up. Batteries in the cameras last a long time, 5 weeks typical with the camera set to low resolution, and these batteries must be 5 years old. The set is obsolete, and Arlo ended support for these a couple of years ago after some scandal of easily hacked. This had been a $250 set new and the software is a lot better than the later cameras I got from Amazon. Remote operation on their battery, standalone without a power or signal cable, is what makes these worthwhile. Each can be some 100 ft from the Arlo hub in the back window of your house, then the hub is on your house wifi. I think modern expensive Arlo stuff is a candidate if you want a real security system.

A year later I bought a $35 Wyze Cam V3, then later a second one. The first had good software for reviewing what it had recorded on the internal SD card. Second one was marketed identical but they want you to subscribe to see your photos hosted there, viewing what's on the card is klutzy. Then a third $19 Wyze OG, decent photos but PIA software. These all need to be powered by an ordinary phone charger, so near a building.

Finally I got a no-name similar China camera, $29 including a solar charger, so it can be set up remote so long as your house wifi can see it. Video ok, really crappy software to see what it recorded. Lots of complaints from people who did subscribe to their (China?) video hosting.

Dunno if these comments help you choose something. At least these are cheap to operate, no cell subscription needed, and usable without buying the monthly remote-hosted option.

* Added after seeing Peace's post: Everything I described can be seen from anywhere via internet, if you have the login password.
 
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   / Cat pic(s) #436  
One more critter photo, a favorite. I love wildlife. Then I'll pipe down. :)

A friend and I were conversing in front of the shop. This little guy popped up to watch for a while.

p1640474rgopherpeeksout-jpg.754755
Cute, albeit microtia.
 

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