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That all sounds like a cat to me. If she was a pregnant stray, she might be especially food-motivated right now, or that could just be her personality. The vet can give you guidance about feeding and weight if you're concerned, but plenty of cats will yell for food even when they're being fed enough, so don't let that worry you.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 19:39 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 17:26 |
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Also if she was recently pregnant/nursing she's probably used to free feeding mass quantities of high-calorie food. When I foster moms with kittens they get unlimited kitten chow to make sure they have the calories to produce milk. Now that she's no longer needed as a milk factory she doesn't need all that food, but she's used to having it so she's going to scream for it. It might die down after a few weeks of you not giving in. Or she might just be like my dummy Odin who screams at me every time I'm by the food bowls even if he has food in it, because he wants me to pick up and set down the already full bowl again.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 19:59 |
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Marchegiana posted:Or she might just be like my dummy Odin who screams at me every time I'm by the food bowls even if he has food in it, because he wants me to pick up and set down the already full bowl again. Sweetheart has literally watched me use her dry food scoop to scoop up what's in her bowl and pour it right back in and been happy as a clam to eat it up. Cats are hilarious.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 20:03 |
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I posted in here a few months ago about adopting a new cat who a couple of my friends a few states over found hyperventilating and nearly dead outside of a library. Well, I've had the little guy for a couple of months now and I feel compelled to post pictures because he's adorable. His name is Frederic and he is a very very good boy It's been kind of funny to watch him learn to be a housecat. He was really young when my friends found him, probably just under a year old, so he was pretty adaptable. He's always been really friendly and really sweet. They had to teach him to eat out of a bowl instead of having to put the food on the ground for him, for example. Since living with me and my girlfriend, he's been steadily learning that cuddling with humans is good and comfy. He started out by sleeping on my pillow at night (which he still does sometimes) and eventually learned that if he snuggled up to my girlfriend she'd put her arms around him and he could just settle in and be the coziest little cat. He even gets along well with our other cat, Jasmine. She swipes at him sometimes but generally they coexist peacefully, and I've even caught her licking his fur a few times. My only real concern is that he has a chronic respiratory issue and sneezes out at least a couple of big globs of snot every day, which can be kind of tough to clean up. He doesn't seem too bothered by it, but I'm wondering if any of you are aware of any medications I should look for/ask a vet about that can at least control the symptoms. When I say "chronic" I basically mean "we paid the University of Wisconsin animal hospital $1000 to run a shitload of tests and they found absolutely no cause for this and he is healthy in every other way," so I feel pretty safe in assuming that he doesn't have an infection we can cure and it's just about managing the symptoms from here on out. It doesn't affect his appetite either, which is great--I know sometimes cats with chronic congestion don't eat well because they can't smell their food, but this little guy is a food vacuum and will eat any amount of any food we give him. Harrow fucked around with this message at 20:16 on Feb 4, 2019 |
# ? Feb 4, 2019 20:14 |
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Antivehicular posted:That all sounds like a cat to me. If she was a pregnant stray, she might be especially food-motivated right now, or that could just be her personality. The vet can give you guidance about feeding and weight if you're concerned, but plenty of cats will yell for food even when they're being fed enough, so don't let that worry you. Neither of our cats are starving but if they ever hear a can make noise even if it's just being shuffled in a cabinet they come running to tell me all about how starved they are.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 20:18 |
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Ditto. I keep Mel's food in a cabinet under my bathroom sink, and if I so much as bump the door she comes dashing over from wherever she is to jump up on the counter and do her "feed me!" routine. When I'm actually feeding her she also really likes to nuzzle the food cans, which actually delays the process of feeding her because I can't open the drat can and pour it in her bowl when she's too busy cuddling it. Wet food update: finally found a food she seems to really like and is also relatively cheap on Amazon, so I'll go with it for now. Wet is still a huge pain in the rear end compared to dry and it means I have to deal with her fits of hunger at the bowl instead of just letting her graze, but doctor's order and all.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 20:25 |
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Sydin posted:Ditto. I keep Mel's food in a cabinet under my bathroom sink, and if I so much as bump the door she comes dashing over from wherever she is to jump up on the counter and do her "feed me!" routine. When I'm actually feeding her she also really likes to nuzzle the food cans, which actually delays the process of feeding her because I can't open the drat can and pour it in her bowl when she's too busy cuddling it. This sounds adorable. Is there video?
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 22:57 |
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Sydin posted:Ditto. I keep Mel's food in a cabinet under my bathroom sink, and if I so much as bump the door she comes dashing over from wherever she is to jump up on the counter and do her "feed me!" routine. When I'm actually feeding her she also really likes to nuzzle the food cans, which actually delays the process of feeding her because I can't open the drat can and pour it in her bowl when she's too busy cuddling it. This is me at the cat adoption place I volunteer for. Touch the food drawer, they all come running. I can barely get a can open without some of them jumping on the counter and nuzzling my hand.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 00:06 |
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Harrow posted:When I say "chronic" I basically mean "we paid the University of Wisconsin animal hospital $1000 to run a shitload of tests and they found absolutely no cause for this and he is healthy in every other way," so I feel pretty safe in assuming that he doesn't have an infection we can cure and it's just about managing the symptoms from here on out. It doesn't affect his appetite either, which is great--I know sometimes cats with chronic congestion don't eat well because they can't smell their food, but this little guy is a food vacuum and will eat any amount of any food we give him. We've been on this journey with our old cat. About 5 or 6 years ago she started sneezing a lot and we've spent thousands on tests without any clues. There is a pill (don't recall it was very common) that helps the symptoms but the vet said it's up to us whether it's worth the bother to the cat. We tried giving it to her every other day for a few months and it definitely helped. Unfortunately, she never stopped throwing a fit over the pills. She refused all attempts to coat the pill in something else (even tuna as she'd just eat around the pill) and so had to be held down every time and get the pill shoved down her throat. This seemed to bother her far more than the sneezing so we gave up on it.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 00:23 |
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Kyrosiris posted:Sweetheart has literally watched me use her dry food scoop to scoop up what's in her bowl and pour it right back in and been happy as a clam to eat it up. Yup, Buffy has become more vocal as she ages but she's always had this thing where she'll come and sit next to me slowly getting closer until I get up, leader her downstairs to the kitchen and show her what's in her bowls. She then eats it and I can leave again but she won't just go down by herself.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 00:52 |
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Len posted:Neither of our cats are starving but if they ever hear a can make noise even if it's just being shuffled in a cabinet they come running to tell me all about how starved they are. I free feed my kittens but if they are awake enough to realize that I am heading into the kitchen? They will follow me and let me know how very important it is that I open the food cupboard and provide them with more food. Even if they currently have uneaten food waiting for them, which they always do. Should I prove particularly uncooperative there then the one of them will stretch up (to show how big and mighty she is?) then sink her murder claws into my kneecap as she purrs and curves up her floofy tail.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 01:38 |
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You all are lucky. If I so much as dare to enter the kitchen. The cats will come sprinting and leap on me claws out and climb on my back to watch me prepare their food. they just sit there watching as I put their bowls on the floor and jump off. I am now always wearing a vest when I go to the kitchen. They have now been sterilized and they have become so vocal. They aren't meowing for food but to play. They wont come to me. they will sit outside the room. Meowing. Run to the play area as soon as i stand up
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 12:57 |
I feed my cat once a day and that's it. Occasionally topping up the bowl with just a little bit as she goes to bed. Is that weird? It's an all in one dry food. Like.. she's not dead..
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 13:16 |
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Infinitum posted:I feed my cat once a day and that's it. Occasionally topping up the bowl with just a little bit as she goes to bed. We fill their bowls in the morning with a cup each since they're alone for over 8 hours and then put 1/2 cup in each before bed. And mine are also still alive. They eat a dry food kept in the living room next to their food dishes but they still flip poo poo when I touch a can
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 13:43 |
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Yeah, we're the same way with Sweetheart. She has a dry food bowl that gets kept topped up at night for her through the work day, plus gets wet food for breakfast.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 14:52 |
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FuzzySlippers posted:We've been on this journey with our old cat. About 5 or 6 years ago she started sneezing a lot and we've spent thousands on tests without any clues. There is a pill (don't recall it was very common) that helps the symptoms but the vet said it's up to us whether it's worth the bother to the cat. We tried giving it to her every other day for a few months and it definitely helped. Unfortunately, she never stopped throwing a fit over the pills. She refused all attempts to coat the pill in something else (even tuna as she'd just eat around the pill) and so had to be held down every time and get the pill shoved down her throat. This seemed to bother her far more than the sneezing so we gave up on it. Hopefully he'll be okay with pills. Our other cat takes pills really easily with Pill Pockets (soft treats you can hide pills in) so maybe he'll follow suit. It's worth a shot, at least.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 15:23 |
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Does anybody have any suggestions on how to deal with a cat that wont' quit knocking over our pet waterer? I've tried giving him better water thinking he was displeased with tap water, and I've made it a point not to reward him with any attention when he does it, but the behavior persists. I'm thinking about just strapping the waterer to the wall somehow but if anyone has any ideas that doesn't involve drilling holes in rental walls, I would be all ears.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 21:07 |
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Kibbles n Shits posted:Does anybody have any suggestions on how to deal with a cat that wont' quit knocking over our pet waterer? I've tried giving him better water thinking he was displeased with tap water, and I've made it a point not to reward him with any attention when he does it, but the behavior persists. I'm thinking about just strapping the waterer to the wall somehow but if anyone has any ideas that doesn't involve drilling holes in rental walls, I would be all ears. Instead of going for the wall, some perforated steel used to strap it to a plywood base would probably work just fine, or you can get excessively creative... http://quinndunki.com/blondihacks/?p=3023
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 21:26 |
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You could glue a big weight to it/inside it/under it.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 21:28 |
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Boogalo posted:Instead of going for the wall, some perforated steel used to strap it to a plywood base would probably work just fine, or you can get excessively creative... Ah, good idea. I could attach it to a plywood base with some L brackets. Thanks for the suggestion. That would also serve as a buffer between the water and my hardwood floor, because he's still gonna scoop it out and fling it everywhere if he can't straight up topple the thing. taqueso posted:You could glue a big weight to it/inside it/under it. I thought about this as well but anything heavy enough seems to be considerably more expensive than the basic hardware required to just mount it to something. He's a pretty big boy and it's surprising what he can push over if he wants.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 21:37 |
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It depends on the cat/cats. With one cat it's not a problem to free feed. With two you have to be sure one fatty isnt eating all the food meant for two cats or if one's on a special diet you've to watch them etc.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 22:50 |
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My cats have discovered/decided that bread is food, they mangled open the wrapper on a loaf of bread then, just to be helpful and considerate, seem to have taken a single bite out of each slice in the entire loaf. It was a nice wholemeal loaf and I am in the UK, so no added sugar or anything, it is probably not bad for them, just empty carbs which they must have really liked given just how much of the bread they ate despite having dry food available. Odd little creatures.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 23:24 |
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Is one of them named Boris, by any chance? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wScyJp38XjE Anyway, in news about my cat, Lucy's gained a positive association with her harness and pesters me to take her out whenever I'm holding it. It's probably come about because the deal we've seemingly struck up; I tell her (via leash-pulling) where not to go, and she decides (also via leash-pulling) whether or not she stays in one place. Thought this might be relevant to anyone thinking of or trying to harness train their cats; no matter what, they're still gonna be cats. She also met a dog. Kind of. From across the street. We were walking a little bit down the pavement when she suddenly pancaked herself. I wondered why, and looked where she was looking and cute curly dog. It was a little tense as the pets involved didn't know what to think and the owners were hoping the critters would want to get closer. The tension eventually got too much for Lu and she ran back up the driveway to where she last saw a juicy lizard. (It has so far eluded her.) Next day, we were out there again. There was no dog, but I think Lucy wanted to cross the road to make sure. The tiny grey idiot stood in the middle of it for a while because she's only ever crossed it once before. Thank gently caress it was 5 am.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 23:57 |
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Cats need fiber too!
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 00:33 |
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Patrat posted:My cats have discovered/decided that bread is food, they mangled open the wrapper on a loaf of bread then, just to be helpful and considerate, seem to have taken a single bite out of each slice in the entire loaf. If we don't keep our bread up rear end in a top hat absolutely will hunt the loaf and drag it under the bed for later eating. He once took a bag of rice there as well which was super weird. Kibbles n Shits posted:Does anybody have any suggestions on how to deal with a cat that wont' quit knocking over our pet waterer? I've tried giving him better water thinking he was displeased with tap water, and I've made it a point not to reward him with any attention when he does it, but the behavior persists. I'm thinking about just strapping the waterer to the wall somehow but if anyone has any ideas that doesn't involve drilling holes in rental walls, I would be all ears. We ended up getting the Catit flower fountain which stopped rear end in a top hat from playing in his water. His previous dishes he would push around and watch the water move, drown things in the dish, and/ or rinse his paws off in the water. With this he can't see the water slosh and there isn't room to drown things. Now if we could just get him to stop covering his food dish. I woke up this morning and he had drug junk mail from across the room and put it over his dish. Why does does it we don't know but he's adamant that paper/plastic bags go over the food dish.
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 03:18 |
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He's hiding his kill for later. Either cover it for him or leave some paper for him to use.
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 05:31 |
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loving smarter than my MIL's cat. She just scratches at the hardwood floor, trying so hard to bury her food with it.
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 06:38 |
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Len posted:We ended up getting the Catit flower fountain which stopped rear end in a top hat from playing in his water. His previous dishes he would push around and watch the water move, drown things in the dish, and/ or rinse his paws off in the water. With this he can't see the water slosh and there isn't room to drown things. Hmm, interesting. How heavy is it? This would also please our other cat who insists on drinking from a running faucet only. Not sure how the dog would react.
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 06:42 |
Kibbles n Shits posted:Does anybody have any suggestions on how to deal with a cat that wont' quit knocking over our pet waterer? I've tried giving him better water thinking he was displeased with tap water, and I've made it a point not to reward him with any attention when he does it, but the behavior persists. I'm thinking about just strapping the waterer to the wall somehow but if anyone has any ideas that doesn't involve drilling holes in rental walls, I would be all ears. I went through this with Glitch. She just kept knocking over every different style of bowl I'd buy for her, rubber mates, splashing water everywhere, etc, etc. Nothing seemed to stick. What worked for me was getting a raised bowl - This one to be precise Essentially it brought the water up closer to her face so she didn't need to stretch her neck down as much, with the added benefit of a higher wider centre of gravity making it tougher to knock over. Now she has showers and leaves her water bowl alone. Cats are weird!
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 07:36 |
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Kibbles n Shits posted:Hmm, interesting. How heavy is it? This would also please our other cat who insists on drinking from a running faucet only. Not sure how the dog would react. I don't know the exact weight but it holds 3 liters which Google says is almost 7 pounds
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 11:20 |
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 19:46 |
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What is the reigning theory as to why cats love boxes so very much?
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 08:30 |
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They hate us and want to be shipped off.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 08:34 |
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MAKE NO BABBYS posted:What is the reigning theory as to why cats love boxes so very much? Scientists have pondered this very question, pouring millions into resesrch documenting and peer-reviewing thousands of cats with millions of boxes. Their final report was just one sentence; "If they [Cat, x1 (one)] fits, they sits".
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 08:41 |
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I think the best guess is they like enclosed spaces because it makes them feel safe, and sitting in even a shallow box is more enclosed than no box. and I guess a circle drawn on the floor is potentially enclosed so probably safer too, better sit in it just in case.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 12:29 |
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Yeah...
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 14:28 |
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Neddy Seagoon posted:Scientists have pondered this very question, pouring millions into resesrch documenting and peer-reviewing thousands of cats with millions of boxes. They might also sits even if they do not fits, so perhaps it would be "Cat, x0.25"
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 16:19 |
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Ema Nymton posted:They might also sits even if they do not fits, so perhaps it would be "Cat, x0.25" If the box breaks it becomes bigger for sits. There was a week recently where assholes favorite spot was a destroyed shoebox in the middle of the floor. Absolutely no box shape was left but he laid there proud of his work.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 16:34 |
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Len posted:If the box breaks it becomes bigger for sits. There was a week recently where assholes favorite spot was a destroyed shoebox in the middle of the floor. Absolutely no box shape was left but he laid there proud of his work. Yep. Sweetheart's favorite lounging place is on top of a plastic bag sitting on a broken-down box. I tried to pick both of them up to get rid of them and she wouldn't stop crying until they were put back.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 16:35 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 17:26 |
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Hello cat thread. I work at a vets and am after cat owner advice please. We’re inviting clients to come in for an evening talk, topic to be decided, and obviously want it to be something people would want to come to. It can be on just about anything cat-related but we already did one on basic first aid not long ago so not that. Ideally it wants to be something with broad appeal. If we make it too specific, like diabetes or hyperthyroidism or whatever, that’s probably only interesting if you’ve got a cat with that. Please give me suggestions so I Iook good at work.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 17:16 |