Monday, July 3, 2006

The Kittens Are Two Weeks Old

The kittens are two weeks old as of yesterday.  Their eyes are open, and they're starting to walk around in the queening box.  Mittens is spending more time outside the queening box checking out the rest of the house.  She's also making the kittens work a little more for their meals.  She's now lying at the opposite end of the box and making them come to her.  Last week, she got fed up with our "helping" the kittens find their way and started moving them out of the box and under the daybed.  Once we stopped picking the kittens up and let her mother them in her own way, she stopped moving them out of reach.  Now, we only pick them up if she's either lying on one of them or about to do so.

Mittens is putting more weight on recently.  You can almost not see her hip bones and shoulder blades.  She's also getting a little fiercer.  Last night, she met Romana in the hallway, and Romana was between her and the kitten room.  Romana hissed at Mittens, and Mittens chased her up onto the video cabinet, tail puffed out, and kept trying to jump up at her.  She couldn't figure out how to get up there by way of the climber, so she kept trotting back and forth in front of the cabinet, occasionally leaping up and putting her paws against the cabinet.  I'm not sure why Romana has suddenly taken to hissing at Mittens.  Perhaps it's because Romana had got used to being the "alpha female" and/or "Chief Fred Groupie", and she feels that Mittens has an advantage over her, being Siamese, intact, and having kittens.  Mittens also keeps trying to snuggle up with Fred, but Fred's not having any.  I'm not sure if it's because she ran off or because she has kittens that don't look at all Siamese, branding her a hussy, I suppose, in his book.

The kittens still have to be kept warm, so we have hardly turned the air conditioning on at all -- an unusual occurrence in July in Virginia!

Thursday, June 29, 2006

The Prodigal Daughter

Doesn't it just figure?  Finally, something blog-worthy happens, and I've been too busy living it to write about it until now.  The miracle we hoped for has happened.  Mittens has come home!  We had been checking the PetHarbor.com found cat listings every day (a wonderful resource, by the way, whether you've lost a pet, found a pet, or want to adopt one, and severely underpublicized in my opinion), and in early June, we saw a picture of Mittens at the Prince Georges County Shelter.  PG County is in Maryland, on the other side of DC from us.  She was undernourished and pregnant, but when we went to look at her, everybody who saw her and the pictures we brought agreed it was the same cat.  As if that weren't proof enough, she came right to the door of the cage and started demanding to know where I'd been all this time in the creaky-door miaou that she uses when she's not happy.  When we opened the cage door, she came straight into my arms and settled in.  When I saw that her whiskers were ticked brown and white, I was absolutely certain.

We brought her home on Saturday and took her to the vet on Monday.  Other than being undernourished and pregnant, he gave her a clean bill of health, no FLV, no FIV, no parasites, nothing that we had feared might befall her on her own.

On Father's Day, June 18, she had her kittens.  There were six, but one of them died on the next day.  The other five are thriving, and their eyes are beginning to open.  There are two black kittens, two grey-and-white ones, and one dark grey tabby.  Mittens is a very good momcat  to them all.  She is starting to put on weight of her own now;  her ribs and spine don't stick out any more, and her shoulder blades and hip bones don't stick up as much as they did when we found her.

The other cats' reactions to the kittens are as varied as the cats themselves.  Freddie took a look at them, saw that none of them looked Siamese, and looked at me as if to say, "Someone gave her the wrong kittens!  They're not Siamese!"  He's such a snob.  He's starting to accept them, but he's still not quite sure what they're going to do.  Romana looked at them and seemed to accept them, but as she walked away, she gave a little hiss as if to say, "Mine were cuter!"  Romana had had a litter before we met her.  Finn keeps going up to the queening box and looking at them and then walking away with a slightly disappointed air as he realizes they're not big enough to play tag with yet.  Puff just keeps coming in and looking at them as if she's trying to figure out what they are.

We still don't know how she got to PG County.  Our best guess is that someone picked her up after she calmed down from her mad dash and took her home with them.  Then when she went into heat, either she slipped out to find someone who could do something about it and got lost again, or else whoever had her couldn't stand the noise of a Siamese in heat (anyone who has heard one will understand, those who haven't don't know how lucky they are) and turned her out.  Either way, we're glad she's home. 

Sunday, March 26, 2006

The World's Worst Journal-Keeper

I think I must be the world's worst journal-keeper.  I write in this thing on average about once a month, even though things happen every day when you have cats.  The problem, of course, is that I'm too busy being in the moment to run off to the computer to write it down.  Recent developments include Finn getting the snip this week.  The vet said to keep him quiet the first night and that he would be normal by the next day.  In fact, he said that it was likely he'd still be woozy from the painkillers.  However, Finn woozy from anesthesia and painkillers doesn't seem that different from Finn wide awake.  Within a few minutes of getting him home, he had visited every food dish in the place and was playing Meezer Tag with Cocoa.

There's still no news of Mittens, although we are still putting food out for the strays and have seen a few of them in action.  However, we've also started getting raccoons at the feeding station.  We had an automatic feeder out there full of dry food, and they knocked the top half off and made off with the top half.  The next day, we put the remaining dry food out in a large plastic dish, and that night the raccoons made off with that!  We now have the dry food in a metal dish, and so far they have not been able to carry that one away.  If only we could be sure that Mittens is one of the strays we're feeding, though!

The cats are enjoying the Spring though.  We've started getting a wider variety of birds for them to watch.  The red-bellied woodpecker is back, and we've started seeing robins.  And today, I saw a tufted titmouse and a slate junco.  I haven't seen those two in over a year.

We've also started training Finn to leash and harness.  He still loves to run everywhere, which means I get plenty of exercise trying to keep up with him.  We tried putting a harness on Cocoa, but she went ballistic until we took it off her.  Romana takes well enough to the leash and harness, but she doesn't care much for being outside.  So for the moment, we are only taking the boys out.

However, as it's nearly feeding time, I suppose I should sign off for now.  Until next time (whenever that is)!

Saturday, February 11, 2006

A Lazy Saturday Evening

Well, I'm just sitting on the couch while all the cats are napping.  Cocoa has just woken up next to me and is washing her face, Finn is asleep on the top level of the cat tree, and Freddie is asleep on the back of the Green Chair.  Romana is asleep probably on Auntie Di's bed, or in the closet.  The rain has turned to snow.  I hope the stray moggies will be OK.  I need to put some food out for them soon.

Finnie has been having some stomach issues and had to go to the vet today.  The vet gave him some new medicine and told me to take up his food for 12 hours (Finn's, not the vet's).  So far, he seems to be handling it OK.  He hasn't actually eaten since about 12:30 or 1:00, so we can probably put some food down for him before we go to bed (assuming Target doesn't close early).  The others will get a special treat; they'll get to eat their supper on the counter where Finn can't reach!

Yesterday, I went to Petco to get more dry food for both my indoor and outdoor cats; and while I was there, I talked to a lady from AdvoCats, who said she will help get a group together to do a trap-neuter-return operation here at Idylwood Village West.  I'm e-mailing her Monday (per her request) to find out what I need to do.  We'll probably have to get permission from the management, and I expect we'll trap a few cats who actually have homes, because several of the moggies I've seen at the feeding station look pretty well cared for.  So either they belong to someone who lets them run loose, or they have several benefactors!  So far, we have seen a couple of black-and-white cats, a tortie, a solid black with white paws, a solid grey, and a grey tabby, but no Siamese.  Mittens remains missing, and I hope she's all right.  I don't like the idea of her being out in the snow.  If she's been taken in somewhere, I wish we could find out who has her.  Of course, I'd then have to go and get her back, and that could lead to a fight.

Saturday, January 14, 2006

Going Home

Well, tomorrow morning I go home.  I told Freddie this year I'd be home on his birthday!  I've been gone almost 10 days, and I'm looking forward to getting home and seeing all my little furry children.  If only Mittens would come home, too!  I am so tired right now that I can hardly type.  I'm trying my best not to come down out of Show mode until I get home, because I know that once I do, I'll crash completely.  Still, I have the whole next week to sleep, do laundry, and earn the cats' forgiveness.

It was a good show this year.  I didn't get to go out on the Show floor at all this year because Lisa was having balancing issues, which I usually ended up having to research as I ran her tapes because she didn't have power to run her calculator.  Next year, I'm going to suggest we pack along some batteries!  Still, Exhibitor Reg. ran as smoothly as I've ever seen it do, if not more so.  I kept looking up into the rafters for the other shoe.