home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.cats
- Path: sparky!uunet!pmafire!news.dell.com!natinst.com!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!rpi!batcomputer!cornell!rochester!galileo.cc.rochester.edu!prodigal.psych.rochester.edu!barlow
- From: barlow@prodigal.psych.rochester.edu (Rebel)
- Subject: Re: Saving mini-blinds
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.153737.12126@galileo.cc.rochester.edu>
- Sender: news@galileo.cc.rochester.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: prodigal.psych.rochester.edu
- Organization: University of Rochester - Rochester, New York
- References: <1eet30INNafr@charnel.ecst.csuchico.edu> <lgnpbnINNd57@jethro.Corp.Sun.COM>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 92 15:37:37 GMT
- Lines: 22
-
- In <lgnpbnINNd57@jethro.Corp.Sun.COM> avi@rix.Corp.Sun.COM (Ann Adamcik) writes:
-
- >In article 1eet30INNafr@charnel.ecst.csuchico.edu, msiegall@OAVAX.CSUCHICO.EDU (MARC SIEGALL) writes:
- >>Help! My cats will bend back (and break) my mini-blinds, so that they
- >>can look out the window at night (while I'm asleep). They push through
- >>the blinds and sit on the window sill.
- >>
-
- >I also have mini-blinds and a cat that likes to sit on the window sill and
- >look out. My solution is simply to leave the blinds raised enough so that
- >Maggie can get under them. I have no reason to close things up tight, and
- >leaving the blinds open a bit keeps them from getting bent and allows Maggie
- >to do what she enjoys...
-
- >-Ann
-
- We have this problem also! We figured that leaving one window blind open
- at night was a better solution than getting up every morning around 6 am
- to open the blind for her. :-)
-
- Jen
-
-