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- Newsgroups: rec.pets.cats
- Path: sparky!uunet!math.fu-berlin.de!ira.uka.de!scsing.switch.ch!univ-lyon1.fr!ghost.dsi.unimi.it!rpi!uwm.edu!linac!att!cbnewsi!klf
- From: klf@cbnewsi.cb.att.com (karen.l.fenton)
- Subject: Re: Burying Food
- Organization: AT&T
- Distribution: na
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 20:11:25 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.201125.3429@cbnewsi.cb.att.com>
- Summary: And burying some fun for mom
- References: <C1F1EG.AG6@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu>
- Keywords: cats, food
- Lines: 41
-
- In article <C1F1EG.AG6@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu>, m2choi@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu (Margaret Haag) writes:
- > My cat, Sasha, occasionally "buries" her food. It will only
- > happen when she has been eating some canned food and can't
- > finish it all. Then she makes these ground-scratching motions.
- > Anyway, I asked my father-in-law about it, and he told me that
- > she is burying the food to save it for later : he thinks it is
- > something that all cats do by instinct, kind of like dogs
- > making little circles before they lie down.
- > This sounds like a reasonable explanation but who knows the
- > REAL reason cats do what they do?
- >
- When our Lolly (Lollipop) had a litter of kittens (in the early 70s -
- she was too quick for us: save the flames - we spayed her asap),
- she used to hunt cicadas in the back yard.
- For those who aren't familiar, these are LARGE insects which make
- a tremendous ratcheting sound with their wings, not unlike locusts.
- She sneak in with one when no one was around, and bury it in the kibble
- dish. Then she'd take up a perch on the kitchen counter, and "call"
- to her kittens. They'd come running, hit the food dish, and
- by disturbing the top layer, enbale the cicada to set off its ratchet.
- VERY LOUD.
- The kittens would go ass_over_tin_cups all over the floor and RUN.
- Anyone who thinks a cat can't smile should have seen mom's face,
- quietly smirking there on the counter.
-
- Lolly has run our house for 20 years now. She's ancient, she stinks,
- she's sick with a million problems, and her little scrawny bones are
- all mis-shapen with arthritis. She insists on sitting on your
- neck and purrs like mad. Don't even *think* about pushing her
- off. She's queen of the house and knows it. She still smacks the
- dogs around, eats like a pig, and gets her choice of seating
- in the family room. The vet says she's the oldest living Am.shorthair
- he's ever seen. Two years ago, he told us she wouldn't last the
- month. She's been snotty and cranky since she was a kitten, and
- we'll never find another one like her.
-
- To answer the question in the previous posting, cats do what they
- do to keep us guessing and to amuse themselves at our expense.
- Why else!!???!
-
- Karen
-