About Me

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I'm retired and a freelance writer.

Check out these books, by me and my family, available for Kindle:

A Front Porch Trilogy
Where Do Socks Go?
We Count
My Brother's Plot

I have also published two more books on kindle but am currently unable to get the links to work. They are: The One Little Pig and Who Killed Freddie Mouse? Also check out other blogs and websites by me and my family:

My Life With Cats
My Life With Dogs

Friday, September 28, 2012

Moth Ball

This is Moth Ball's mother, Devil Eyes.



I could sit for hours watching two stray kittens play.  They are of such innocence.  They can spend an unnumbered amount of time just running at each other.  Even Mother is not beyond their playful antics. From my den window, I watched two kittens at a neighbor’s house across the street.  The mother cat, Devil Eyes, had found what she thought a safe place.  It was under the house through an open vent.  She would eat food put out at my house and then cross the street to call her two out for nursing.  When finished nursing, they played.  If unexpected danger came, a dog or human, through the vent they went running while Mother found other protective cover.  I wondered how they were able to get through such a small opening.  But I have read cats can squeeze through small openings.  But apparently that opening did stop the much bigger Mother cat.
I had noticed sometime that the kittens were there, but apparently the owner took a while in learning this.  When she did, she took steps to solve what she thought to be a problem.  She closed off the vent with heavy blocks.  But she did not stop with just that.  She had her son throw moth balls in her yard.  A deterrent she saw to rid herself of unwelcome cats.  On any given day, the smell of moth balls linger.  Before the mother cat made it in finding a new home, she lost one kitten to the traffic in our subdivision.  She moved the remaining one kitten under my house inside my vent.  
Many property owners don’t like a cat using their garden as a litter boxes.  Moth balls are a toxic and can kill a cat, a dog, or other animals.  If consumed, they can destroy the liver.  Moth balls are registered pesticides which are illegal to use for anything other than what is described on the container. Could not the owner find a safer deterrent?  I think so; information is available out there if one simply looks.
Cats are not necessarily the pesky creatures many like to believe.  In many cases, the good outweighs the bad.  Even I don’t like the cat using my garden as a litter box.  But I had a mole problem in my garden.  I don’t have one now with the stray cat coming around.  They also rid an area of mice and sometimes pesky insects.  I watch as my indoor cats take flying leaps to catch flies that may have entered the house through opening a door.  They make it better than a fly swatter.  
Devil Eyes has taught her little white kitten to eat solid food and drink water at my house.  The little white long haired tabby has been given the name Moth Ball.  It becomes a reminder of the neighbor across the street.  As for what is the kitten’s gender, it will reveal itself in time.  Meanwhile from a distance, a remarkable trait stands out.  Moth Ball has a set of beautiful blue eyes that stare back at me.  As she stares, I wink my eyes at her. I have heard this is a form of communication.  I think maybe the kitten is sizing me up with her stares.  Maybe someday; she will allow my touch.

Friday, September 14, 2012

In The Heat




            The summer of 2012 was a hot one.  It went down in the record books.  Across the nation, our state included, saw record consecutive days with the heat hitting over one hundred.  The first thing that crossed my mind was how do cats make it in this heat?  I found the comfort of my house with air-conditioning.   But a stray cat you can’t catch and bring indoors.  And so, I continued to feed them and keep fresh water out.  But for those cats out there that did not have this, I wondered about their survival.  It was among my few I fed and watered, I would see the heat take a victim.  It sure hit close to home!
            Joyce was one of Likes ‘Em Green’s kittens.  The cat, Likes ‘Em Green, was given the name by me.  The name came from a neighbor who abandoned her.  She lost her home.  The neighbor, knowing I had a garden, yelled from her house one day wanting some tomatoes.
            “I likes ‘em green,” she yelled.
            After the neighbor lost her house, she left the mother cat behind.  The mother cat moved in under the house next door.  She began immediately coming to our house to eat.  Then she would go back to the house next door.  She had litter after litter that would soon wind up eating at our house also.  Because the cat had been abandoned, I named her from the last words yelled by that neighbor.  She became Likes ‘Em Green.
            It was two years ago that two kittens from her latest litter came to eat.  I named the female kitten Joyce and the male kitten Neil.  Neil would wonder off and became victim to poisoning.  When taking him to the Humane Society barely alive, they verified poisoning.  But Joyce was a home body.  She never made it out of the two back yards.  From the time she came to eat, we could tell things weren’t right with Joyce.  When walking, she never got faster than a snail’s pace.  I would have to watch my step so as not to step or trip on her.  She was constantly gagging for air.  When she tried to sit down, she never made it to a full sitting position.  And in those two years, male cats never came near her.  There was no doubt in our minds that she had suffered birth defect or something had harmed her in some manner.  She would eat, but never before the other cats.  She ate and drank enough to keep her alive.  Being she was a stray, we never tried to pick her up as we probably would only add to her pain.  We really felt there was nothing we could do for her except let her live out her life in what comfort we could give her.  She was never lacking for food or water.  Eventually she left entirely the house next door and moved in our back yard.  She did nothing except lay around where she ate and drank.  Little kittens would try to play with her, but finally they moved on to another cat. 
            “I really don’t think Joyce will make it in the heat,” said my son.
            I was optimistic and replied, “She made it through winter.”  Last year was not a bad winter, but the previous one was.  I had to believe Joyce would make it.
            But the heat got her.  I found her barely off our patio.  On one of the hottest days, Joyce had passed away.  She was buried under the pear tree in our back yard.  It is hard not to get attached to a cat you see every day.  We miss her!