by gg3 » Wed 26 Dec 2007, 02:33:44
Hi Narz! "A birdie a day keeps the veterinarian away!":-)
Re. ye who likes plants but not animals: So you played with cats when you were a kid but now you shoot 'em. Interesting. What else did you do when you were a kid that you have a passionate hatred for now that you're a grownup?
Re. pope: Go look it up, should be easy enough to find. I found it in a book that detailed the perversions of popes through history, that was on the shelves at a local newspaper whose phone system I was responsible for years ago. Some of those popes were real sickos.
Re. X marks the spot: That occurs with male cats that aren't "fixed" by a certain age. If you get your male cat fixed early, that solves it. And also solves the problem of ferals breeding in the wild. Humans do the same thing, it's called grafitti, or nowadays, "tagging." Probably could be solved the same way as for cats, which will also help deal with the problem of humans breeding in the wild. Hey, what's good for the goose is good for the gander.
Many years ago I lived in a large collective household: ten people sharing one kitchen. There was a cat. One night I heard some scratching noise behind the oven: uh-oh, a mouse in the kitchen. I called the cat in, who quickly heard the noise and sat there flicking his tail from side to side and licking his chops. As I prepared to move the oven, he got in close. I pulled back the oven and not one, but four or five (!) mice jumped down from a niche they had created for themselves. The cat pounced and got three of them in one pounce. The other two escaped down the hole where the gas line came through, which must have had only 1/2" of clearance on one side.
The cat took his Happy Meal into another part of the kitchen and finished off the three mice quickly enough, and I proceeded to nuke the oven and surrounding area with bleach and then seal up the hole around the gas pipe with instant cement. No more mouse problems after that.
It's not that I have any hatred of mice; domestic ones in clean cages are kinda' cute and perfectly acceptable. But not wild ones in food storage & preparation areas. For this there will be cats, who can go where no mousetrap would reach.
We'll probably, almost certainly, have cats in the community. Their breeding habits will be properly controlled to assure genetically diverse replacements over time, without letting the breeders get loose to start a feral colony. They will probably be kept inside: in the barn, in houses, and so on, where they can do rodent patrol without getting distracted by birdies.
Because, you see, there's one more problem with cats and birdies that no one here has mentioned yet. If bird flu gets going, probably at a higher level of contagion and lower case fatality rate, direct or indirect contact with wild birds may prove to be a hazard. For which reason clothes lines should also be protected in some way. You don't want infectious bird poo on your underwear, any more than you want your cat to be munching on infected birdies.