Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 4:33 pm
Perhaps, Don...but if this is the case, your recent comment in the "Hell Hot Enough" thread reflect the thought that cats did a piss-poor job of domesticating humans.
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My very first cat was 15 when I adopted my current brood. He'd been an only cat up until then, and basically had no idea that he was a cat. At first introduction, Mara trotted right up to him to say "Hi!" and his reaction was "Ewww! It tried to touch me!" From then on, they were on a mission to out-snob one another. A while later, I had a foster cat who didn't want to have anything to do with any of them, and it was fairly common to see 3 cats eating out of the same dish, all studiously pretending that the others didn't exist.aliantha wrote:
Cats seem to grow more independent as they grow older, and it also seems to depend on whether they've lived with other cats all along. Morgan and Tommy were best buds when they were kittens. Tommy still wants to socialize, but Morgan was an only cat for a couple of years and doesn't want to any more. I think they're 9 and 7 now, with Morgan being the older cat.
Of course they didn't do a good job, they're cats. They got bored and went to sleep about halfway through.Savor Dam wrote:Perhaps, Don...but if this is the case, your recent comment in the "Hell Hot Enough" thread reflect the thought that cats did a piss-poor job of domesticating humans.
Yeah, mine are both almost completely silent.Sorus wrote:Feral cats generally don't meow. Most of the 'meow' language was developed in order to communicate with humans, most of whom aren't capable of appreciating the nuances.