The Absolute Coolest Freekin' Cat Thread!

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Messages 203 - 222 of total 1004 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
ec

climber
ca
Jan 23, 2013 - 01:54am PT
MH,
Redundant...read thread before posting...
TomCochrane

Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
Jan 23, 2013 - 03:01am PT













Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Jan 23, 2013 - 03:33am PT
craig mo

Trad climber
L.A. Ca.
Jan 23, 2013 - 10:32am PT
Cats are cool
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Jan 23, 2013 - 10:45am PT
WyoRockMan

Trad climber
Flank of the Bighorns
Jan 23, 2013 - 10:58am PT
This is Nikki. We found her on Christmas eve 1996 frozen under the hood of my old truck. She was felt almost solid and at first I wasn't sure she was alive. Over the course of a few weeks she had lost her tail, ears, most of her toes and voice box. The cold seemed to have stunted her growth as well. She is still (at 17 years+) spry and feisty.


Last year I had a 3D "portrait" commissioned of Nikki for my wife's birthday. It turned out great.

Jim Leininger

Trad climber
tucson, az
Jan 23, 2013 - 11:02am PT
Now THAT it survivability!!! Hats off to her!!!
TwistedCrank

climber
Dingleberry Gulch, Ideeho
Jan 23, 2013 - 11:21am PT
That is a rock star cat. Holy cow!
guyman

Social climber
Moorpark, CA.
Jan 23, 2013 - 11:47am PT
Funny as heck.... and true.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3scQ0wq5zLE
justthemaid

climber
Jim Henson's Basement
Jan 23, 2013 - 10:20pm PT
Nikki looks like an awesome cat.

RIP Puffalina

TomCochrane

Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
Jan 24, 2013 - 05:17pm PT
SteveW

Trad climber
The state of confusion
Jan 24, 2013 - 05:26pm PT

JTM, I'm sorry! It's always so hard to lose a dear friend. . .
TomCochrane

Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
Jan 24, 2013 - 07:08pm PT
the albatross

Gym climber
Flagstaff
Jan 24, 2013 - 07:27pm PT
Awesome creatures.


ec

climber
ca
Jan 24, 2013 - 09:19pm PT
WyoRockMan,

You should have named her "Nippy," not Nikki!!!

Cool cat. Like the pic with the doll. Way funny!


 ed
Hardly Visible

Social climber
Llatikcuf WA
Jan 24, 2013 - 11:06pm PT
TwistedCrank

climber
Dingleberry Gulch, Ideeho
Jan 24, 2013 - 11:19pm PT
They would kill us and eat us if they had half the chance.

But because we worship them, they tolerate us.


Freekin' awesome, but half the human race are suckers for them. Here kitty kitty kitty.
Michelle

Trad climber
Toshi's Station, picking up power converters.
Jan 24, 2013 - 11:23pm PT
I do not have cats. I have pet teddy bears. Or ewoks. Same thing.
velvet!

Trad climber
La Cochitaville
Jan 24, 2013 - 11:46pm PT
Some kiwis don't seem to like the kitty cats...

http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2013/01/new_zealand_eliminate_cats_they_kill_endangered_bird_species_and_shouldn.html

Cats Are Evil
Why New Zealand is right to consider banning them in order to save its wildlife.

By Laura Helmuth|Posted Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2013, at 3:48 PM ET


You know what animal makes a good pet? No animal.

Dogs will bite you to death and then eat your corpse. Snakes will asphyxiate you, escape, infest the Everglades, and eat all its mammals. Pet parrots perpetuate a trade that upends ecosystems, and hamsters pass you dangerous zoonotic diseases. But perhaps the worst pet of all, environmentally speaking, is a cat.

Domesticated cats started out as parasites on human civilization. Unlike other species, and admittedly to their credit, they domesticated themselves. When humans started growing grain, the crops attracted rodents that attracted cats. Wild cats evolved into housecats, and they were quite useful for thousands of years, killing disease-ridden rats and mice and protecting our food stockpiles. But now that we have industrial farming, reliable food storage, and mostly mouse-proof houses, cats are mere parasites again. Playful and often affectionate parasites, sure, and adorable when young, but a scourge on the landscape.
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An economist in New Zealand named Gareth Morgan has made the logical and quite correct case that his island nation should eliminate its cats in order to protect its endangered birds. He means “elimination” in the most humane way possible: Existing pets should be spayed and neutered and allowed to live out their lives, but no new cats should be allowed to be born or imported. He is not advocating that people poison feral cats, as a former researcher at the Smithsonian National Zoo was convicted of doing a few years ago. Nor does he say people should shoot them, as particularly avid birdwatchers have done. That would be really wrong.

Morgan points out that your cat “is actually a friendly neighborhood serial killer.” He may sound like some wretched, obsessed Jonathan Franzen character, but his Cats To Go project isn’t meant as a caricature of environmentalism. He’s asking people to pledge to neuter their cats, keep them indoors, and not get any new ones.

Cats are a globally invasive species. They kill millions of birds each year in Wisconsin alone. Cats feast on endangered North American ground-nesting birds such as the California clapper rail, least tern, and piping plover, any one of which is cuter than a laundry basket full of kittens. A study in the D.C. area a few years ago showed that in some neighborhoods (neighborhoods in which a lot of people who really ought to know better let their beasts roam free), outdoor cats eat basically all juvenile birds as soon as they fledge.

Cats are particularly damaging in island ecosystems that are home to species found nowhere else on earth. A lot of island birds and mammals evolved in the absence of cat-size predators. They nest on the ground and have no defenses against an invasive species that plays with and then decapitates its victims. Cats have endangered or caused the extinction of bird species in Hawaii, Australia, the Chatham Islands, and New Zealand, among others. Morgan points out that 40 percent of New Zealand’s land birds are extinct, and 37 percent of the survivors are endangered.

Humans are responsible for most modern extinctions, whether through hunting, habitat destruction, introduction of invasive species, or other environmental disruptions. If we give up or at least contain our cats, wild animals will have more of a chance.
Roughster

Sport climber
Vacaville, CA
Jan 30, 2013 - 10:38pm PT
My two awesome cats just chillin' on the couch with me watching Wicked Tuna :-)

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