Showing posts sorted by relevance for query mama kitty rabbit. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query mama kitty rabbit. Sort by date Show all posts

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Mama Kitty teaches her children to hunt

Warning:  A wild rabbit is going to die at the end of this story; the pictures aren't terribly graphic, but if the death of a rabbit bothers you, you may want to move along. 


Cliff and I were sitting in the living room when he exclaimed, "What's Mama Kitty got now?  It's big, whatever it is!"  


I grabbed the camera and ran to see:  It was a young rabbit, almost the size of her growing kittens.  I followed her to the front of the barn; she laid her prize down for her two girls...

  and then gave the task over to them.  Notice how she watches closely in the background.  What you can't see is her tail twitching as she watches.  

The girls aren't quite sure what to do with something this big.  Usually Mama brings them mice or moles.  Now, watch what happens next.  It turns out the bunny isn't as dead as we thought.  Mama Kitty has to save the day.  

Did you see her spring into action?  Now we know why she feels it necessary to sit close by on the sidelines.  Sometimes these youngsters don't pay close attention to detail.  

Mama Kitty stops the bunny and once again moves to the sidelines, tail twitching to indicate that if the kids mess up again, she will step in.

Now the real hunter moves in:  That's Jakie, the only boy of the litter, and he seems to end up with most of the takeout meals Mom brings home.  He will do the killing.  Obviously Mama has lots of trust in him, because she has now turned her back (although she is ever vigilant).  

Say good night, Rabbit.  

Notice any similarity?

I was touched by the inborn wisdom of Mama Kitty.  She only interfered when necessary.  She is teaching her children to survive, knowing they won't always have her around.

Friday, November 20, 2020

Ramblings

Remember my problems with the DVD player last weekend?  Some of you thought the problem was with the DVD's themselves, figuring I needed to wipe them off in case there was dirt on them.  I didn't do that, since the silly player did the same thing with every DVD I loaded into it.  Yesterday I put "Little Big Man" in it and let it play; I wasn't really watching it, had the sound almost off, but I wanted to see if it would play the whole thing.  It did.  Apparently the thing just needed to be used, and that good old country music on the Country's Family Reunion DVD I put in it last week was just the ticket.  I don't know what to tell you; strange things happen, especially when I'm involved.  

Mama Kitty has always been a hunter; if you want to see her in action, check out this blog entry from 2012, when she gave her final litter of children a hunting lesson.  These days, it seems she only hunts moles, although I'm sure she wouldn't turn down a baby rabbit.  When we look out the north window into the pasture we often see her waiting patiently for prey.  And, typical cat, she has been known to leave a mouse or mole on the front porch for me.  Mama Kitty is soft-spoken, and meows almost in a whisper.  I was sitting in my chair near the front door yesterday and heard a cat meowing loudly a few times.  Mama Kitty's one remaining son, Jake, is a loudmouth, but he and Buttons, another cat I wasn't too fond of, left us for some reason.  Still, Jake shows up in the barn every couple of months, eating our dry cat food.  I could have sworn it was his voice I heard on the porch, and even told Cliff, "Well, I guess loudmouth Jake decided to bless us with his presence."

Imagine my surprise when I opened the door and saw the usually reserved Mama Kitty there with a mole laying in front of her.  She looked up at me, meowed (in her typical whisper instead of a yowl this time), and poked at the mole with her nose, then looked back at me.  I understood she was proud of it and wanted me to have it, so I stepped out and stroked her and told her what a great hunter she was.  I picked up the mole by its tail as I petted the cat, then put it down and told her I'd already had breakfast.  She stared at me.  Since Blue was there, I offered the mole to him, but Mama darted quickly over and snatched the mole before he could pick it up, then started playing with it as though she was a kitten again, even to the point of batting it off the porch and jumping down into the yard to continue her game.  That old cat amazes me at how much fun she seems to have since I began feeding her a tiny little packet of wet food every day.   

Our wonderful weather is in the process of changing.  It's cloudy today and supposed to rain this afternoon.  Even so, the highs are forecast to be in the 50's for the next week, which isn't so bad for November.

I couldn't find anything I wanted to make for dinner (that's the noon meal here, because I was raised around country folks), so I went to All-recipes.com to find something different to make with ground beef.  I found a recipe for Spanish Rice Bake, saw I had all the ingredients, and read some reviews.  I noticed several people mentioned there's no need to dirty up three pans and put it in the oven, because you can make it in a heavy skillet on the stovetop; so I took their advice.  One ingredient I didn't have was chili sauce, but I googled "ingredients in chili sauce" and found out I could make a cup of it with tomato sauce, brown sugar, allspice, and vinegar.  It puzzles me they call it chili sauce since there's no chili powder in it, but the final casserole was delicious.  I had to make twice as much chili sauce as I needed in order to use the whole 8-ounce can of tomato sauce, but I put the rest in a half-pint canning jar and froze it to use the next time I make this stuff.

Here's a picture I took four years ago of the horses that were boarded here.  It made me smile to see it. 


A month or so ago I ran out of Lipton teabags and put it on my shopping list.  However, Walmart didn't have any single Lipton teabags.  I'm used to shortages now, so I wasn't surprised.  The only other individual teabags on the shelf were the Great Value brand, so I bought a box of 100.  They weren't awful, but the tea was weak.  I hate to throw something away when I paid good money for it, so I began using two of the teabags for one cup of tea; that was better, although the taste still wasn't as good as Lipton.  Yesterday I used the last two teabags out of that box and happily opened a the Lipton tea, which I finally found on Amazon for the normal price.  I had to stop drinking coffee when I had that bout of stomach problems, but I still buy it for Cliff.  I honestly haven't missed it much at all.  

OK, enough of this drivel.  I have a hot cup of tea sitting next to me and two books on the iPad to read.  Oh, and a whole cabinet full of DVDs I haven't watched in awhile!

I'm glad they're hurrying up with Covid 19 vaccine.  I'll be getting mine the minute they tell me it's available.

Yours truly

Donna

Thursday, January 08, 2015

Animal behavior

I find it interesting to watch the domestic animals around me and try to figure out what makes them tick.  It amazes me how much they know, things nobody teaches them... they just know.  

I haven't had a house cat for years, and don't want one.  I do get a kick out of watching the two fat barn cats, though.  Even though they have never been in our house, both of them like to station themselves either at the front porch or the back, watching us through a window, if possible.  If Mama Kitty is on the back porch looking through a window and I lower the blinds and close them, she will move to the front porch.  Cats just feel so entitled, don't they?  Mama Kitty seems rather unique to me because of the way she follows us around the place.  She even went on our walks with us most days.  She was a wonderful mother, back before we had her spayed.  I did THIS ENTRY about her teaching her children to hunt.  I was amazed!  She caught the young rabbit and brought it to them, still alive, then turned her back on them so they would have to deal with it themselves.  But when the rabbit got away from them and ran for cover, Mama Kitty chased after it, caught it, and brought it back.  

Dogs are interesting, but for the most part they become people.  They're like children:  all lovable, all somewhat spoiled, all of them having different skills.  They are four-legged people, only they aren't judgmental and they forgive a lot better than we do.  This is why so many people have dogs that they treat as if they were their children.  Because dogs serve that purpose, but they never turn into juvenile delinquents or run away from home.

Chickens are stupid, but still interesting.  It seems to be built into their genetic code to lay eggs in a nest.  You can put young chickens in a hen house and wait for them to grow up and lay eggs.  Put a couple of nests in the hen house and when they are ready to lay eggs, they somehow know they are supposed to get in the nest... that's where they lay eggs.  Unless they have the misfortune to be in one of those huge egg factories, in which case five or six of them are shoved into a small cage and they have no choice but to lay their eggs right there.  

I enjoy watching Grace-the-cow raising three babies, two of which are adopted.  I allow them 15 minutes together twice a day.  When I go back outside to separate them after their time is up, the two Holsteins have stopped nursing because the milk is all gone.  Grace's natural-born daughter, Gypsy, though, is still attached to a teat, even though she isn't getting anything from it.  When I call Grace into the barn, I have to fend her calf off or it would follow her out into the pasture.  

After the Holsteins have stopped nursing because the milk is gone, they go up near Grace's head; you could almost say they are cuddling with her.  Sometimes she licks them, just like she would her own baby.  And you would think she really believes they are hers.  

But she is smarter than that.  I learned this last week when I turned her out with all three calves.  Once she had full access to her daughter, she couldn't have cared less about those other two.  It's amazing, I tell you!  

Another thing that I've mentioned before is this:  Calves fed with a bottle will almost always try to suck on one another, on any body part they can get hold of.  But these calves, after spending only 30 minutes a day with the cow, sucking on an actual teat, have never shown the slightest inclination to suck on one another.  

I'm glad I have some animals to observe.

Thursday, December 03, 2020

Cats, banana bread, and Facebook

Sometimes having pets is as worrisome as having children.  They're always getting into something dangerous or running off, and we always think the worst, don't we?  Yesterday Blue followed me to the chicken house.  He loves to be there when I turn the chickens loose for a couple of reasons:  He likes to chase them, scaring them half to death; and then he likes to lick up the leavings in their slop pan.

I turn all leftovers... stale bread, unfinished oatmeal, mashed potatoes that have been in the refrigerator too long, sour milk, moldy cream cheese or sour cream, etc. into their favorite treat, which I call slop.  They can't eat hard, raw vegetables, but they do love fresh tomatoes, even half-rotten ones.  Yesterday I received three gallons of milk that was two weeks past the use-by date.  I kept one gallon out on the cold back porch to mix in with the chickens' slop, and put the other two jugs of milk in the freezer to use after the first gallon is gone, pouring a little of the jug of milk out to give it room to expand when it freezes.

Of course, since the slop is a thick liquid, chickens daily leave a layer of nasty-looking, dried slop in the bowl because they can't peck up the very last traces with their pointy beaks.  Blue feels that's his portion.  Yesterday as usual he followed me to the chicken house, chased the chickens when they came out, and went in the coop for his nasty treat.  

I feed Blue and Mama Kitty their wet food at 4:30 PM.  Mama Kitty was waiting at the front door; I called Blue, who never fails to come running from wherever he is because he knows it's time to eat at 4:30.  This time, he didn't come.  I knew better than to worry:  He's a quite intelligent cat, he's lived outside most of the time since I got him as a kitten.  But someone might steal a cat of his style and intelligence.  Or maybe he walked to a neighbor's house who took him for a feral cat and they let him in because he's so gorgeous; if that happened, they'd be sure to keep him.  What if the horses next door stepped on him?  I had that happen to one of Mama Kitty's grown daughters.  I called for him at least every 20 minutes until bedtime, praying for God to watch over him.

I was up at 3 AM this morning, but I waited until I saw the grandson leave for work at five to look for Blue.  I went to the barn calling him, and he came out of the same spot he always appears from in the morning, as though nothing had happened.  I have no idea where he was at his favorite meal-time yesterday, but I'd bet money that he was somewhere he couldn't hear me calling, because he sure likes to eat.  Cliff is on the exercise bike; he just looked out the window and saw Blue coming through the cat with a mouse in his mouth.  All is well.

I am back on Facebook, but with a difference.  First of all, I un-followed everyone.  That keeps me from going down rabbit holes caused by a funny joke or story.  Second, I made a resolution not to post anything on Facebook.  If someone asks a question of me on my timeline, or just wants to talk, I will respond to them.  I think that's going to work for me, but if I go back to my old ways, I'll leave again.  I don't intend for Facebook to distract me from real life again.

I acquired a lot of over-ripe bananas yesterday as well as the sour milk for the chickens.  They are perfect for making banana bread; I decided to make two loaves, one for now and one for the freezer.  I decided to find a different recipe on allrecipes.com and came up with a winner, so I'm going to share it with you.  There's one very odd thing in the recipe:  The lady who submitted the recipe said to slice the bananas instead of mashing them.  Something told me that just wouldn't be right, because who wants to take a bite of banana bread and bite into a soft, slick chunk of cooked banana?  Reading the reviews, most cooks said they went ahead and mashed the bananas.  One woman who did slice them said it was awful that way.  So if you try the recipe, be sure to mash the bananas so that you have one cupful.  Other than that, the recipe makes absolutely the best banana bread I've ever tasted, although it may be a trifle sweet for some folks.  To Cliff and me, it's perfect.  Click HERE for the recipe.  

And the only other thing I have is something I happened to see on Facebook that I wanted to share, but of course I'm not sharing things there any more; that's the reason I am blogging more often.  I save my stories for the blog.  So here's what made me smile this morning.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Missing cat

For three days now, I have not seen Mama Kitty.  I'm pretty sure she's dead.  She wasn't one to wander across roads, or even to neighboring properties, very much.  Since we had her neutered, she had no reason to go elsewhere.  Cliff thinks perhaps a coyote or fox got her.
  
I've been accustomed to finding two cats outside my door when I awake in the morning:  Jake, yowling and complaining, and Mama Kitty, a cat of few words: waiting silently, ready to lead me to the barn where they are fed... just in case I forgot where their food is kept.  


Mamma Kitty moved here when neighbors moved away and left her and her children behind.  I had no intention of taking her in, but she sneaked her way into my heart, winning me over with the resourceful methods she had of feeding her kittens.  She scrounged in the garbage and hunted for food.  Not a day went by that she didn't kill a mouse, a bird, or a rabbit.  Whatever it took to keep her family from starving.  To see her in action, click HERE.  


Most days she went with us on our walk and stayed with us from start to finish.  


Through the fallen leaves


and even in the snow.  

I know we can find another cat or two.  A local farmer has already offered me some, and if I take a couple and they stick around, I'm sure they will catch mice and rats, because they are already barn cats.  

But where do you find a cat that will take walks with you?  

I'm gonna miss that cat.

Monday, August 12, 2024

Rain

 For two days I googled our weather online and had a bit of hope for my garden.  Sunday night was supposed to have an 84% chance for rain.  I went to bed last night hearing distant thunder in the north and woke up at 4 A.M. hearing it from the south.  I looked out and the sidewalks weren't even wet.  *sigh*

However, I did hear raindrops gently coming down an hour later; at 6 o'clock, which is the time I let Gabe get up and eat, the rain stopped.  That's a good thing because Gabe hates to do his business in the rain.  There was just enough time for that, and then the gentle rain began again.  I saw online that the clouds were headed down I-70 to St. Louis and thought, "If only we get half an inch, it would help so much."

Yesterday I planted several things for a fall garden, so I had tilled the "concrete" into dry dust.  With no moisture at all, I made rows with my hoe, then took the hose and put water in the dirt of the rows so seeds would have something to start them growing.  That was fortunate, because after being tilled, that dirt soaked every drop of rain as far down as possible.  The rain is over now, and the rain gauge has in it exactly six inches of precious water.  The are more chances for rain this week, but not as likely to actually happen. 

A recent picture of my two cats, Mama Kitty and Blue, looking over the pasture behind the house.

Some of you might enjoy seeing 14-year-old Mama Kitty teaching her last litter of kittens to hunt back in 2012.  If so, you'll find it HERE(warning:  a young bunny rabbit died that day.  You have been warned.)


Tuesday, March 30, 2021

little tidbits from my life, in no particular order

 I finally spoke to the neighbor whose German Shepherds kept coming over to use my yard for a toilet and then proceed to try and kill my dog, Gabe.  She said she'd keep them up, then told me my three chickens had been coming over there.  I told her I'd find a home for the chickens, and within two days, the chickens were gone.  A few days later, the dogs are running loose again a lot of the time.  I chased one home yesterday. 

I am really content with the home I found for the chickens, though:  A young woman who grew up next door was glad to take them.  She said her oldest daughter, maybe eight years old, had been wanting chickens.  When she brought our cage back a week later, she said both hens now come running up to them and they can pick them up any time.  So so my coronavirus hens have made a little girl very happy.  I do miss my fresh eggs; believe me, there's a difference between really fresh eggs and eggs from the store.

This morning when I was practicing my left-handed writing, I reached a milestone:  I noticed I was writing at about the same speed I use with my right-hand.  Go, me!  It shouldn't have taken me that long, but I wasn't writing enough every day to improve.  Once I started writing about what I read in the Bible every day, it's like a switch turned on in my mind (or in my hand?) and everything worked properly.

I have met some challenges left-handers face, though:  Spiral notebooks!  What an aggravation.  My left had has to try and write neatly while laying on metal spirals.  I found out they make left-handed spiral notebooks and went as far as adding it to my Amazon cart; then I realized that since I use both sides of a sheet of paper in a spiral notebook because I'm cheap, I would be dealing with the metal on one side anyway.  Duh.

My dog knows a lot of human words that most dogs don't.  For instance, if I've been sitting down for awhile when he asks to be taken out, I will have to go pee first, because my bladder is the same age of the rest of my body.  As I get out of my chair, I'll tell him I have to go to the bathroom first, and he will head down the hall to the bathroom before I am fully standing, to monitor my activity.  And he has finally learned to go where I point when I see him going the wrong direction; some dogs seem to know this instinctively. but Gabe had to learn it.

  I always put the shock collar on him to go on my walk now, and seldom have to use it.  Even when I do use it, I use the "vibrate", not the shock, unless he is about to go somewhere he could be run over or get hurt.  When that happens, I yell "no" and use the shock.  I've only done that two or three times, and it isn't turned up nearly all the way.  He enjoys our walks in the pasture so much more now, because he can run around in my vicinity without having to walk at my slow pace.  If I see him getting too far away, I'll either call him to me saying "come" or else I'll have him sit/stay until I get closer.  He minds very well with the collar on.  Without it, he might obey, but he's like a two-year-old child.  I'll say, "Gabe, come!"  He'll turn and start to come, but then he will stop and smell something, and I'm once again hollering "come" several times.  But I sure am glad the collar lets him off the leash, because I don't worry about him seeing a rabbit or a strange cat and disappearing into the woods for hours.

I have let my cat in the house all winter because my cousin told me they don't shed in winter.  Sure enough, cat hair was not a problem at all.  But yesterday Cliff came in the door for dinner saying, "The cat's shedding."  I asked which cat, and he said Blue.  "How do you know?" I asked.  "I was petting him, and hair went everywhere," says my husband  So, those of you who thought he'd be a house cat forever will now find out you were wrong.  We are going to put the Igloo Cooler on the porch away, too... the one Cliff turned into a winter cat-bed.  They both still use it on cool days and nights, but they don't need it, and it needs to be off the porch.  It was a great solution for those below-zero temperatures.

The strangest thing in the previous paragraph is that Cliff admitted he was petting a cat.  When we got married and bought our first twenty-acre farmette, I had another Mama Kitty living at my parents' house; I had tried to keep her in my apartment, but that cat had been raised outside and didn't like being a house cat, so my parents took her.  Cliff and I bought our first country home and I claimed my cat.  Cliff hated her, and all cats; he considered them creepy.  He thought their purring was actually a growl.  Since my cat had been a house cat, once in awhile she would sneak in when somebody was opening the door:  He would hiss at her loudly and shove her out with his foot!  Once he saw her killing a rat about half her size, he gained respect for her.  But we have been married fifty-four years, soon fifty-five; and I don't think he ever petted a cat in his life until Blue came along.  Blue has even been on his lap a couple of times.  The cat's personality makes it hard not to like him.  

The grandson wants better fence around this place he bought from us, and it definitely needs it.  He and Cliff and the next-door neighbor are going to be putting new fence up between our place and theirs.  He's willing to buy fence and do his part on his section, so they have already done a little bit of "getting started".  Arick gets home from work before 3 PM, so he and Cliff can get a lot done before bedtime.  It doesn't look like rain will stop them; there aren't many rain chances in the next ten days.  It seems every year we start out with a rain deficit, then barely get enough rain to grow the crops all summer.  Global warming, maybe.

Is that enough trivia for you?  Cliff's on the exercise bike, so he won't be proof-reading it for 20 minutes or so.  I always proof-read it too, but I usually miss something.  Sometimes we both do.  

Enjoy this spring day.