At 10:53 PM 10/28/02, Deborah Harrell wrote:
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[I quoted:]
>
> << In households where they were exposed five
>  years or more, cats had more than triple the risk.
> In a two-smoker household, the risk went up by a
> factor of four." >>
>
> Cats ignore whoever they want to, whenever they want
> to.
> I can just see the frustration of a lawyer trying to
> sign up a tabby for a class action suite.

<LOL>
And since there's an obesity epidemic among pets (dogs
and cats, anyway), would Fido sue his best friend for
giving in to those oh-so-sad-eyes and slipping
buttered-toast-and-bacon to the pooch?

D. J. only eats proper cat food. He weighed 17 pounds the last time he was at the vet. (He has been up to 18.) Fat? No. Slow? Hardly. He can, however, stand on the floor on his hind legs and stick his nose in the sink . . .




Somewhere I
read that there are fitness clubs promoting "bring
your dog to the track" to encourage jogging. (My
former neighbor actually had a cat who would jog a
slow 1/2 mile with her, then turn back home.  Before
he broke a leg and couldn't climb the fence,


The first time Andy let someone back over him, it broke one of his hind legs. He still took off running and went over at least one fence before stopping under the neighbor's storage shed (a place he frequently went to cool off on hot days).

When he got home from the vet with a pin in that leg, the vet's instructions were to keep him locked up because he wouldn't be able to fight or run from other neighborhood cats looking for a fight. Of course, he had to be taken out of the cage in order to clean it. I put him on the patio in the back yard while I cleaned the cage the first time. Within seconds, he was over the gate so he could see what was going on and supervise . . .



--Ronn! :) , D.J. =^.^= , and Midnight =^.^= ,
Spot (1992-96), and Andy (1989-99)

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