Your Purrki is some character, Sally!
Long may he continue in his role of boredom-buster! Kerry

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 3:40 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FeLv and Microchips?


Dear Melissa...

I've been wondering the same thing.  I have a 5-6 mo. old positive who
has 
already managed to sneak out of the house once and be "lost" for most of
a day 
and part of the night until I was able to find him with the help of an
animal 
communicator.  He has the ego of an panther in a tiny black body and
seems 
determined to live his life LARGE.  Day before yesterday he pulled
another 
disappearing act and I spent another frantic day looking for him, only
to discover at 
the end of the day he had climbed into the clothes dryer and was shut in

there all day taking a nap with some fleece kitty beds and never uttered
a meow or 
tried scratching to get out.  Luckily my dryer is an old one and you
can't 
start it just by pressing a button...I have to hold the switch with one
hand 
while trying to start the drum spinning with my other hand, so there is
no way I 
could have started it and cooked him without knowing he was in there,
thank 
goodness!

Purrki tested positive at 6 weeks and has remained nonsymptomatic except
for 
very mild gingivitis and recurring cyclical fevers.  He has boundless
energy 
and seems dedicated to making sure there is no boredom in my life. He
will be 
neutered very soon...I was thinking that would be a good time to get him

microchipped in case his lust for sneaking out of the house does not
diminish.  But 
I am wondering if a tiny "foreign body" like a microchip could be
deleterious 
to a compromised immune system.  Has anyone out there microchipped their

positives?

They should be "indoors only" so that wouldn't be necessary, right?  Try

telling that to Purrki.  I have to put him in a carrier if I'm going in
and out of 
the house or he will zip out between my ankles like a furry rocket and
seems 
to have no regard for his own safety.  He will chase the chickens (3
times his 
size) or run up a tree and launch himself onto the top of the chicken
house 
with thud that sends them squawking.  He is definately a feline free
spirit.  
At the rate he's going and taking risks, he may not be long for this
world, but 
he will definitely live his life to the fullest.  When he isn't going
full 
speed ahead, he is quite the love bug and does an excellent imitation of
a mink 
stole, sleeping and purring draped across my neck or on my chest or some
other 
part of my anatomy. 

Sally in San Jose 

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