I'm looking over at "Smokey" on the couch. Smokey's been an inside
boy for over two years now. He's lying on his back with all his legs
in the air and his eye rolling around to check me out upside-down,
since the back of his head is on the pillow and his mouth is in the
air.
Smokey was once a feral at CFB Trenton air force base, living in the
forest, eating baby bunnies and seagulls supplemented with garbage and
leftover food he could scam. He got adopted by my unit and tamed.
Then the accommodations manager called animal control to "dispose" of
him. The security chief heard about this and got together with me to
find Smokey an immediate home. The chief had been the one who first
bought Smokey cat food and started feeding him outside the ops centre,
but he had dogs at home that were vicious to cats. So I smuggled
Smokey off base one night and took him to my home and gave him to my
fiance and very unimpressed black queen cat.
We swear Smokey was once someone's pet. He NEVER sprayed, was
automatically litter trained, NEVER scratched the furniture, used his
post to scratch, is a clean boy, etc, etc. He's also a desperate suck
for attention and crawls on EVERYONE'S lap, including complete
strangers and known cat haters--I can barely sit down without a lapful
of pokey Smokey.
We got him fixed and tested from FIV and Feline Leukemia and given his
shots and a license. He was really, really agitated the first few
times he had his claws clipped; being denuded of his primary weapons
was very upsetting until he realized he didn't need them razor-sharp
to catch meals or defend himself. He had troubel figuring out that
windows couldn't be jumped through, and he's still neurotic about
food--when the food bowl is empty he SHRIEKS and caterwauls until it
is full. HE doesn't necessarily eat, just has to know it's there if
he WANTS to eat it.
We also worried how Smokey would adapt from a whole forest to run in,
to a high rise apartment. Turns out the one time we tried to take him
out to the park on leash, he threw himself on his back and SCREAMED
until we took him in. Even being on the balcony makes him
scream--even seeing the OPEN BALCONY DOOR makes him scream.
Apparently nature sucks and Smokey never wants to be in the horrible
outside again--that nasty place with no couch and no food.
Smokey is a happy boy. I feel sick that they were thinking of
poisoning him for being a "wild animal." Watching him grow from a
scrawny, undernourished, gritty-furred refugee to a sleek, healthy,
handsome couch-fungus has been a delight.
--Enfilade
Agua Girl - 15 Sep 2004 04:26 GMT
Awww... I love reading about these success stories. Lucky
Smokey and lucky you to have each other.
AG
> I'm looking over at "Smokey" on the couch. Smokey's been an inside
> boy for over two years now. He's lying on his back with all his legs
[quoted text clipped - 44 lines]
>
> --Enfilade
Mary - 15 Sep 2004 04:54 GMT
> I'm looking over at "Smokey" on the couch. [snips]
Wonderful story, and good for you!!
dd - 15 Sep 2004 23:28 GMT
Bless your heart! If there is a heaven, you'll be there, surrounded by
furry friends.
> I'm looking over at "Smokey" on the couch. Smokey's been an inside
> boy for over two years now. He's lying on his back with all his legs
[quoted text clipped - 44 lines]
>
> --Enfilade
Harriet - 16 Sep 2004 06:35 GMT
Funny thing about cat haters... they can be converted. When I was a
teenager, my parents left my grandmother to babysit my little sister. She
HATED cats, and walked around criticizing my baby constantly. He actually
was an exceptionally sweet cat but she had a blanket policy to hate cats.
Anyway, we came home hours later to find my grandmother sitting in a chair
reading a newspaper and holding it high enough so that our cat could sit on
her lap and not be touched by the paper. It was pleasantly shocking but the
cat was so sweet that he won her over. She gave in. I would give anything
to have a snapshot of that moment.
I also heard that cats sense hostility and will work on a person to get them
to come over on their side.
:-D
Harriet
> Bless your heart! If there is a heaven, you'll be there, surrounded by
> furry friends.
[quoted text clipped - 47 lines]
> >
> > --Enfilade
Enfilade - 16 Sep 2004 19:45 GMT
> Funny thing about cat haters... they can be converted.
They sure can...my parents did NOT want me to take in Smokey. What if
he had diseases? what if he fouled the rug? what if he beat up on
Nocturne? what if he bit? what if he scratched? what if he hated
being inside? what if he hated people?
I didn't tell them we had him until three weeks later when we went on
a trip. They offered to petsit Nocturne for us and I said that if
they took Nox they also had to take Smokey.
By the end of the week they wanted Smokey for themselves :)
--Fil
KLR - 17 Sep 2004 14:37 GMT
>Funny thing about cat haters... they can be converted. When I was a
>teenager, my parents left my grandmother to babysit my little sister. She
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>:-D
>Harriet
that is dead true, (and i love the original story and the name too :)
cats can change people like you wouldnt believe
my cat gorgar has turned around 2 chronic cat haters i knew, and
caused at least 4 catless people(who had never had or considered a
cat) to get a kitten and ultimately fall in love with it :)
ironically too it was a friends old cat (now deceased due to age) -
also called "smokey" to make me fall for cats and lead me to adopt
little gorgar -and then later a baby russian blue i named smokey in
memory of the old smokey :)
>> Bless your heart! If there is a heaven, you'll be there, surrounded by
>> furry friends.
[quoted text clipped - 47 lines]
>> >
>> > --Enfilade