'Jewel' saves a kitten

Objavljeno u Zanimljivosti
Yet another abandoned kitten found and brought to safety by concerned tourists.
Foxy Foxy Photo: Vivian Grisogono

It was midsummer, and I was eating my lunch without too many cares in the world, when my peace was disturbed by knocking on my door. Standing outside were two strangers, evidently mother and daughter, and my young neighbour Ronaldo. In the child's arms was a small ginger kitten, looking much less than well. My heart sank. It was obvious that I was the intended recipient of the klitten. I was trying to avoid taking in more strays of any kind. I had enough on my plate (apart from my lunch which was getting cold), and as for my neighbours, their reaction didn't bear thinking about. 

The ensuing conversation took place in Croatian (me and Ronaldo) and English (me and the lady and her daughter). The two visitors were German, but both spoke excellent English. My sunk heart prevented me from paying too much attention to detail, but I did register that this very engaging young child was unusually fluent and communicative in a foreign language. Ronaldo explained that these two kind hearts had found the kitten in the Pitve-Zavala tunnel, and had bravely stopped to pick it up, as it would certainly have been killed. It was obviously injured, as it was bleeding from the nose. The Pitve tunnel is not an experience for the faint-hearted. What was the kitten doing inside it? Was it abandoned in the tunnel, or trying to make its way back home having been deposited elsewhere? Anyway, here they were, in the same dilemma as all good-hearted people who want to help abandoned animals on Hvar. What happens next? I explained my lack of enthusiasm. There was a silence, a kind of stand-off. I accepted my fate and took the kitten in my arms. It immediately emitted a very strange loud sound, somewhere between a rattle and a rasp. "Why is it making that odd noise?" asked the child. "I think it might be in pain" I replied. I put it down carefully. My colourful kitten Malica sniffed it and started to lick it gently. It remained passive, showing no interest in Malica or the food or drink I offered it. I placed it in the shelter of a cat-box, again wondering if it would survive.

My visitors left and I went back up to eat the rest of my now-cold lunch. When I went down to cat-land later, the ginger kitten was still asleep just as I had left it. Would it survive? The next morning, it had disappeared. Had it crept out somewhere to die? No, it was resting peacefully in a quiet corner. When I checked again, it had tucked itself on to an old shoe; after that I found it snoozing, snoring loudly, on top of a box. Sometime during the day, it came to, and started to look around. I established that it was a he, with a slightly fox-like face, so I named him Foxy. He had his first encounter with Sivka, second-in-command after Bianchi, who repelled his friendly advances with an aggressive hiss. He wisely skirted round her and headed for the food bowl.

Every time Foxy set eyes on me, his rasping rattle started up at full volume, and I realized that he was purring, not breathing his last gasp. Even when tucking into his food, which he was now doing with great gusto, the penetrating drilling sound continued without hindering his intake.

 
My oldest cat, Bianchi, was as unenthusiastic about the new arrival as Sivka had been. Bianchi lost part of his right front paw several years ago, probably in a fight. He had been an avid hunter of wild edible dormice, but that all stopped after his injury. He is still a tough male, ready to fight his corner. He also has a soft side: he loves to be cuddled, and has looked after many of the young kittens which have passed through our home over the years with tender care.

It wasn't hard to see why Bianchi did not welcome Foxy's arrival. Once up and going, Foxy moved around without fear or favour, tail up, in true dominant male style. Once Bianchi had vented his feelings with a strong hiss, the two ignored each other, each going about his business as though the other didn't exist. A kind of truce, which I hope will last.

The day after Foxy arrived, I came home in the late afternoon to find a bag of cat food at my front door, with a charming note which read: "Thanks for taking care. Maybe this is a little help!" Yes indeed, and the help and kind thought are much appreciated. Touchingly, the note was signed in a child's hand: 'J E W E L'. So I hope Foxy's saviours will see this message of gratitude in his name, and I am sure they will be glad to see that he has recovered so quickly from his traumas. What does the future hold for him? I don't know. With cats, I have learned to live for the day, and for the moment the days are happy ones.

© Vivian Grisogono 2014

  

Nalazite se ovdje: Home zanimljivosti 'Jewel' saves a kitten

Eco Environment News feeds

  • Finding that Norfolk butterfly has been distinct subspecies for 200,000 years could transform conservation approach

    The endangered swallowtail butterfly Papilio machaon britannicus, which is only regularly found breeding in Britain on the Norfolk Broads, has been a distinct subspecies for at least 200,000 years, according to a study.

    Smaller, darker in colour and much rarer than the continental swallowtail, britannicus was previously considered to have developed its distinctive form during its confinement in the wetlands of eastern England over the last 8,000 years, after the flooding of Doggerland.

    Continue reading...

  • Cooling down has become political amid record highs, as experts say row is distracting from work of protecting lives

    As the afternoon heat rose to a dizzying 41.7C (107F) in eastern Brandenburg on Sunday, taking German temperatures to unprecedented highs, Mario, 65, took precautions but did not panic. Two years ago, a fierce heatwave had prompted him to buy a powerful device that few Germans own: an air conditioning unit.

    “The summers are slowly getting warmer,” says the retired handyman in Neuzelle on the German-Polish border, whose bungalow is now among the 6% of German homes with fixed air-conditioning. “And as you get older, the heat gets harder to endure.”

    Continue reading...

  • Huge numbers of blackchin tilapia, a fish native to west Africa, are wreaking havoc among Thailand’s river ecosystems. Experts – and some chefs – are seeking sustainable solutions

    The menu at Kor-Tae seafood restaurant, in Thailand’s Samut Prakan province, is filled with Thai classics – from tom yum talay, a fragrant hot and sour soup, to spicy larb salads. But the restaurant’s chef is also experimenting with a more controversial ingredient: blackchin tilapia.

    “People are hesitant, but once they try it – [they say] it’s delicious,” says owner Adisorn Jamsuksaward, who has been offering the non-native fish free of charge to friends who request it.

    Continue reading...

  • Cornell Lab for Ornithology plans data linkup between app and population monitoring on eBird platform

    The Merlin bird ID app will allow users to feed real-time bird identifications into one of the world’s biggest citizen-science biodiversity projects in an update it is hoped will aid conservation of at-risk birds.

    Since 2021, the free Merlin app, created by the Cornell Lab for Ornithology, has used machine learning to provide an almost instantaneous sound-identification service for birdsong, along with an image for each bird identified. In future, the detections of bird species recorded by people will be automatically collected on the global online database eBird, which contains more than 2bn bird observation records.

    Continue reading...

  • As this year’s invertebrate of the year competition launches, we join scientists studying last year’s winner

    Witek Morek is closely inspecting an old brick-and-flint wall on the Cambridgeshire campus of the Wellcome Sanger Institute.

    “We are going to use a very advanced tool designed by bioengineers and evolved over millions of years – the human hand – and grab some moss, and put it in an envelope,” he says.

    Continue reading...

  • Guardian recreates audio landscape of past filled by loud morning symphony before 73m wild birds were lost

    Imagine a deafening abundance of birdsong so loud it wakes your children at dawn; the chirrup of house sparrows, the chattering of starlings, the melody of the wren, and the clear high-pitched flute of blackbirds saturating the garden, reverberating around your local park, dominating your neighbourhood from early morning to evening twilight.

    So loud is the song of the thrush that the naturalist and ornithologist WH Hudson wrote in 1919 that he was grateful when observing one that it was perched on a tree at a distance from his home, “so that when I woke at half past three or four o’clock, the shrill indefatigable voice came in at the open window, softened by distance and washed by the dewy atmosphere to greater purity”.

    Continue reading...

  • Hitchin, Hertfordshire: The broad-bodied chaser is often the first to arrive at a new pond, and sure enough, I spot an exuvia clinging to a leaf blade

    The hole in the nest box on our house wall is all mouth. A sparrow chick on the cusp of fledging has thrust its head out, beak open, displaying an orange gape ringed with a creamy-yellow flange. It’s an unmissable prompt for the parents: Insert Invertebrates Here.

    I’m watching the spuggies from behind the pond, where I’m perfectly positioned to see the aftermath of another emergence. At the top of a bur-reed, the hollow legs of a dragonfly exuvia (the shed larval casing) grip the leaf blade, while a split in the cuticle shows where the adult has pushed through its exoskeleton.

    Continue reading...

  • Suspicions grow in Lanarkshire that local people have been misled on supposed benefits of the huge development

    The promise was that a Scottish community would be transformed by massive investment and empowered to chase “the jobs of the future”. Instead, local people in Lanarkshire fear they may have to sell their properties and lose green belt land because of the errors of a badly planned AI datacentre complex, even as those jobs and investments never arrive.

    Late last year, representatives of Oakes Energy Services began to knock on doors in Newarthill, a village east of Glasgow. In letters reviewed by the Guardian, they invited residents to individual meetings. They told them about plans for a solar farm, say local people, and made offers: free solar panels, tree planting, or even cash for their properties.

    Continue reading...

  • Humans have long sought to geoengineer the Earth’s environment. Tim Flannery outlines a few of the wildest ideas from the 20th century

    An increasing number of scientists think we have let the climate crisis fester for so long that our only hope to stave off ever-intensifying catastrophes is to use technological interventions. Cloud brightening, injecting sulphur into the atmosphere and the use of tiny mirrors in space – all of which might reduce the amount of sunlight reaching Earth’s surface – are among the concepts being promotedby entrepreneurs and governments alike. Geoengineering, they argue, is now inevitable.

    Ever since the God of the Old Testament granted our species dominion over the Earth, ideas of remaking the world to better suit us have been a dominant thread in human thinking. We have for centuries toyed with grand ambitions to alter and re-form the climate and environment, many of which – in retrospect – seem doomed or absurd.

    Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads

    Continue reading...

  • As Britain reached its hottest June temperature on record, readers recall the summer when temperatures hit 36C

    The recent heatwave in the UK broke the previous June record of 35.6C, recorded during the 1976 heatwave.

    In Lingwood, Norfolk, a provisional temperature of 37.7C was recorded on Friday 26 June, breaking the previous record reached on 28 June 1976 and on 29 June 1957.

    Continue reading...

Novosti: Cybermed.hr

Novosti: Biologija.com

Izvor nije pronađen