Friday, December 26, 2025

Adopted on Boxing Day

Today is the second day of Christmas, the feast of Saint Stephen, Boxing Day. It’s a good time, I think, to announce that Moxy will be adopted. I’ve decided to keep the Mixer with me.


There are several reasons for keeping him, aside from the fact that I like him and he seems to like me. Whether rightly or wrongly, I feel that outsider cats (and Moxy was an outside/inside cat) deserve to stay in the home to which they’ve become adjusted, to which they’ve adapted. That, of course, is not always possible, nor is it always preferable. Nonetheless, I think they have a certain proprietorial interest in the home into which they’ve been accepted.


As well, Moxy is the Mixer, and a great asset to a household which fosters other cats, especially shy ones. I believe it is because of Moxy that Sable has done so well in adapting to the indoor life. They are friends, and certainly, though Moxy doesn’t quite reciprocate her feelings to the same extent, Sabe is very fond of her fat-headed chum.


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Then there is his relationship with the other cats. Though he may annoy others from time to time, most tolerate the Mixer. He seems to exude a confident harmlessness. Take for example, his warm and peaceful relationship with Brazil.


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Then there is his character. He is simply a friendly, amiable fellow. Besides, his periodic moments of leaving his body behind to stare blankly at objects makes me think he is either very spiritual, or just not right in the head.


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So Moxy will be staying with me. It is, perhaps, not a wise financial decision. But having cats at all is not a wise financial decision. Then again, some cats are worth the cost.


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Thursday, December 25, 2025

A Happy Christmas to All!

Merry Christmas to all those reading this, and to all those who are not. I hope this one is very good to everybody, and that it brings joy that follows you well into the new year.


I have almost the same crowd with me as I did last Christmas: only Xandria and Valkyrie - the two youngest - have left, and the latter’s adoption is not yet finalised. Funnily enough, Xan, too, was on a trial adoption last year at this time, with her own future not quite formalised. Everyone else is doing well, except for Neville who, at least, is holding his own. So I am grateful for what the Yuletide has brought me.


Below is my Christmas card for 2025, the outside and the inside. Click on the images to enlarge.


Don’t worry about wishing me a happy Christmas; most readers have done so already, if they intended to. Instead, please accept my wishes for a contented and peaceful holiday.


God bless you all.


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Wednesday, December 24, 2025

What the Doctor Said

This morning, as soon as the veterinary hospital opened, I called and told them that I had sent pictures of Neville, asking if one of the doctors could take a look and recommend something for what I suspected was an abscess. The receptionist said that there was but one doctor on duty today, and she would be too busy to give suggestions based solely on pictures. She is a relatively new veterinary at the hospital; she’s been there a year, but I have never consulted with her. I realized that there was little to be done, and made an appointment for Monday.


However, about half an hour later, the receptionist called me back and reported the cancellation of an appointment at mid-morning. I was able to take Neville to see the doctor then.


Not having examined the Nevsky before, the doctor found a number of concerns (his heart sounded good but perhaps a bit arrhythmic; his lymph nodes were a little irregularly sized; he had a tiny divot on the cornea of an eye). These were all legitimate concerns but with little to be done about them; most were addressed previously, and Neville is too old and on too many medications for still more to regulate his heart and other organs. Besides, there was a more immediate worry. (She did stain the eye to make sure the divot was not an ulcer. It is not.)


The swelling on his chin is very likely an abscess. The doctor noted a small scratch on the chin. While I doubted that one of the other cats produced that, Nev may have done that himself. He may have been itchy; as well, I have noticed that he is grooming himself in a minor fashion, which he has not done in a long time (the influence of the Solensia, perhaps?) so the actions may not be as familiar as they once were. In any case, he is on a liquid anti-biotic. I am prepared for this to cause some fluidy stools, and am adding more probiotic to his soft-food. In any case, I expect the medicine to help him. I did not cancel the appointment on Monday, just in case.


Thank you to all those who expressed their concerns about the old lion. So far, he is staying with me and enjoying his simple life - except for the periodic pokes and force-feeding of medicine…


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Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Our Holiday Tradition

There is a tradition in the Cosy Cabin, which has carried over from the Cosy Apartment, like a ghost following a cursed tenant: the tradition of the sick cat on the long weekend. Since Christmas will give us a four-day weekend, it was almost destined to recur now.


I took Neville to the veterinary hospital for his second Solensia injection. It went as expected (ie. he threw up in the carrier due to nerves), though he worryingly has lost some weight. He had gained a little between his last visit and the one prior to it, but this time, he fell in tonnage from 5.4 kilograms (11.9 pounds) to 4.95 kilograms (10.9 pounds). Since he has been eating well - so much so that I was confident that he would have gained weight - this probably has less to do with food-consumption than what the mass in his liver is making of the food consumed.


That, however, is not the problem. This evening - after we returned from the hospital, of course - I was giving the Nevsky a chin-rub and noticed that there was considerably more chin to rub. It stood out like the tuft under a lion’s chin, only Nev’s was solid, and not fur. It felt, in fact, not quite solid, but rather like a tiny sack of silicone or gelatine. From the front, his chin is visibly larger.


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I suspect it grew quickly; the fact that I felt a difference suggests that I felt it when it first manifested itself, and not that I had simply missed it previously.


Tomorrow being Christmas Eve, the veterinary hospital is open only until noon. I intend to send them pictures of Neville, some taken a week or two ago, and others taken tonight, and ask if a doctor can recommend treatment based solely on these. There is a possibility of that, as the staff, especially Nev’s usual doctor, know him and me well. Another possibility is that I may be asked to take him in very quickly, in which case I of course will. If anti-biotics are prescribed, I may have to pick them up at the hospital, or they may be called in to a closer pharmacy. This will be a rapid operation, with a number of variables, each leading in a different direction.


I will report more tomorrow, when I hope that I, the cats, and all you who are reading this, will be able to start a peaceful and healthy Christmas.

Monday, December 22, 2025

The Tree is Safe This Year

I felt it was safe to put up the Christmas tree and the stockings, now that Valkyrie is on her trial-adoption. Last year, the first day the decorations were up, she knocked down the tree and half the stockings. This year, they appear to be safe.


The tree is the same sad, artificial tree that has seen better Yuletides. I decided not to dispose of it last year as I was able to store it intact in the furnace room. There are no ornaments on it, since, though none of the remaining cats are as mischievous as Valkyrie, they are still cats. (The big litter-less litter-box in the corner is not officially part of the seasonal décor, but is for Neville’s convenience.)


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The stockings each belong to a specific beast. Mine is the big one. Below that is Indigo’s, a reasonably no-nonsense sock for a no-nonsense cat. Sable’s warm and fuzzy stocking, for feet that need not worry about touching snow anymore, comes next. On the left is Imogen’s at the top; a fancy sock for the one who believes herself first, if not top, cat. Neville, as plain as Indigo’s, is above the pair belonging to Brazil and Moxy. Millie’s tiny feet have a tiny stocking.


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We are all set for Christmas in the Cosy Cabin. Valkyrie won’t be with us, about which I am a bit sad, but she is doing well with her new family, so I suspect that her kittenish personality will be too busy with new things to miss us. That’s how it should be.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

Valkyrie's Next Adventure

Valkyrie is off to her prospective new home. She left a few minutes ago. True to her nature, she was annoying me to the last.


I will miss her. She was into everything; nothing was safe, and everything had to be hidden, sealed, locked or latched, and even those precautions were no guarantee of freedom from her interference. But I will miss her.


My principal worry is the same as with every foster-cat going on a trial-adoption: that the trial will fail, for whatever reason, and Valk will return. She will always have a place here, if need be, of course, but her own home, her own family, hers for her lifetime, is the goal.


Some ask foster-guardians why they don’t just keep their foster-cats, since the cats are simply going to another home that will be, for a while, unfamiliar to them and frightening. The answer is that those who adopt the foster-cats usually don’t take in strays or abandoned animals. The cats in shelters and rescue-groups were once lost or deserted. Once one of them is taken in permanently by an individual or family, another may then be fostered.


As well, fostering allows people to come to know the cat, to determined the best sort of home for her, which gives the adoption a better chance of success than if it is what might be termed a ‘cold adoption’ of an unknown animal. Foster-homes absorb the unknown elements and provide the permanent home with a known and socialised quality.


And right now, my latest known quality is on her way to her new home.


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Saturday, December 20, 2025

Too Busy to Say 'Thank You'

I think Brazil likes his cat-nip toy… Thank you to Ellen and the Tooth Fairy.


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