
Trivia about Dogs
A dog's whiskers are touch-sensitive hairs called
vibrissae. They are found on the muzzle, above the eyes and
below the jaws, and can actually sense tiny changes in airflow.
According to a recent survey, the most popular
name for a dog is Max. Other popular names include Molly,
Sam, Zach, and Maggie.
According to ancient Greek literature, when
Odysseus arrived home after an absence of 20 years, disguised
as a beggar, the only one to recognize him was his aged dog
Argos, who wagged his tail at his master, and then died.
An American Animal Hospital Association poll
showed that 33 percent of dog owners admit that they talk
to their dogs on the phone or leave messages on an answering
machine while away.
An estimated 1 million dogs in the United States
have been named the primary beneficiary in their owner's will.
Barbara Bush's book about her English Springer
Spaniel, Millie's book, was on the bestseller list for 29
weeks. Millie was the most popular "First Dog" in history.
Before the enactment of the 1978 law that made
it mandatory for dog owners in New York City to clean up after
their pets, approximately 40 million pounds of dog excrement
were deposited on the streets every year.
Cats have better memories than dogs. Tests conducted
by the University of Michigan concluded that while a dogs
memory lasts no more than 5 minutes, a cat's can last as long
as 16 hours - exceeding even that of monkeys and orangutans.
Cats have more than one hundred vocal sounds,
while dogs only have about ten.
Cats, not dogs, are the most common pets in
America. There are approximately 66 million cats to 58 million
dogs, with Parakeets a distant third at 14 million.
Contrary to popular belief, dogs do not sweat
by salivating. They sweat through the pads of their feet.
Dachshunds are the smallest breed of dog used
for hunting. They are low to the ground, which allows them
to enter and maneuver through tunnels easily.
Developed in Egypt about 5,000 years ago, the
greyhound breed was known before the ninth century in England,
where it was bred by aristocrats to hunt such small game as
hares.
Dogs are mentioned 14 times in the Bible.
Dogs can hear sounds that are too faint for
us to hear, and also can hear noises at a much higher frequency
than we can. Their hearing is so good that they probably rely
more on sound than on sight to navigate their world.
Dogs' eyes have large pupils and a wide field
of vision, making them really good at following moving objects.
Dogs also see well in fairly low light.
Dogs have far fewer taste buds than people --
probably fewer than 2,000. It is the smell that initially
attracts them to a particular food.
Dogs may not have as many taste buds as we do
(they have about 1,700 on their tongues, while we humans have
about 9,000), but that doesn't mean they're not discriminating
eaters. They have over 200 million scent receptors in their
noses (we have only 5 million) so it's important that their
food smells good and tastes good.
Each day in the US, animal shelters are forced
to destroy 30,000 dogs and cats.
Every known dog except the chow has a pink tongue
- the chow's tongue is jet black.
Every year, $1.5 billion is spent on pet food.
This is four times the amount spent on baby food.
For Stephen King's "Cujo" (1983), five St. Bernards
were used, one mechanical head, and an actor in a dog costume
to play the title character.
French poodles did not originate in France.
Poodles were originally used as hunting dogs in Europe. The
dogs' thick coats were a hindrance in water and thick brush,
so hunters sheared the hindquarters, with cuffs left around
the ankles and hips to protect against rheumatism. Each hunter
marked his dogs' heads with a ribbon of his own color, allowing
groups of hunters to tell their dogs apart.
It has been established that people who own
pets live longer, have less stress, and have fewer heart attacks.
Korea's poshintang - dog meat soup - is a popular
item on summertime menus, despite outcry from other nations.
The soup is believed to cure summer heat ailments, improve
male virility, and improve women's complexions.
Lassie was played by several male dogs, despite
the female name, because male collies were thought to look
better on camera. The main "actor" was named Pal.
Lassie, the TV collie, first appeared in a 1930s
short novel titled Lassie Come-Home written by Eric Mowbray
Knight. The dog in the novel was based on Knight's real life
collie, Toots.
Marie Antoinette's dog was a spaniel named Thisbe.
Most pet owners (94 percent) say their pet makes
them smile more than once a day.
Pekingese dogs were sacred to the emperors of
China for more than 2,000 years. They are one of the oldest
breeds of dogs in the world.
Prairie dogs are not dogs. A prairie dog is
a kind of rodent.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's most famous
canine companion was his Scottish Terrier, Fala, who is part
of the Roosevelt Memorial in Washington, D.C. But during Roosevelt's
12 years and one month as president, 11 dogs lived in the
White House. They included a Bullmastiff, two red setters,
a retriever, a Bulldog, a Llewellin Setter, a Scotch Terrier,
a Great Dane, a Sheepdog, and a German Shepherd who tried
to rip the pants off the British Prime Minister.
Researchers studying what dogs like to eat have
found that the appetite of pet dogs is affected by the taste,
texture and smell of the food, and also by the owners' food
preferences, their perception of their pet, and the physical
environment in which the dog is eating.
Seventy percent of people sign their pet's name
on greeting cards and 58 percent include their pets in family
and holiday portraits, according to a survey done by the American
Animal Hospital Association.
Small dogs are rapidly gaining popularity, according
to American Kennel Club registration statistics. Three toys
breeds are among the top 10 in popularity on the most recent
list: the Yorkshire Terrier, Chihuahua, and Shih Tzu rank
sixth, ninth, and 10th, respectively. A decade ago, no toy
breeds were in the top 10.
Some 39 percent of pet owners say they have
more photos of their pet than of their spouse or significant
other. Only 21 percent say they have more photos of their
spouse or significant other than of their pet.
The bloodhound is the only animal whose evidence
is admissible in an American court.
The calories burned daily by the sled dogs running
in Alaska's annual Iditarod race average 10,000. The 1,149-mile
race commemorates the 1925 "Race for Life" when 20 volunteer
mushers relayed medicine from Anchorage to Nome to battle
a children's diphtheria epidemic.
The Canary Islands were not named for a bird
called a canary. They were named after a breed of large dogs.
The Latin name was Canariae insulae - "Island of Dogs."
The common belief that dogs are color blind
is false. Dogs can see color, but it is not as vivid a color
scheme as we see. They distinguish between blue, yellow, and
gray, but probably do not see red and green. This is much
like our vision at twilight.
The dachshund is one of the oldest dog breeds
in history (dating back to ancient Egypt.) The name comes
from one of its earliest uses - hunting badgers. In German,
Dachs means "badger," Hund is "hound."
The English Romantic poet Lord Byron was so
devastated upon the death of his beloved Newfoundland, whose
name was Boatswain, that he had inscribed upon the dog's gravestone
the following: "Beauty without vanity, strength without insolence,
courage without ferocity, and all the virtues of man without
his vices."
The expression "three dog night" originated
with the Eskimos and means a very cold night - so cold that
you have to bed down with three dogs to keep warm.
The first dog to star in an American movie was
Jean the Vitagraph Dog, a Border Collie mix, who made his
first film in 1910.
The first dogs to hunt in packs and the first
small companion breeds were probably bred in ancient China.
Written records more than 4,000 years old from China show
that dog trainers were held in high esteem and that kennel
masters raised and looked after large numbers of dog.
The first seeing-eye dog was presented to a
blind person on April 25, 1938.
The largest and the smallest dogs to live in
the White House where both there during the tenure of president
James Buchanan. The president had a Newfoundland named Lara.
And his niece, Harriet Lane (who served as White House hostess
because the president was unmarried), had a tiny toy terrier
named Punch.
The last member of the famous Bonaparte family,
Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte, died in 1945, of injuries sustained
from tripping over his dog's leash.
The name of the dog from "The Grinch Who Stole
Christmas" is Max.
The name of the dog on the Cracker Jack box
is Bingo.
The only dog to ever appear in a Shakespearean
play was Crab in The Two Gentlemen of Verona
The phrase "raining cats and dogs" originated
in 17th Century England. During heavy downpours of rain, many
of these poor animals unfortunately drowned and their bodies
would be seen floating in the rain torrents that raced through
the streets. The situation gave the appearance that it had
literally rained "cats and dogs" and led to the current expression.
The smallest breed of dog recognized by the
American Kennel Club is the Chihuahua, which stands six to
nine inches at the top of the shoulders and weighs two to
six pounds. The largest is the Irish Wolfhound, which stands
30 to 35 inches at the top of the shoulders and weighs 105
to 125 pounds.
The smallest of the recognized dog breeds, the
Chihuahua, is also the one that usually lives the longest.
Named for the region of Mexico where they were first discovered
in the mid-19th century, the Chihuahua can live anywhere between
11-18 years.
The term "dog days" has nothing to do with dogs.
It dates back to Roman times, when it was believed that Sirius,
the Dog Star, added its heat to that of the sun from July3
to August 11, creating exceptionally high temperatures. The
Romans called the period dies caniculares, or "days of the
dog."
The theobromine in chocolate that stimulates
the cardiac and nervous systems is too much for dogs, especially
smaller pups. A chocolate bar is poisonous to dogs and can
even be lethal.
There are 701 types of pure breed dogs.
There are more than 100 million dogs and cats
in the United States. Americans spend more than 5.4 billion
dollars on their pets each year.
Though human noses have an impressive 5 million
olfactory cells with which to smell, sheepdogs have 220 million,
enabling them to smell 44 times better than man.
Using their swiveling ears like radar dishes,
experiments have shown that dogs can locate the source of
a sound in 6/100ths of a second.
Walt Disney's family dog was named Lady. She
was a poodle.
While small dogs are gaining in popularity,
the top dogs are still the big ones. The Labrador Retriever,
Golden Retriever, and German Shepherd Dog are first, second,
and third on list of the American Kennel Club's most popular
breeds.
Who first thought of using dogs to guide blind
people? At the end of World War I, the German government trained
the first guide dogs to assist blind war veterans.

Trivia about Cats
95% of cat owners admit they talk to their cats.
A cat can be either right-pawed or left-pawed.
A cat can jump as much as seven times its height.
A cat cannot see directly under its nose. This
is why the cat cannot seem to find tidbits on the floor.
A cat has 230 bones in its body. A human only
has 206 bones.
A cat has four rows of whiskers.
A cat in a hurry can sprint at about thirty-one
miles per hour.
A cat sees about six times better than a human
at night because of the tapetum lucidum , a layer of extra
reflecting cells which absorb light.
A cat uses its whiskers to determine if a space
is too small to squeeze through. The whiskers act as feelers
or antennae, helping the animal to judge the precise width
of any passage.
A cat will almost never meow at another cat.
Cats use this sound for humans.
A cat will clean itself with paw and tongue
after a dangerous experience or when it has fought with another
cat. This is believed to be an attempt by the animal to soothe
its nerves by doing something natural and instinctive.
A cat will never break a sweat because it has
no sweat glands.
A cat will spend nearly 30% of its life grooming
itself.
A cat's arching back is part of a complex body
language system, usually associated with feeling threatened.
The arch is able to get so high because the cat's spine contains
nearly 60 vertebrae which fit loosely together. Humans have
only 34 vertebrae.
A cat's brain is more similar to a human's brain
than that of a dog.
A cat's ear pivots 180 degrees.
A cat's hearing rates as one of the top in the
animal kingdom. Cats can hear sounds as high-pitched as 65
kHz; a human's hearing stops at just 20 kHz.
A cat's heart beats at 110 to 140 beats per
minute, twice as fast as a human heart.
A cat's jaws cannot move sideways.
A cat's normal body temperature is 101.5 degrees
F (38.6 C).
A cat's sense of taste is keener than a dog's
sense of taste.
A cat's tail held high means happiness. A twitching
tail is a warning sign, and a tail tucked in close to the
body is a sure sign of insecurity.
A cat's tail plays a vital part in the cat's
balance and in the "righting reflex" that allows it to land
on its feet after falling from a height.
A cat's tongue is scratchy because it's lined
with papillae-tiny elevated backwards hooks that help to hold
prey in place.
A cat's whiskers, called vibrissae, grow on
the cat's face and on the back of its forelegs. The whiskers
are thought to be a kind of sensor to help a cat gauge the
space it wants to go through.
A female cat can begin mating when she is between
5 and 9 months old.
A fifteen year old cat has probably spent ten
years of its life sleeping.
A frightened cat can run at speeds of up to
31 mph, slightly faster than a human sprinter.
A group of adult cats is called a clowder.
A group of kittens is called a kindle.
A large majority of white cats with blue eyes
are deaf. White cats with only one blue eye are deaf only
in the ear closest to the blue eye.
A male cat can begin mating when he is between
7 and 10 months old.
A polecat is not a cat. It is a nocturnal European
weasel.
A quarter of cat owners blow dry their cats
after bathing them.
Abraham Lincoln loved cats. He had four of them
while he lived in the White House. Abraham Lincoln's cat,
Tabby, was the first of several White House cats.
According to one legend, the "M" marking on
the forehead of the Tabby Cat was created by the prophet Mohammed
as he rested his hand lightly on the brow of his favorite
cat, a Tabby.
Adult cats with no health problems are in deep
sleep 15 percent of their lives. They are in light sleep 50
percent of the time.
After being handled, cats lick themselves to
smooth their fur and get rid of the "human" smell. Licking
is also thought to produce a calming effect.
Ailurophobia is the fear of cats. Julius Caesar,
Henry II, Charles XI, and Napoleon all suffered from this
and would nearly faint in the presence of a cat.
All cats are born with blue eyes.
All cats are members of the family Felidea.
Interestingly enough, the cat family split from the other
mammals at least 40,000,000 years ago, making them one of
the oldest mammalian families.
Americans spend more on cat food than on baby
food.
Americans spend more than 5.4 billion dollars
on their pets each year.
An adult cat has thirty teeth and around twelve
whiskers.
Ancient Egyptians believed that "Bast" was the
mother of all cats on Earth. They also believed that cats
were sacred animals.
At night a cat can gather into the extra-large
corneas and lenses of its eyes more than six times the amount
of light than humans can. Seeing far better than humans do
at night time and tending to focus best at a distance of eight
to twenty feet makes cats excellent night time hunters.
Black cat superstitions originated in America.
In Asia and England, a black cat is considered lucky.
Both humans and cats have identical regions
in the brain responsible for emotion.
Calico cats are nearly always female.
Cardinal Richelieu was so fond of cats that
he shared his home with 14 of them. Specially appointed attendants
cared for them, and upon his death, the Cardinal left all
his worldly wealth to his feline companions.
Cat families usually play best in even numbers.
Cats and kittens should be acquired in pairs whenever possible.
Cat scratch disease, a benign but sometimes
painful disease of short duration, is caused by a bacillus.
Despite its name, the disease can be transmitted by many kinds
of scratches besides those of cats.
Cat urine glows under a black light.
Catnip can affect lions and tigers as well as
house cats. It excites them because it contains a chemical
that resembles an excretion of the dominant female's urine.
Cats are attracted to automobile antifreeze
because of its sweet taste.
Cats are sometimes born with extra toes. This
is called polydactyl.
Cats are the only domestic animals that walk
directly on their claws, not on their paws. This method of
walking is called "digitigrade." When cats scratch furniture,
it isn't an act of malice. They are actually tearing off the
ragged edges of the sheaths of their talons to expose the
new sharp ones beneath.
Cats average 16 hours of sleep a day, more than
any other mammal.
Cats bury their feces to cover their trails
from predators.
Cats can donate blood to other cats.
Cats can get "age spots". These are black spots
on the skin that are often seen around the lips, eyes, and
nose; and usually start when the cat is three to five years
of age.
Cats can get bored. They show their boredom
by excessive licking, chewing, or biting.
Cats can have freckles. They can appear anywhere
on a cat's skin and even in its mouth.
Cats can learn tricks. They just sometimes choose
not to.
Cats can see color. Studies have shown that
cats can distinguish between red and green; red and blue;
red and gray; green and blue; green and gray; blue and gray;
yellow and blue, and yellow and gray.
Cats can see up to 120 feet away. Their peripheral
vision is about 285 degrees.
Cats have 13 ribs.
Cats have a homing ability that uses its biological
clock, the angle of the sun, and the Earth's magnetic field.
Cats have a third eyelid, called a haw, that
is rarely visible. If it can be seen, it could be an indication
of ill health.
Cats have AB blood groups just like people.
Cats have about 100 different vocalization sounds.
In comparison, dogs have about 10.
Cats have amazing hearing ability. A cat's ear
has 30 muscles that control the outer ear (by comparison,
human ears only have six muscles). These muscles rotate 180
degrees, so the cat can hear in all directions without moving
its head.
Cats have better memories than dogs. Tests conducted
by the University of Michigan concluded that while a dogs
memory lasts no more than 5 minutes, a cat's can last as long
as 16 hours - exceeding even that of monkeys and orangutans.
Cats have carpal pads on their front paws that
help to prevent them from sliding on a slippery surface when
jumping.
Cats have true fur, meaning that they have both
an undercoat and an outer coat.
Cats lack a true collarbone and can generally
squeeze their bodies through any space they can get their
heads through.
Cats love to hear the sound of their own name
and your voice, so talk to them often.
Cats must have fat in their diet, because they
can't produce it on their own. Never feed your cat dog food,
because cats need five times more protein than dogs do.
Cats only need a sixth the amount of light that
humans do to see. However, their daytime vision is only fair
compared to that of humans.
Cats purr at about 26 cycles per second, the
same frequency as an idling diesel engine.
Cats scratch to shed the sheaths of their old
claws.
Cats step with both left legs, then both right
legs when they walk or run. The only other animals to do this
are the giraffe and the camel.
Cats use more than 500 muscles to leap, jump,
and sprint.
Cats with white fur and skin on their ears are
very prone to sunburn.
Cats, not dogs, are the most common pets in
America. There are approximately 66 million cats to 58 million
dogs, with Parakeets a distant third at 14 million.
Despite its reputation for being finicky, the
average cat consumes about 127,750 calories a year, nearly
28 times its own weight in food and the same amount again
in liquids. In case you were wondering, cats cannot survive
on a vegetarian diet.
Each day in the US, animal shelters are forced
to destroy 30,000 dogs and cats.
Ear furnishings are the hairs that grow inside
a cat's ears.
Ernest Hemingway once had some 30 cats at his
home in Havana.
Felix the Cat is the first cartoon character
to ever have been made into a balloon for a parade.
Florence Nightingale owned more than 60 cats
in her lifetime.
Human painkillers such acetaminophen (Tylenol)
are toxic to cats. Chocolate is also poisonous to cats.
If left to her own devices, a female cat may
have three to seven kittens every four months. This is why
population control using spaying and neutering is so important.
If your cat is in the habit of rolling over
and exposing his stomach, you can be sure he feels perfectly
safe with you. It's also a way of demonstrating his pleasure
in your company.
In 1888, an estimated 300,000 mummified cats
were found at Beni Hassan, Egypt. They were sold at $18.43
per ton, and shipped to England to be ground up and used for
fertilizer.
In addition to using their noses, cats can smell
with the Jacobson's organ which is located in the upper surface
of the mouth.
In ancient Egypt, the entire family would shave
their eyebrows off as a sign of mourning when the family cat
died.
In cats, the calico and tortoiseshell coats
are sex-linked traits. All cats displaying these coats are
female... or occasionally sterile males.
In general, cats live longer than most dogs.
An average life span might be 12 to 14 years. Some cats are
reaching 20 or more. A cat's longevity depends on feeding,
genetics, environment, veterinary care and some other factors.
It is also important whether or not the cat lives indoors
or is allowed outdoors (outdoor cats live an average of eight
years). The general consensus is that at about age seven the
cat can be considered as "middle-aged", and at age 10 and
beyond - old.
In relation to their body size, cats have the
largest eyes of any mammal.
In the 9th century, King Henry I of Saxony decreed
that the fine for killing a cat should be sixty bushels of
corn.
In the midst of building the Grand Coulee Dam
in the state of Washington, engineers were stymied by the
problem of threading a cable through a pipeline until an anonymous
cat saved the day. Harnessed to the cable, this unknown hero
crawled through the pipeline maze to successfully finish the
job.
It has been established that people who own
pets live longer, have less stress, and have fewer heart attacks.
It has been scientifically proven that stroking
a cat can lower one's blood pressure.
It is a common belief that cats are color blind;
but recent studies have shown that cats can see blue, green,
and red.
Julius Caesar, Henri II, Charles XI, and Napoleon
had aelurophobia, the fear of cats.
Lucy Webb Hayes, wife of Rutherford Hayes, is
the first person recorded to own a Siamese in the U.S.
Many cats are unable to properly digest cow's
milk. Milk and milk products give them diarrhea.
Many of a cat's bones are found in its tail.
More than 30 percent of American households
have a cat as part of the family
Morris, the 9-Lives cat, was discovered at an
animal shelter in New England.
Most cats have five toes on each front paw,
but only four toes on each back paw.
Neutering a cat extends its life span by two
or three years.
Never pick a kitten up by the neck. Only a mother
cat may do this safely.
Newborn kittens have closed ear canals that
don't begin to open for nine days.
Nostradamus, the French Astrologer, 1503-1566,
had a cat named Grimalkin.
One litter box per cat, plus an extra box, is
the best formula for a multi-cat household.
Orange and lemon rinds are offensive to cats.
A light rubbing of orange peel on furniture will discourage
your cat from using it as a scratching post.
People who are allergic to cats are actually
allergic to cat saliva or cat dander. If the cat is bathed
regularly, allergic people have better tolerance to it.
Perhaps the oldest known female cat was Ma,
from Devon, who was 34 when she died in 1957.
Purring is part of every cat's repertoire of
social communication, apparently created by the movement of
air in spasms through contractions of the diaphragm. Interestingly,
purring is sometimes heard in cats who are severely ill or
anxious, perhaps as a self-comforting vocalization. But, more
typically, it is a sign of contentment, first heard in kittens
as they suckle milk from their mother.
Siamese cats originated in Siam-modern day Thailand.
Legend has it that they were the companions of kings and priests
and that they guarded temples. Some trace Siamese origins
to Egypt and Burma, but many dispute this idea. Siamese were
first brought to England in the late 1800s.
Sir Isaac Newton, who first described the principle
of gravity, also invented the swinging cat door for the convenience
of his many cats.
The ancestor of all domestic cats is the African
Wild Cat, which still exists today.
The average canned or dry cat meal is the nutritional
equivalent of eating five mice.
The cat family split from the other mammals
at least 40 million years ago, making them one of the oldest
mammalian families.
The cat is the only animal that walks on its
claws, not the pads of its feet.
The cat lover is an ailurophile, while a cat
hater is an ailurophobe.
The cat was domesticated over 4,000 years ago.
Today's house cats are descended from wildcats in Africa and
Europe.
The catgut formerly used as strings in tennis
rackets and musical instruments does not come from cats. Catgut
actually comes from sheep, hogs, and horses.
The cheetah is the only cat in the world that
can't retract its claws.
The color of the points in Siamese cats is heat
related. Cool areas are darker. In fact, Siamese kittens are
born white because of the heat inside the mother's uterus
before birth. This heat keeps the kittens hair from darkening
on the points.
The declawing of a pet cat involves surgery
called an onychectomy, in which the entire claw and end bone
of each toe of the animal are amputated.
The different types of tabby patterns that are
seen in domestic cats also occur in wild cats.
The domestic cat is the only cat species able
to hold its tail vertically while walking. All wild cats hold
their tails horizontally or tucked between their legs while
walking. A tail held high means happiness; a twitching tail
is a warning sign; and a tucked tail is a sign of insecurity.
The giraffe, camel, and cat are the only animals
that walk by both their left feet, then both their right feet
when walking.
The heaviest cat ever recorded weighed 46 lbs.
The normal temperature of a cat is 101.5 degrees.
The only domestic animal not mentioned in the
Bible is the cat.
The penalty for killing a cat, 4,000 years ago
in Egypt, was death.
The Persian cat has the longest and thickest
fur of all domestic cats. The topcoat may be up to 5 inches
long.
The phenomenon of cats finding their owners
in a place where they have never been before is scientifically
known as Psi-trailing. Many well-documented stories tell of
cats that have walked hundreds, even thousands of miles to
find their owners.
The phrase "raining cats and dogs" originated
in 17th Century England. During heavy downpours of rain, many
of these poor animals unfortunately drowned and their bodies
would be seen floating in the rain torrents that raced through
the streets. The situation gave the appearance that it had
literally rained "cats and dogs" and led to the current expression.
The red tabby cat is a Sarman.
The silver tabby cat is a Teku.
The Turkish Van, a very old rare breed that
originated in Turkey, is quite different from other breeds
because of its unusual love of water. Known as "the swimming
cat," the Van is strong, quick and agile. He makes a devoted
and loyal companion--on land or at sea.
There are more than 100 million dogs and cats
in the United States.
There are more than 500 million domestic cats,
with either 35 different breeds (according to The Cat Fanciers
Association, the world's largest cat registry), or 38 breeds
(as recognized by The International Cat Association, the second
largest registry).
Those dark lines connecting to a cat's eyes
are called mascara lines.
To drink, a cat laps liquid from the underside
of its tongue, rather than the top.
When you find your cat glued to the window intently
watching a bird, making a strange chattering noise and clicking
his or her jaws oddly, your cat is merely acting on instinct.
What your cat is doing is directly related to the killing
bite that all cats (both domestic and wild cats) use to dispatch
their prey.
Winston Churchill, adored cats. Churchill used
to refer to his cat, "Jock", as his special assistant. "Jock"
was reported to be on the bed with his master on the day the
great British statesman died.
You can tell a cat's mood by looking into its
eyes. A frightened or excited cat will have large, round pupils.
An angry cat will have narrow pupils. The pupil size is related
as much to the cat's emotions as to the degree of light.
Young cats can distinguish between two identical
sounds that are just 18 inches apart at a distance of up to
60 feet.
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