If you have a small pet.....
Jun. 10th, 2005 10:55 amhttp://www.partiallyclips.com/pages/archive.php?id=1263&c=1
This applies to cats, too. From what I've read, cats are prey animals as well as predators (Disney over-simplified matters--who knew?)--that's why they're apt to hide if they're lost instead of coming running if they're called. See The Lost Pet Chronicles.
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stoutfellow.
This applies to cats, too. From what I've read, cats are prey animals as well as predators (Disney over-simplified matters--who knew?)--that's why they're apt to hide if they're lost instead of coming running if they're called. See The Lost Pet Chronicles.
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I had a rabbit who was as bossy as a cat
Date: 2005-06-10 04:37 pm (UTC)He used to wake me up so he could get me out of bed and sleep in the spot I warmed.
And he would sneak up behind people and lick the backs of their ankles. People never expected a rabbit's tongue there.
Rabbits' tongues are skinny and slightly rough.
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Date: 2005-06-12 12:59 am (UTC)That's a good point, though it may not always hold true for all cats. Sugar will come if she hears us and is outside--once she's decided she wants in. And I've heard of at least one former feral cat who got out, was lost for a few weeks, and then came home (though I admit that's different than coming when called).
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Date: 2005-06-12 11:07 am (UTC)Sidetrack: I was hanging out in a park where people took their dogs off the leash--the level of obedience from the dogs wasn't much better than I see from the cats.
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Date: 2005-06-12 08:20 pm (UTC)Apparently it is possible to *train* cats to come reliably when summoned. My boss has trained his two cats to come when he whistles (he can do that ear-piercing finger whistle). This is useful because he can let them out to roam a bit, but reliably summon them indoors when convenient without canvassing the neighborhood for them.