There
is one thing for sure that I can say about every rural town: there is always a town dog or cat. The other thing that you can be sure of is
that people drop off their stray cats thinking that they will find their way to
a barn and become a barn cat. Both of
these scenarios I can personally attest to.
The stray cat issue, though, caused me much money
and much pain. It seemed, as I later
found out, that the college nearby offered a psychology course that included
behavior training or whatever, so the kids would get a cat and then, when they
could not take it home, dump it in one of the villages close by. These cats would have kittens, and the
nightmare would start. My first cat
actually was a Siamese I brought with me when I moved to Eaton; he was very old
and died there. I had Chat for many
years. He was about 20 when he died and
traveled with me everywhere. He loved to go in the truck.
The
first stray in Eaton was Linky, which was named by my neighbor's son after a video
game. I eventually called him Lincus
because of his serious nature. Link
wandered in during a blizzard and was full-grown, the vet thought about 5 years
old. He snuck into the basement where I
had the wood stove the first winter in the house. (This stove had to be moved in the spring
because the floods filled the basement with water.) Link kept leaving in the
morning and then returning. I thought
perhaps he couldn’t find his way home.
Linky
looked just like a lynx, and when I brought him to the veterinarian he
exclaimed, “ a real cat!” I didn’t quite
figure that statement out. Linky also was the alpha cat and made all the other
cats bow to him. The younger males would
lick his head and ears for him, and then he would put his paw out and they
would sit next to him. I told everybody
he was the Godfather and they were all kissing his ring!
One fall I was sitting in
the house, and what I thought was Linky was sitting on porch. I went out to pet him, and he backed
away. I said, “Link, what’s up!”. He
didn’t move. I brought some food out,
and he gobbled it down as if he hadn’t eaten in a week. Just then Linky walked
up the side porch steps, looked at the other Linky, smelled him and walked
away!
That afternoon my friend and
I sat in the back yard on the deck, and the other Linky sat under foot. She sat, drank her beer and said, “Linky is pretty quiet today.” I said, “That’s not Linky.” She said, “Of course it’s Linky!” I said, “No, it’s not Linky!” She finally agreed when the real Linky walked
by. The other cats sniffed him and never
raised their back or their paws, so all we could figure was that this cat was a
twin of Linky’s. When he died a few
weeks later I assumed he had come back to the place where they were born to
die! It was certainly the strangest cat
thing I had ever witnessed.
When
Linky died on New Years Day at over 20 years old, I wrote an obituary about him for the Mid-York
Weekly since most people in town knew him because he went out every morning and
every night and made his rounds around the town, even until the week of his
death.
The cat all of the adults
and children loved was Curly. Curly came
to the house in terrible shape the week of Chanukah. I was making a Chanukah
Bush for a young friend, who was studying this for a school project, when this sick cat
appeared. He was obviously wormy and
starved and looked terrible. I fed him
and tried to clean him up, but no one would take him. He had something caught in his throat like a
bone, and it caused him not to be able to eat much. Eventually by sheer feeding him small meals
and by the bone or object moving, he recovered, and within a year he was the
most beautiful black and white cat anyone had ever seen. The same people whom I had tried to give him
to came by one by one, and they all wanted to adopt this wonderful clean cat. I laughed as I told each one of them that
they couldn’t have him, that I was keeping him, and that he was the cat they
hadn’t wanted.
The children of town
could put him in paper bags and chase with him, and the little girls could
dress him with hats and put him on a wagon.
And to really get him going, all you had to do was yell with a bit of a
raised voice, “C-u-r-r-l-ee-y.” Curly
died an old and well-loved cat. Even my friend Pauline a dog lover would sit and pet him; she said he reminded her of an old farm cat they
had had as children. Curly was the kind of mellow cat that could just
sit in one place and smile that all knowing smile at you, like a Cheshire Cat.
I miss them both! I now have a stray called Rascal who actually is quite like by people, he has his own Facebook page..Rascal Messere..friend him..he will friend you back!
Here is a spoof video we did on Rascal....
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