Author Archives: Charles Huss

Copy Cats


One again it seems that history is repeating itself. When we adopted Puck he quickly learned some of Chris’s bad behaviors. For example, Chris would jump on top of the cabinets. Puck watched him do this for several weeks, perhaps longer and eventually learned to get up there himself.

Chris on kitchen babinet

Bad Cat Chris and Puck on top of the Cabinets

Chris also liked to hang out on top of the China Cabinet and soon Puck was up there too.

Our cat Chris on top of the China cabinet.

Our cat Puck on china cabinet

Puck eventually developed his own favorite places to hang out and now our new cat Frankie is following in his footsteps. First Frankie decided he liked lying on the couch where he could look out the window. That happens to be a favorite spot of Puck’s but it probably doesn’t really qualify because it is a naturally good spot and Chris likes it too.

Bad Cat Chris and PuckOur cat Frankie on couchThere is also what has become known as “Puck’s Perch.” It is the ledge between the kitchen and living room that Puck loves to hang out on.

Our cat Puck on ledge.Now we have to start calling it “Puck and Frankie’s Perch.” It just doesn’t sound as cool.

Frankie the cat on Puck's perchA few months ago Rose bought a basket that she put on top of the china cabinet as a decoration. Right away Puck decided to get inside of it, which he did with great difficulty because the ceiling was too close. I put the basket on its side to make it easier for him and it soon became Puck’s second favorite napping spot (Just behind the back of the couch).

Our cat Puck on china cabinet

Chris would also lie in the basket sometimes but I think he did it just to take it away from Puck.

20131226_cats_170

Now Frankie has discovered it and he is in that basket quite often. So much so that I am worried that Puck will soon lose interest in it.

Our cat Frankie in basketAs I was in the middle of writing this post, Rose called me into the living room to help her with something. While I was helping her, Puck started pawing my back, indicating that he wanted to get on my shoulders (something he copied from Chris) so I picked him up and eventually walked over to the China cabinet thinking he might want to hop into his basket. It was then that I noticed it was occupied. I stood there for a minute to see if Puck would try to take back his spot but he was not interested in ousting Frankie. Perhaps I should start a new blog called “Good Cat Puck.”

I’m sure a lot of readers have pets that learn behaviors from other pets. If you would like to share I would love to hear about it.

The Return of Our Feathered Friend


Our Egret returned last weekend looking for food. I tried giving him a little ham and Puck managed to slip past me and ran outside. He just ignored the big bird and ran off to do his own thing. I decided to let Chris out too but Frankie had to stay in after what he did on his first foray outside. Both cats seemed to not be interested in the egret and the egret seemed to not be afraid that two cats were running around the yard.

EgretEgret with our cats, Chris and PuckEgret with our cats, Chris and Puck

Our cat Frankie

I felt bad that Frankie did not get to participate. We talked about letting him out today. I said it would probably be okay if Rose stayed and helped watch him but she was skeptical so only Chris got to spend some time outside, and that was only because he escaped twice while I was coming through the door.

Photo Friday: Frankie’s First Foray Outside


The weather was so beautiful last weekend that I decided to let Chris and Puck outside for a little exercise. I felt bad about leaving Frankie inside but I was not sure about what he would do once outside. I also did not feel comfortable trying to watch three cats at once.

Our cats Chris and Puck outside with Frankie inside.

C’mon Puck. What are you waiting for?
Our cats Chris, Puck and Frankie.

I see you having fun out there!

Our cats Chris and Puck

Okay! Enough pictures already!

Egret in our back yard

Looks like this isn’t a good time to ask for hot dogs.

Our cat Frankie watching Chris and Puck from inside

What about me?

Our cats Chris and Puck behind patio.

Chris: Puck. I think I found a way in. Puck: What do you want to get in for? Chris: Oh yeah, you got a point.

Our cats Chris and Puck and Frankie

C’mon guys, let me out.

After a few minutes, Rose came out and said I should let Frankie out too. I told her I would be happy to but I needed her help to watch them. So Rose agreed to stay outside and help babysit.

We opened the door to let Frankie out but he was hesitant at first.

Our cats Chris and Frankie

Okay Frankie. You can play with us if you want to,

Our cats Chris and Frankie Outside.

Come on Frankie. It’s great out here.

Our cats Chris and Frankie Outside.

Are you sure it is safe?

Our cats Chris and Frankie Outside.

Okay, here I go.

Our cat Frankie Outside.

I’m outside! This is great!

Our cat Frankie Outside.

There’s so much to do. Where do I start?

Our cat Frankie Outside.

I think this is where work is done. I don’t want to go in there.

Our cats Frankie and Puck Outside.

Oh Frankie! You need to do a better job cleaning your ears.

Our cat Frankie and Outside.

No, this isn’t catnip.

After doing a little exploring close to home, Frankie decided to venture further away. This is when I had to stop taking pictures and pay attention. I put myself between him and the far side of the yard, hoping to encourage him to turn around. It didn’t work. He slipped past me and started heading for the other side of the property.

Our building has six units. We live on the side closest to the marina and that is the side I am familiar with. There is a fence and a gate on each side but I only ever use the one side so I don’t really know what is on the other side. On our side there is a wall that separates the Marina from our property. My only concern there is that Chris will crawl under the gate (which he has done), but even then he has a long way to go to get out of my sight. We also have a padlock on the gate that can be a bit of a hassle because the numbers are hard to read for an old guy like me.

The other side borders a large condo building and, until Frankie started heading toward it, I never noticed the fence had gaps big enough for a cat to walk through. I yelled to Rose that I needed her help but she was not there. She went inside the house.

Frankie did just what I thought he was going to do. He ran straight to the fence and walked right through. I thought about running back into the house to tell Rose I needed help but instead I headed for the gate to walk around the fence. I forgot about the lock so I had to fumble with the combination. that is when I learned that the numbers were different on that padlock.

I quickly ran back to the house, told Rose I needed help and headed  out the front door.  I hurried back over to the condo property to look for Frankie. When I got there I saw him between cars and when I approached he walked through the fence to our side. This is exactly what Chris would do to me at our last Condo (see here – coincidently, if you follow this link and click on the second photo and enlarge it, you can see our current home).

I walked all the way back around to our side only to see him walk through the fence again. To casual observer, this must have seemed funny, but I was not amused. So back around I went only to have him disappear through the fence again. This time Rose scooped him up and put an end to the games. I have a feeling that outside time just got more difficult.

Did We Make a Mistake?


It has been more than three weeks since we adopted Frankie and while things are somewhat better now, there are still problems to overcome. This is new to us. We have had many cats over the years but never so many problems with fighting.

Our cats Frankie and Chris

At first it seemed like Chris was to blame. It surprised us because Chris did not act that way when we introduced Puck. He seemed happy to have someone to play with. The two of them “fought” all the time but it was mostly play. There was very little growling and hissing. I suppose it also helped that Puck learned to be subservient when necessary.

When Frankie and Chris are together, there is usually growling, hissing and, for lack of a better word, screaming. There is also fighting. Not play fighting but mortal combat. Yesterday I had to break up a fight when Chris pursued and then attacked Frankie. I held Chris down by the scruff of the neck (I learned that from what Chris does to Puck) and verbally scolded him. He didn’t like it and told me so. I finally let him go and he immediately went after Frankie again.

There has been some bright spots though. I sometimes see Chris and Frankie sniffing noses, or sometimes Chris will sniff Frankie’s butt without a fight starting. I also see Puck and Frankie close together without trouble. When that happens I have hope for the future which is quickly dashed by another fight.

Puck and Frankie getting along seems reasonable because Chris is our bad cat and Puck is our good cat. Puck never causes problems. At least that is what I thought, but I have seen plenty of fights between Frankie and Puck too. This morning the two of them were running around the house, apparently playing. This went on for a while but it suddenly turned into a major fight. I was in the kitchen and saw Puck pounce on Frankie as he tried to get out the cat door. A fight ensued which I foolishly tried to break up and got a paw full of Frankie’s claws in the back of my hand. A little later Rose also felt the wrath of Frankie’s claws.

I’m starting to think that maybe Frankie is not completely innocent in all this. Perhaps he is just one of those cats that needs to be in a household with no other pets. Most shelters will warn you about that, but since Frankie came from a government agency, they probably never took the time to figure that out. Also, we adopted Frankie from a Petsmart employee who probably didn’t know anything about him.

Well, we have him now and we don’t want to give up on him so we need to just continue to try to make things better. Perhaps this will just take months instead of weeks. Only time will tell.

The Story of Casper, The Friendly Cat


“Some day soon, perhaps in forty years, there will be no one alive who has ever known me. That’s when I will be truly dead – when I exist in no one’s memory.” – Irvin D. Yalom

I think writing about my cats helps keep their memory alive, perhaps indefinitely, which makes me feel good, but there is another cat, one who belonged to someone else, who I feel deserves to be remembered. I thought about Casper while reading a post on Rumpydog called The Damage That Ignorance Can Do. Part of the story was about people moving and abandoning their cat. It reminded me of how Casper was abandoned, not physically but emotionally. He had no home where people cared about him. I suppose I should start from the beginning.

Casper the Friendly CatThe year was 2004, long before Chris was born. We had three cats at the time; Princess, Sneakers and Vinny. That summer a white and black cat started coming around. I think he saw our cats on the patio and thought this would be a good home for him. He would stand by the patio door and ask to come in.

I started going outside to pet him. He was very friendly and loved the attention. At first I thought he might be homeless so I would feed him when he came around. Sometimes he ate a little but mostly he was just there for the attention. A couple of times I let him on our patio when no other cat was around. We had no idea if he was sick or not so we didn’t want to risk exposing our other cats to him.

Chuck and Casper the Friendly Cat

Pay no attention to my haircut. This was the first and last time my wife attempted to cut my hair.

Chuck and Casper the Friendly Cat

We lived in a nice, quiet neighborhood. Our house was on the east side of the street. Across the street and one house to the south was where Casper lived. Next door to me on the north side lived a couple just a little older than Rose and I named Nancy and Dutch. Nancy was very nice but very quiet and soft-spoken. When our cat Vinny first came around as a stray, we started feeding him and soon discovered Nancy was feeding him too. Dutch was a big, burly ex-biker with an outspoken personality. He had a bit of a short fuse but he also had a big heart and would do anything for people he cared about.

We were affected by a few hurricanes that year. Two of them passed almost directly over us but their strength was diminished because they had hit Florida from the east coast and moved across the state before hitting us on the west coast.  Even so, we were still confronted with very powerful winds. During one of the hurricanes, I looked out the window and noticed Casper huddled against the front window of his home. His owners had evacuated and left him outside. I called Dutch, grabbed a towel and the two of us went over to retrieve him. We wrapped him in the towel and brought him to Dutch’s garage where he rode out the storm.

Our cat Vinny

Vinny

Some time in October, Rose and I were out for dinner when we got a phone call from Dutch. He said a pit bull was loose and had torn up the screen on our patio trying to get at Vinny, who happened to spend a lot of time out there. Fortunately Dutch chased the dog away and I fixed the screen the next day.

By then Casper was a regular visitor although I hadn’t learned his name yet. We had a trampoline in the back yard and sometimes he would have a nap on the perimeter of it (it had a safety net) while he waited for someone to come out and pay attention to him. Unknown to me, he was on the trampoline one afternoon while I was taking a shower. I heard a lot of barking in the back yard and since this was about four days after the attempted attack on Vinny I was a bit concerned. I hurried out of the shower, quickly put on a pair of shorts and went to see what all the commotion was about.

It was a pit bull, probably the same one that tore up our screens. This time he wanted Casper. He couldn’t reach him on the trampoline but Casper didn’t know that. He panicked, jumped down and made a run for it. He made it to Dutch’s yard and the dog pounced on him.

I ran out the patio door as quickly as possible but I was not exactly dressed to fight a pit bull.  I was screaming at the dog the entire time but he was singularly focused on killing the cat. Dutch had his trash cans nearby so I grabbed a lid and threw it at the dog. It caught the wind and turned, causing me to either miss or just graze him but it did distract him long enough for Casper to scramble up a tree. Unknown to me, Vinny had followed me out the door and now became the new focus of the crazy pit bull. He lunged for Vinny who, thankfully, dodged the attack and scrambled up the same tree as Casper.

With both cats out of reach and me still yelling at the dog, he ran off. Just then Dutch came outside with a baseball bat and helped me retrieve Vinny from the tree. While we were doing that, Casper was climbing higher into the tree and would not come down.

I left Casper there and went back inside to get dressed. Together, Dutch and I walked north between the houses looking for the dog. We almost reached the end of the block when we saw, on the street behind our houses, the reunion of dog and owner. I noticed their back patio had screens that were completely shredded and the fence around the yard was broken so any dog that made it to the patio had unrestricted access to the rest of the neighborhood.

We walked over to him and Dutch got in his face and said, “If I ever see that F*%#in dog again I’ll kill him!” Amazingly, the man seemed unfazed and proceeded to argue with Dutch. I could tell Dutch wanted to punch the guy but he restrained himself with much effort. I know if Dutch was in my face yelling at me I would be very cooperative. I chimed in that the dog tore up my screens a few days earlier while he was trying to get my cat but he didn’t seem to care about that.

After several minutes of arguing, we left to see if we could get Casper out of the tree. He had climbed pretty high and seemed content to stay put. I walked across the street, I believe with Rose who was home by then,  to see if Casper’s owner could help. A girl, perhaps ten years old, answered the door. We told her what happened and she followed us to Casper’s tree. It was then that we learned his name as she called him to try to coax him down. It didn’t work. Casper was safe in that tree and he was not coming down. I did get some information out of her though. She told us that they had a dog that would harass Casper so he rarely went inside the house.

About 7:30 that evening I got a flashlight and went back to the tree. This time I was able to talk him down. I noticed that Casper had some cuts from the attack but he seemed okay otherwise. I carried him home and give him to the little girl, hoping someone there would take care of him.

Later, I called animal control. I was hoping to prevent the dog from doing something like this again to Casper, Vinny or anyone’s pet. It surprised me to find out that unless the dog attacked a human there was not much they could do. The woman I spoke to was nice though and she did file a report. A few weeks later she called me and said those people had moved out, which was a relief.

Not long after that indecent our kids were witness to the aftermath of a horrible accident on the way to the bus stop. Apparently, the male member of the Casper household had struck and killed a woman who stepped out in front of his truck. I don’t know if that contributed to relationship problems but soon after that the woman and daughter moved out leaving him alone to take care of Casper. The poor cat got very little attention before this and now he was virtually a stray.

By early to mid December the weather had become cold and Casper had developed a limp. I felt bad for him because he was stuck in the cold and I knew his owner would not take him to the vet.

I propped my garage door open enough for Casper to get in and then closed the screen sliders almost all the way so a would-be criminal would not easily notice my garage was not locked. Inside I put a warm blanket along with food and water. I also had a chair out there and I would sometimes sit and pet him while he laid on my lap. Rose and I tried to contact Casper’s owner about his condition a couple of times but got no answer at the door. We then left him a note that went unanswered.

I wanted to adopt him but we felt like we couldn’t just steal our neighbor’s cat. Don’t get me wrong, taking a cat from a neglectful owner was not the problem. The problem was the first time Casper looked out our front window his owner would see that we had him. We needed to find someone willing to take in a cat in need and eventually talked Rose’s mother’s boyfriend into taking him. The only thing left to do was bring Casper to the vet.

We made an appointment for the following Monday and Rose took him while I was at work. The vet said that Casper was suffering from advanced Feline leukemia and recommended he be put to sleep. So on December 27, 2004 a beautiful life ended because of neglect. I felt as sad as if he were my cat. I felt even worse because he was on the verge of finally having a good life with a human that would give him the attention he deserved.

There are many other Caspers out there. My hope is that anyone who reads this will do just a little to help them. Just one thing. Adopt a pet if you can. If you can’t, you can volunteer at a shelter or at least give to a local shelter or TNR program. If you have outside cats, let them in, better yet, keep them in. At the very least get them vaccinated and don’t forget to to pay attention to your pets. Food and water is just not enough.

If you know a pet that deserves their own story I would be happy to read it. Please leave a comment or a link. I also want to know what you think about Casper.

Photo Friday: For The Birds


When we moved into our current home in June, there was an egret that would come by every day and hang out by our back door waiting for us to feed him. We assumed the woman that lived there before us would feed him everyday and he came to expect it. I did not really want to continue the tradition but I felt like we should wean him off the handouts. Unfortunately we had no meat to give him other than cat food so I put some out for him but he was not very interested. Eventually he went away but then suddenly showed up at our door the other evening.

Our cat Frankie watching an egret.

Our cats Chris and Puck watching egret.All the cats were on the patio, interested in what this bird was doing so close to their space. We only had sliced ham for him so I tore a piece into smaller pieces and threw them to him. He gobbled those up quickly and stuck around begging for more.

Rose gave me another piece so I did the same thing. This time Puck ran out the door and chased the bird back but he didn’t leave the yard. I then had to spend the next ten minutes chasing Puck back and forth until Rose finally opened the door and I was able to corral him back onto the patio.

Frankie’s Favorite Place


Last week Frankie discovered how to get from the house to the patio using the cat door. He has loved the patio since we first introduced him to it and suddenly he could go out there whenever he wanted to. The problem was, he apparently didn’t realize that the cat door worked in both directions.

We came home after work one evening to find Frankie at the door wanting to come in. I don’t know how long he was out there but I did know he needed to learn how to get into the house before we left for work the next day. I tried a couple of times to put him in front of the cat door and open it so he could see it worked both ways but he would not pay attention. He just walked away like he was bored. Finally I picked him up and gently shoved him through the door. I felt bad doing it but I did not want him to go on the patio and then not be able to get back inside where his food and litter is.

Since then he goes out and comes back in at will. He likes lying on the chair and watching the goings on of the outside world but he does not like Chris out there bothering him.

Our cats Chris and Frankie

Fortunately, he discovered a place where he can be relatively free of other annoying cats (or should I say cat?) and still have a great view of outside.

Our cat Frankie

Now, if we haven’t seen Frankie for a while, we have a good idea where to look first.

New Cat Troubles


I have introduced many cats to our household over the years and it is never easy but usually after two or three days the war is over except for some minor skirmishes now and then. This time the war lingers on after eight days. It is getting better though. This weekend has been a bit of a turning point and the war has gone from the Civil War to the Cold War.

I did not expect Chris to be this bad. When we introduced Puck, Chris was eager to play with him. It was Tigger who had the problem. I can’t say it is all Chris’s fault though. Frankie gets very defensive when Chris or Puck enters the room and hisses and growls at them. Puck does the right thing and keeps his distance but Chris is undeterred and pushes forward, causing Frankie to retreat under the bed or stand his ground and fight.

Sometimes a fight starts just because Chris is too close. He seems curious about Frankie and wants to smell him but Frankie feels the need to defend himself. Other times Chris wants to show Frankie who is boss and will Chase him under the bed. We were leaving the house today and as I was locking the door I saw Chris chase Frankie out of the living room and down the hall. Out of pure impulse I went back in the house and chased Chris from the bedroom making a show of stomping my feet as I followed him out to the patio. I think I might have over did it though because it looked like I scared Chris. I felt bad about it but I also think Chris needed to learn that what he was doing was not acceptable.

We did have some good moments this weekend and I think we can at least leave the bedroom door open when we are gone. There was one moment yesterday when the two of the smelled each others nose without a fight starting. They also spent time together on the patio, although not too close.

Chris and our new cat Frankie

Frankie keeps a watchful eye on Chris.

Chris, Puck and our new cat Frankie

Frankie, enjoying some time on the patio, has to keep an eye on Chris and Puck.

Puck and our new cat Frankie

Puck made it to the second perch but Frankie’s hisses forced him back to the table.

Things are slowly getting better. A little too slow for my taste but we don’t know what kind of trauma Frankie went through before we took him home. He may just need more time before he trusts the other cats. I think he might also have to accept Chris’s role as the alpha or we may never see peace.