Tag: cats

gallusrostromegalus:

katy-l-wood:

gallusrostromegalus:

Husbeast has given Mr. Mochi watermelon and now Mochi is trying to snitch the crusts off his plate.

Always consult your vet before making any changes to your pet’s diet, but Watermelon is safe for both cats and dogs and a good way to help them stay hydrated this summer.

Just. 

Don’t give your cat with a history of determined Begging and sneaky little thief hands watermelon off your plate because then he thinks he’s allowed to eat the watermelon off your plate and that’s just inconvenient.

“Determined Begging” implies much less thievery than Mochi is involved in.

It’s only theft if we’re not looking! Srsly of we are he does a full Saddest Cat Ever face while pulling things off the plate.

He doesn’t steal Charlie’s food either he slaps Charlie then eats his food so it’s really assault and robbery.

jakubrozalski:

“Czart”

Czart – a relic of ancient times, although very rare even this days you can still meet some of them in less populated and wild places of Eastern Europe. Often near to the places of the ancient pagan temples and cults. They eat cows and sheep, try to avoid people, for unknown reasons they are really afraid of cats…

Who need a Witcher, when there is Babushka 😉

prints: https://society6.com/mrwerewolf/s?q=new+prints

why-animals-do-the-thing:

New footage of the elusive Chinese Mountain Cat! 

(Image Credits: Shan Shui Conservation Center)

This documentation of a barely-known species of small wild felid is incredible – it’s potentially the first active Chinese mountain cat den ever found! As documented in a recent blog post, a researcher working on a crane conservation project took photos of what he thought was a Tibetan fox, only to discover later that he’d actually photographed a cat so rare it was only discovered as a species in 2007! Researchers returned to the site later and were ecstatic to find that the cat was a mother with two young kittens. The placed a camera trap close to one of the den entrances and was able to record multiple days worth of footage before the family moved on.

Chinese mountain cats (Felis bieti) live in a very small, high-altitude range in remote northern China. They’re well-adapted to the harsh weather at those heights, with a stocky build and thick fur in the winter, and are often called “grass cats” by locals because they blend into the the dry grass of the alpine meadow habitats where they’re most often observed. What little information we have about these elusive felids comes mostly from observations by herders whose livestock graze in those meadows. The IUCN lists that no substantive knowledge has been gained about Chinese mountain cats since 2010, so this new footage from Shan Shui Conservation Center is a major contribution to the scientific understanding of the species. 

Click through here to watch the footage of the Chinese mountain cat family!