Subscribe to Our Mewsletter

  
Bathroom Cats V
Bathroom Cats V
A. Langston
8 in. x 10 in.
Buy This at Allposters.com
Hauser--Cat Out
Hauser--Cat Out

Buy This at Allposters.com


Cats, kittens, feline fun and all aspects of cat welfare and behaviour for you and your furry companions - TAKE A LOOK!!!!

Home
A'mews'ment Arcade
Animal Welfare
Articles

Book and Product Reviews
Book Picks
Breed Profiles

Cat Chat

Charities
and Rescue Centres
Contact the Mews
Team

Cudell Street Cats
Dan Weiss
Ed Kostro
Feline Fitness
Headlines
Jim Willis
Kitten Diaries
Kittybits
Links
Link to us
Mewsers' Mewsings
Mewsletter Archives
Napping on a Sunbeam

Neil the Vet
Our Mission
Paws for Thought
Purrfect Poetry
Subscribe
The 'Mews' Team
Willi Whizkas

Other Mewsings

Guidelines for Submission

READ GARFIELD'S FIRST CHRISTMAS LETTER HERE!!!!

Praise for Garfield's First Christmas Mewsletter ....

Please tell Garfield that his Christmas Letter was one of the most heartfelt I've ever read. Ed Kostro Dec 2005

CHECK OUT RICKY'S YOGA SESSIONS HERE

One cat is company. Two cats are a conspiracy. Three cats is an attempted takeover. Four or more cats is a complete coup!o

Shona Steele (Australia)

5 GOOD REASONS FOR HAVING YOUR CAT NEUTERED

DID YOU KNOW...

Images brought to you by

'The smallest feline is a masterpiece.' Leonardo da Vinci

'Dogs come when called. Cats take a message and get back to you.'

'Of course, every cat is really the most beautiful woman in the room.' Edward Verrall Luca, essayist

 

A morning kiss, a discreet
  touch of his nose landing
  somewhere on the middle
  of my face.
  Because his long white
  whiskers tickled,
  I began every day laughing.



  JANET F FAURE

'Dogs have owners. Cats have staff.'

'In the middle of a world that has always been a bit mad, the cat walks with confidence.'

Roseanne Anderson


 

Site
Meter

Jimmy, the Resident Daily Mews Feline Columnist has his own place now: click here
 

'Cats make one of the most satisfying sounds in the world: they purr ... A purring cat is a form of high praise, like a gold star on a test paper. It is reinforcement of something we would all like to believe about ourselves - that we are nice.' - Roger A Caras

"Of all the [cat] toys available, none is better designed than the owner himself. A large multipurpose plaything, its parts can be made to move in almost any direction. It comes completely assembled, and it makes a noise when you jump on it." -- Stephen Baker

Garfield: 28.03.86 - 12.06.06

Garfield

Click on the cartoon to take you to Garfield's tribute pages

GARFIELD and those infamous 20th birthday pictures. See both birthday hats and more ...

LETTER FROM GARFIELD is a final letter written with great love to his Mum ...

 

 

 

 

 

 

A  CHRISTMAS STORY OF HOPE

by Pam Ahern: Edgar Mission Farm Sanctuary, Australia

Claudette

Someone far wiser than me once said “It's not the destination that's important. It's the journey that takes you there”.   In creating Edgar’s Mission Farm Sanctuary I had no idea of the journey I was embarking upon.  With no road map to guide me and a gut instinct that says kindness is the key to a better world for us all I set out each day in unchartered fields.

Another wise sage said “When the student is ready the teacher will appear”.  My teachers have been appearing throughout my life, teaching many simple yet profound lessons.   On the 9th July 2008 a new teacher appeared in my life, her name was Claudette and she was a goat of no distinct breed with only one horn (a legacy of a recent injury).  Battered, bruised and bloodied she arrived in the back of an animal ambulance.  

 Claudette was the most petrified animal I had ever encountered, with no trust in the human species that stood before her.  Her fear was so great and her flight response so keen that placing her in any open paddock would have been fraught with disaster add to this a gun club down the road who would have seen a fleeing goat on their property as fair game and it soon became obvious that the only safe place for Claudette was in a stable with a rope attached to her collar lest she scale the wall.

While I will never know of the trauma that brought Claudette to the sorry state she was in on that first day I saw her, I knew that in time her physical injuries would heal.  The helmet the good folk at the animal hospital had fashioned for her would protect her horn bud from further trauma, while stemming bleeding and preventing infection.  It would remain to be seen if she, no we, could ever overcome the psychological damage that yielded such a morbid fear of man.

At first all I could do was just sit still on a little stump in Claudette’s stable and pretend not to notice the violent trembling my presence would cause.  In time she came to sniff me and soon she began to associate me with good things like yummy treats and head rubs.  Head rubs that would begin to rub away the massive amounts of dried blood that oddly caressed her face.  With each gentle stroke dried blood would crumble through my fingers.  In time I would be able to take her for walks, but some days it was a case of one step forward two back.  Sometimes I would be walking along only to find a goat hoof belting me about the head.  I could never understand why Claudette would do this, but once I would turn to face her she would cock her head on the side and just stare at me.  This lead me to nick name her, as only a truly loving and devoted guardian could “Claudette, my crazy crazy goat”.

As the weeks morphed into months I came to adore my “Crazy Crazy Goat”, and there can be no doubt that in me, Claudette found a human she could say “I feel safe in your company”.  Although I couldn’t always claim that I was safe in Claudette’s, for even with one horn she could pack a mean blow.  But I did Jesus proud as I literally turned the other cheek, but never returning the blow.  There was many a night as I contemplated my bruises as things were going pear shaped where this road would lead… 

Proudly on the 4th of December I undid the lead rope on Claudette that had been dragging behind her in Goatville, her newfound home, her journey almost complete.  To see this goat now with her kin, grazing peacefully and initiating contact with humans (albeit gingerly) gives me the greatest pride that I never gave up.  I remember well the ambulance driver saying to me that he would take Claudette back to the hospital when we both realised that I could not put her in a paddock to rehabilitate due to her intense fear.  But both he and I knew what that would mean.

The lesson I again learned from Claudette is one that each and every animal in my life has taught me, and that is we are all the same.  We fear things that harm us, we yearn to feel safe and all yield to kindness.  If I have achieved nothing else in my life I have made a pig happy, a cow sing and goat forgive.  And if a motley goat such as Claudette can find it in her heart to forgive our species that has so wronged her why then cannot our species find it in ours to cause them no harm.

At Christmas time, I pray that Claudette’s story will encourage every one of us to align our lifestyles with our values as we celebrate the diversity of nature and all its creatures and extend to them mercy. This will indeed make Christmas time a time to truly celebrate and may 2009 be the year of compassion.

Peace on earth to you all, I’m off to hug a goat!

Pam

 "If we could live happy and healthy lives without harming others....why wouldn't we?"

 

Visit Pam's website to see the incredible and wonderful work that she does:

www.edgarsmission.org.au

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

123Greetings.com
123Greetings.com