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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!
Shona Steele
(Australia) |
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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
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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
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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

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 ...
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Cats On Duty with
NATO
Reprinted with express permission.

Feline Gus, he is responsible for the
old British headquarters building.

It is midnight at the NATO Headquarters in Kabul, Afghanistan.
All is as it should be. Most of the garrison is asleep and there has not been a
rocket attack in weeks. The camp is dotted with reinforced concrete bunkers,
stocked with food and water, in case of mortar attacks or other hostile actions.
A duty officer, with a small staff, monitors the radio nets and stands ready to
sound the alarm or to take other action in case of trouble. Communications
soldiers man the night shift, to maintain the network with subordinate NATO
units in Afghanistan and with the Intermediate Staging Base in Uzbekistan, as
well as with higher NATO headquarters in the Netherlands and in Belgium.
Italian soldiers, with night vision devices and automatic rifles, patrol the
perimeter. But they are not the only ones guarding the lives of the sleeping
garrison. Independently from the heavily armed and well-equipped soldiers, a
special company patrols the interior of the camp... it is a company of cats.
Over 5,000 years ago, people in Egypt began leaving food out for cats, to
encourage them to stay in the vicinity to hunt for mice, rats, and snakes. Mice
and rats threatened their grain stocks, and poisonous snakes threatened the
people themselves. In return for these handouts, the cats killed, dispersed, and
generally suppressed the pests. It was a sort of contract between man and cat,
and it began a long association of mutual benefit. The situation at NATO
Headquarters-Kabul, thousands of years later, is essentially a continuation of
the relationship established on the banks of the Nile, at the dawn of history.
It took a hard lesson to establish the Kabul Cat Company.
The average human life-expectancy in Afghanistan is 43 years. One third of all
Afghan women die during pregnancy, and of those who survive to full term, more
than one in ten die in childbirth. Children have a 16 percent chance of dying at
birth, and of the remaining 84 percent who are lucky enough to survive being
born, at least 16 percent will die before their sixth birthday.
Leishmaniasis, tuberculosis, e-coli, and a host of uncatalogued diseases ravage
the population. Rabies is widespread. There are eleven different types of
poisonous snakes in Afghanistan, seven of which have no known anti-venom.
Naturally, sending soldiers to live and operate in such an environment must be a
cause for urgent concern on the part of military medical authorities, and these
medical authorities noticed that there were many cats in the camp, some of which
were being adopted as mascots by the soldiers. Fearing rabies, these medical
authorities captured every cat on the installation in 2003, and transported them
to a wilderness many miles distant.
Within two months, the results of this mistake were apparent to all.
Flea-ridden rats, formerly unknown at the camp, occupied it in swarms. The rats
brought their own rabies threat, while their dried droppings spread disease
throughout the garrison. Snakes were attracted by the presence of these rodents,
which made wonderful meals for them, and cobras were found lurking in the
bunkers, which offered shelter from the searing Afghan sun. It was a serious
military problem, and there was only one solution.
The cats had to come back.
Today, some 60-70 cats patrol the installation. There is not a rat to be found,
and the cats include the bunkers in their rounds as well. Some of the cats have
names, given by the soldiers who feed them. Throughout history, military units
have often adopted animals as mascots and pets. For as long as there have been
armies, soldiers deployed on hard missions, far from home and family, welcomed
these little friends, who reminded them of their own humanity. Our NATO soldiers
of today are no less human than the soldiers of days gone by.
And so, tolerated by military medical authorities, loved by soldiers, and feared
by rats and snakes, the Kabul Cat Company carries on, at no cost to NATO or the
nations. Soldiers complete their missions in Kabul and return home, healthy in
mind and body, to their homes in Europe and North America.
It is midnight at NATO Headquarters in Kabul. All is as it should be.
Copyright 2004: Jared Kline
The story above is a wonderful reminder to
Military Medical Authorities as to why cats should never be taken off any
military base. Ignorance is no excuse." -
http://www.moggies.co.uk
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Dear
Ollie, My name is Timber, and I'm on your side about this cat-food
thing. I mean really, my mum tried to serve me LIVER AND CARROT
MEAL!!!! I immediately walked away! So I'm so on your half
on this Ollie!
Love, Timber (USA)
To read
Timber's in-depth comments about food, please click
here:
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Top 10 Cats’ Names in 2007 |
- Molly
- Felix
- Smudge
- Sooty
- Tigger
- Charlie
- Alfie
- Oscar
- Millie
- Misty
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DID YOU KNOW ...
putting your cat's name on his collar
is asking for trouble?
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MEWSLETTER ARCHIVES is a
new section where all the past MEWSLETTERS are stored. Read
through them at your leisure or better still, subscribe to the
MEWSLETTER which is free each month!!! |
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Testimonials
Ollie's diary is the most adorable thing I've ever read!!
I've just found your website today, and I can't stop reading his
funny entries. My face hurts from laughing! Thank you for
brightening my day. Naomi Harris USA (May 2005)
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A Cat's Prayer'
Lead me down all the right paths,
Keep me from fleas, bees, and baths.
Let me in should it storm,
Keep me safe, fed, and warm.
Let the sun shine where I lay,
Keep me young so I may play.
And most of all ...
Bless the people I adore,
And guard me from the dog next door.
Lisa Malone
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PRAISE FOR THE OCTOBER
2005 MEWSLETTER
Thank you very much for another wonderful Mewsletter. I look
forward to it each month, and this month was especially fine.
There is enough in it to be able to read at leisure over several
days, which sets it apart from many more compact sites, which
are finished in a few minutes. Your Mewsletter is more of a
digest, which I can go back to for something new over and over
again. I appreciate very much the work that you put into it,
and the contributions of all your feline staff. Thanks to
Ricky, I may even take up yoga.
All the best from rural Belgium, Jared Kline |
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EVER HAD AN ELECTRIC SHOCK OFF YOUR CAT? Find out
why it happens here
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Pet, Skunk, Smoke and Dead
Animal Odor remover by Clear The Air Eliminates smells from dead
mice, skunk spray, cigarette smoke, pet urine, and foot odors.

For a wonderful website where animal
writers and illustrators are welcome, please go to:
www.iawia.net
The fantastic logo is by Jill Carpenter
MOLLIE'S BIG HEART*
is a website about a very
special cat with a very special problem. This heart-warming site is
temporarily off line while Mollie and his siblings relocate from California
to Pennsylvania. Don't worry folks - they'll be back soon!
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