This entire forums quieter than a ---

13»

Comments

  • SilverGirl said:

    memcneil70 said:

    A year and a half ago, I found a picture of a ginger cat that needed to be adopted with his older brother and had 'issues'. We both fell in love.

    I suspect this will be how it is for me. All the fur-family in my life has always found me, never the other way around. There's kind of a joke in the family that the weirdly complicated ones always pick us because they know we'll take care of them. Heck of an honor, if it's true.

    Our current pair were put in our path by the Good God I am convinced. Especially our older one Bear: Husband and I made an impulse "just looking" trip to the shelter. It turned out to be weekend the fees were waived. Here was this adolescent lab mix playing up to Husband. Husband was never more than lukewarm to the idea of a dog - me & the 18-20ish kids were the ones who wanted one - yet Husband was the one who asked, "Should we get him?".So we called the kids. It's a truly surreal experience to have your 20 year old son ask if you've thought something through. Said son quickly became Bear's favorite human, and still is. 

    We had decided to get a second dog when we found Gilligan the ditzy border collie at an adoption day 2 years ago. He is a "tripod" (amputee) and super fast and agile, which is typical of tripods, the vet said. Gilly is the rare dog who is much more motivated by attention than food. He reminds me of a 50+ pound version of those cats that plop on top of you and demand to be petted. LOL

    @torquinox Yes I too feel the paradox of loving the pets and being tired of the labor of love. Most deeply when they want out at 2am.

  • TorquinoxTorquinox Posts: 3,556
    edited January 22

    miladyderyni_173d399f47 said:

    @torquinox Yes I too feel the paradox of loving the pets and being tired of the labor of love. Most deeply when they want out at 2am.

    Yes. Glad to know I'm not the only one! smiley

    Post edited by Torquinox on
  • Well this thread has livened up the forums. Should we rename it "OT: Pets Anonymous"?

  • davesodaveso Posts: 7,137

    miladyderyni_173d399f47 said:

    Well this thread has livened up the forums. Should we rename it "OT: Pets Anonymous"?

    yep..the rest lingers. At least it got some folks talking for a bit yes 

  • Just to let everyone know, my Squeaky (19 yo cat) seems to think that shouting at at screen at the top of his voice will type a reply - he's just been trying it, despite the fact that the acoustic amplification is not as good as when he's standing in the bath. He and our Maine Coon both think that 5am is an eminently suitable feeding time, and don't appreciate our disagreement. Regards, Richard.
  • tsroemitsroemi Posts: 2,851

    I love pets too, and I'm exhausted caring for them when they decide to fall sick taking turns, and I hate hate HATE it so much that I will always lose them eventually. Having baby animals every once in a while would maybe cure this feeling to some extent, but I just couldn't cope with having to find a new home for the young 'uns, and then worrying about them forever.

    My family and I have been starting to turn more towards fostering wild animals lately, in cooperation with some organisations close to where we live. Currently, we're the proud hosts of three young hedgehogs sleeping away the winter days in an enclosure in our garden. We had two others in the summer which my wife fed until they were strong enough to be released. That was a sad but glorious day. I think this could be a good way to go for us, and maybe for others also who feel the pain too much. But the cuddling is kinda hard, with hedgehogs, obviously. Though the babies are really nosy and fearless and try to nibble your hand very affectionately laugh.

  • SilverGirlSilverGirl Posts: 1,067

    richardandtracy said:

    Just to let everyone know, my Squeaky (19 yo cat) seems to think that shouting at at screen at the top of his voice will type a reply - he's just been trying it, despite the fact that the acoustic amplification is not as good as when he's standing in the bath. He and our Maine Coon both think that 5am is an eminently suitable feeding time, and don't appreciate our disagreement. Regards, Richard.

    My splotchy kitty sang a lot. He'd sing to the Yule tree, he'd sit at the top of the stairs and sing -- I think because he liked the way it echoed there down to the front landing, and then the bottom one (split-entry home). Funniest was when he'd hunt some bug or another that had gotten into the house... he'd sing to it before he'd kill it. I think he must've been in the opera in his last life. Dearly wish I had a video of any of it. I always meant to take one, and then would miss it and think "oh for sure next time"... until I ran out of "next time"s. :( 

  • Matt_CastleMatt_Castle Posts: 2,644

    daveso said:

    At least it got some folks talking for a bit yes 

    I can post more silly horse outfits if that helps.


    Gallery Link

  • davesodaveso Posts: 7,137

    Matt_Castle said:

    daveso said:

    At least it got some folks talking for a bit yes 

    I can post more silly horse outfits if that helps.


    Gallery Link

    Helps a lot. thanks laugh 

  • SilverGirlSilverGirl Posts: 1,067

    Matt_Castle said:

    daveso said:

    At least it got some folks talking for a bit yes 

    I can post more silly horse outfits if that helps.

    The answer to "more silly horse outfits" is always a resounding YES :) 

  • Absolutely!
  • richardandtracyrichardandtracy Posts: 5,847
    edited January 23
    Silver girl, love your stories of your pets. It always hurts to loose one, but after a year or so, the bad times are forgotten and the good ones form the memories. My avatar cat died in 2004 aged 19-ish (he was an adult when he adopted my wife, so we never knew exactly how old he was) and the memories of him last. Regards, Richard.
    Post edited by richardandtracy on
  • @tsroemi : You've taken an option I'm not sure we have the stamina for. Adopting/housing wild animals as they recover/grow up looks from the outside to be very hard work. I have always had concerns that you know the wild animal less well than with a pet, and so can't necessarily see when it's not as fit as it could be. However.. you may well be proving me wrong.

    Thinking on the idea of recovery homing for wild animals.. our garden is about an acre (1/3 hectare) of wildlife garden, so we could do the same, and potentially do the release into the garden - there is a large amount of wildlife there despite the relentless rodent slaughter perpetrated by our Maine Coon. Ozzie seems to be able to catch up to 2 rodents a day in the garden and doesn't appear to reduce the numbers. A previous Maine Coon kitten we had caught 2 rabbits a day and singlehandedly nearly exterminated a local warren. That warren took 3 years to recover after he ran out in front of a car.

    Regards,

    Richard

  • tsroemitsroemi Posts: 2,851

    richardandtracy said:

    @tsroemi : You've taken an option I'm not sure we have the stamina for. Adopting/housing wild animals as they recover/grow up looks from the outside to be very hard work. I have always had concerns that you know the wild animal less well than with a pet, and so can't necessarily see when it's not as fit as it could be. However.. you may well be proving me wrong.

    Thinking on the idea of recovery homing for wild animals.. our garden is about an acre (1/3 hectare) of wildlife garden, so we could do the same, and potentially do the release into the garden - there is a large amount of wildlife there despite the relentless rodent slaughter perpetrated by our Maine Coon. Ozzie seems to be able to catch up to 2 rodents a day in the garden and doesn't appear to reduce the numbers. A previous Maine Coon kitten we had caught 2 rabbits a day and singlehandedly nearly exterminated a local warren. That warren took 3 years to recover after he ran out in front of a car.

    Regards,

    Richard

    Richard, you usually get a lot of help from local wildlife organisations, seeing that a) they don't want people to mess about with the animals in a clueless way of course, so they want to educate you first, and b) they really need more folks to engage with that kind of thing. So you're never on your own, and they're easing you into it gently.
    With the hedgehogs, for example, you don't start out caring for the very young ones that need to be fed by hand and very often. The teenagers we got at first just needed cat food in their enclosure once a day, and they had to be weighed every few days. The ones living with us right now just sleep basically, and we made sure the rats can't get to them. The baby birds that keep falling from our roof in spring are much more work, they want to be fed every 20 minutes, 24 hours. These we usually bring to a pro shelter asap, cause that's not something you can keep up with a job. There's really all levels of commitment.

    Your garden sounds wonderful for this kind of thing, maybe you really want to give it a thought or two. It's great that it's a wild garden in any case! And yeah, our cat sometimes kills baby rabbits and even hares as well, it's a problem. We had to get him because of the mice, and he's otherwise a lovely animal, but it's not good when they do that ... Fortunately in this respect, he's getting old now.

  • davesodaveso Posts: 7,137

    I've noted a fairly significant uptick in posts on the Facebook DAZ related groups. 

  • Roman_K2Roman_K2 Posts: 1,250

    WendyLuvsCatz said:

    not so much now as my help is not wanted or removed

    sad

    For what it's worth I am attempting to analyze one of your posts about subdivision. laugh

  • Roman_K2Roman_K2 Posts: 1,250

    daveso said:

    I've noted a fairly significant uptick in posts on the Facebook DAZ related groups. 

    Not gonna go there. Been wondering about Reddit though.

    In truth a few minutes here on DAZ can easily generates weeks of study. And there's always stuff to learn about adjunct programs and platforms. Just as an example I bought a Wacom "ONE" tablet about a year ago. Offline for weeks/months because I couldn't locate the power button! (It is ultra-smoothly recessed into the case) The box had tiny diagrams (why do they do that?) on the outside and on the inside important info - like the location of the power - was on this cardboard cover that flipped up to reveal the actual tablet/device and the octopus cables. Of course I flipped the cardboard UP before I noticed the info.

    So many plusses and minusses... the "ONE" (and would you believe there is more than just "one") has a matte screen, oh bliss oh joy. But the black plastic INTUOS "one" makes a nice, pencil-like scratchy sound while you draw.

    But the touch-screen equipped Samsung tablets **ALLOW YOU TO ZOOM IN AND ROTATE** with your thumb and forefinger!

    I wonder if the Cintiq tablets (that cost ten thousand dollars) combine a matte surface and stritchy stylus with a movable touch screen.

  • PixelPiePixelPie Posts: 329
    edited January 29

    I just dropped by to discuss...there's always this   smiley

    cheekysmiley

    elephantRoom3.png
    1024 x 1024 - 1M
    Post edited by PixelPie on
  • barbultbarbult Posts: 24,694

    What's that? The elephant in the room?

  • WendyLuvsCatzWendyLuvsCatz Posts: 38,472

    well the Nvidia cards might become a whole lot cheaper attracting more back to this hobby

  • NorthOf45NorthOf45 Posts: 5,530

    I was just thinking that... My creaky 1080 can't keep up.

Sign In or Register to comment.