This is an update to my previous post “Aging in Cats,” where I shared a medical journal article on signs of aging in cats, as well as talked about my own senior kitty, Patches.

This is an update to my previous post “Aging in Cats,” where I shared a medical journal article on signs of aging in cats, as well as talked about my own senior kitty, Patches.

We never did reunite Stuart with his mom and siblings, so he’s been back and forth between a couple of us volunteers.
Another colleague in rescue (I have many of them) shared a Journal Article about cat aging, what’s typical, and what one should look out for that might indicate a problem.
Imagine my surprise at work when I get a text of a picture of a newborn kitten.
Hello anyone who reads this:
I know I dropped off the face of the Earth. It isn’t because I’ve stopped being a cat lady, quite contrary. Rather, the class that I started this blog for ended, and I began a new job (outside of being a cat lady). Excuses, excuses. I’m going to post a couple things that have happened in the past two months soon enough. In the meantime, a picture of Rook supervising board games.

The bubbies are my dad’s cats, but I figured I’d share their story anyway because I raised them.
Part of my class assignment is to do a video presentation. My professor requested that we do a rough draft video, so I did one in my living room, with my various cats trolling in the background.
I’m doing a smartphone ethnography for one of the assignments in the class. What that basically means is taking photos with my phone while being “in the field.” My being in the field will include talking with fosters, going to shelters, and attending events.
I decided that I might as well start somewhere easy: my own home.