We've settled on calling him Jay, although he's had other names: Cutie Pie, Sweetie Pie and Mischiefer.
Both Jay and his mother Beauty, a lovely calico, are up for adoption.
I'm fostering them until we can find permanent loving homes for them.
Whiz, my other foster cat is in his glory.
Finally he has someone with boundless energy that wants to play with him. I reminded him of just that last night when Jay, acting in his mischiefer role, decided to pounce on Whiz while he was napping.
I'm sure Whiz had a few moments there when he regretted wanting someone--anyone of any age--to play with him.
The mommy cat, we call her Beauty, got spayed last week so she's been taking it easy this week and sleeping and keeping a low profile.
She's eating well which is good and hopefully she'll now gain some weight back.
Both Beauty and Jay were very sick when they first came here and for a while it even looked like the kitten wouldn't live.
That was when Amber stopped going in the cat quarantine room. She couldn't bear the thought that they might not make it.
But I told her that regardless of the outcome, it's our job to never give up on them. So we didn't. And they survived.
The kitten has also taken to playing with the bunny. Now this isn't a little bunny, this is a very large Angora rabbit, named Lexi.
Lexi is a bit strange and thinks that the kitten attacks are actually attempts to pat and groom her so she runs towards the kitten and encourages him even farther.... I think I've been so busy with projects lately that Lexi is feeling a lack of attention.
I was glad a few weeks ago to cut off Lexi's long soft fur. I collect the fur to use later to spin into Angora yarn for knitting. I also cut off Margarite's hair, my other rabbit.
Her hair wasn't long enough yet, but I knew she was uncomfortable and hot and I already had lots of her fur saved. This shorter cut hair can be used for craft projects or put out for birds for nesting material in the spring. Margarite was unusually cooperative with being groomed and having her hair cut off, so that alone showed me how very happy she was to have it removed.
2 comments:
Do actually cut the bunny's fur, or just comb? And does their fur have guard hairs, or can you just spin it w/o cleaning? (I am very curious about Angora bunnies...can you tell?)
Hi Melanie. I'm very new at spinning with angora fur so I don't have much experience. It is preferable to pull the wool but I found it took too long to get it out that way.
There are many videos on YouTube that show different methods. Yes, their are guard hairs, but I've just been spinning the whole works together.
See this site on YouTube which is very helpful: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BX-d5EmkE50&feature=fvst
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