Open thread

Letter to the Berkowitzes: This is a letter from a cat to his pet humans regarding the adoption of a dog.  It’s hysterical!

This is a story from Sports Illustrated that is very much worth reading.  It’s quite inspirational.  Because it’s hidden behind the stupid firewall, it was copied to another blog, which is where I’m directing you since I couldn’t access it at the SI site.

You absolutely must go see these photos of ice formations.  Most of them are of what looks like a wave of water that found itself quick-frozen.  Stunning…

Birds in the News 68 (v2n19): There’s plenty of bird news to read, including some updates on that poor duck in Florida who survived two days in a refrigerator after being shot and thought dead.  Also, you have to see that first photograph of a wood duck drake.  Wow!

Philosophers’ Carnival #42 is a nice collection this time around.  If you like to think about thinking and being and all those other questions that don’t have empirical answers, this is the carnival for you.

Vocabularium

I’m rather scatterbrained this morning, so here’s an easy one for you.

dilettante (dil·et·tante): / DIL i tahnt /
noun

(1) a dabbler in knowledge or art, especially one who has a superficial interest and takes up the practice for amusement; amateur
(2) a passionate admirer or lover of art or science, especially of a fine art

adjective

(1) superficial, especially with regards to one’s understanding of something; amateurish

[From Italian, from the present participle of dilettare meaning “to delight,” from Latin delectare meaning “to keep alluring or enticing,” frequentative of Latin delicere meaning “to allure.”]

Usage: I didn’t want to mention this while in the gallery, but I thought his new paintings were unusually dilettante.

Random Thought

There are some words which I have known since I was a schoolboy. “With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censored, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably.” These words were uttered by Judge Aaron Satie — as a wisdom, and warning. The first time any man’s freedom is trodden on, we’re all damaged.

— Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), Star Trek: The Next Generation

Scarlett’s story

I thought I’d repost an entry I first wrote almost a year ago to the day.  From Perdition’s flames could not stop her, I share with you a true example of what cats are really about.

The day already had ended, the setting sun now well below the horizon.  With it the last vestiges of light were now gone.  Night’s darkness settled upon the world like a blanket, bringing with it bitterly cold temperatures.  It was March 30, 1996, and the place was Brooklyn, New York.

At an abandoned garage, derelict and devoid of human inhabitants, Scarlett, a calico cat, tended her litter of five four-week-old kittens.  Winter’s last breath fell upon this place and dropped temperatures below freezing.  This abandoned building would protect her children as she saw to their needs.

Certainly unaware of how it started, she knew the instant the building caught fire.  Flames licked the old structure with heated tongues of fury that cared not for these little kittens or their desperate mother.  They would consume everything with dispassion and detachment.

Scarlett knew she must move the litter if her family was to survive, yet the flames moved quickly to consume this once safe home.  She could not move them all at once.  How could she get her five kittens to safety?

She braved the flames and smoke and falling debris to carry her children, one by one, out of the building.  Each trip found the engulfing fire more virulent and persistent.  As though challenging her to save her clan, it moved to block her path at every turn.  Scarlett would not be deterred.

As the fire raged on, she returned time and again, carrying each kitten to safety as her own body was licked by flames and her own lungs burned by smoke.  The fire had reached the kittens.  She was running out of time.

With the last kitten held firmly in her mouth, her eyes had already blistered shut and her body was touched by the flames’ insistent attempts to block her path.  With fur scorched and paws burned, she did not hesitate.  Whatever protection her wounded body could provide was the least she would do.

While the kittens had not escaped the fire unscathed, she arrived outside with the last child, now drawn to the pained and frightened meows of her offspring.  No longer able to see them, she gently touched each of them with her nose to ensure none had been missed.

Arriving firemen were drawn to the pitiful meows of the five wounded kittens and their badly burned mother.  Although now blinded by her own blisters and suffering horrific burns over all of her body, she was carrying the kittens across the street to get them further away from what had been their home, a home that now threatened to consume them with fiery hunger.

Firefighter David Gianelli, a 17-year veteran at the time, scooped up the entire family and carried them to the safety of an animal shelter.

Weakened by smoke inhalation, one of the kittens died from a viral infection, yet the other four and their mother were cared for and nursed back to health.  After recuperating, the selfless Scarlett and her four remaining kittens were adopted by various families who desperately cared to see that her physical sacrifice was not in vain.

“She’s a wonderful, gentle animal who did a courageous thing,” said North Shore Animal League shelter manager Marge Stein. “It shows with all creatures — animals or people — there’s no way of measuring a mother’s love.”

Why is Everybody So Surprised That I Saved My Furry Five?
By Rosemary Asmussen

Why is everyone so surprised
that I saved my furry five;
that in spite of pain and danger
I brought them out alive?
True my eyes were barely open
but I heard their frantic wails;
through smoke and flames I saw
scorched ears and burning tails.
Every trip was a burdened choice
but I could make no other.
The rescuers have called me cat…
but I am also “mother.”

[see Scarlett – Cat of the Century for photos and more information]

Open thread

Join the party over at Weekend Cat Blogging #86.  There’s plenty of feline fun to be had.

While you’re at it, don’t forget to stalk your way to Carnival Of The Cats #149.  Hunt through the links to find plenty of cat goodness.

Although it goes downhill near the end, take a look at this webcam video.  It was aimed along a sidewalk when a tornado (F3) visited the block.

Look at this photo!  That cat’s serious about gettin’ some of that water.  Not only a beautiful animal, but obviously quite good in the balance department as well.