Category Archives: Kako Photos

Do as the doctor ordered

Kako lying on the floor with sunshine flooding in from behind her (20080419_04137)

Kako abhorred enjoyed her annual visit with the vet today for her exam and vaccinations.  In truth, her unpleasantness was subdued compared to most visits.  Sometimes we should be grateful for what age can bring…

She did try several times to climb into the cabinets above the examination counter.  At home she enjoys the cupboards above the refrigerator, beneath the kitchen counters and below the bathroom sink, so this came as no surprise.  She was unfortunately denied this escape in the doctor’s office, and that meant she instead cuddled in my arms for shelter.  Oh darn!

Kazon sitting on the bed (20080426_04991)

Although her overall health and condition are good, she does have yeast infections in her ears.  That means medication for two weeks.

Given that both she and Kazon had terrible mite infestations in their ears when they were young, this comes as no surprise.  Neither of them can properly address ear cleanliness since both suffer from oversensitivity.

I need to do a better job with the Oticalm from now on to keep this from recurring.  Or so I hope…

Grendel lying on the floor with sunshine blanketing his back (20080419_04122)

While speaking with the doctor, she brought up Grendel.  You see, this is the same doctor who has spent a great deal of time helping him through his various health issues, from hip surgery to asthma to bladder and kidney stones to inflammatory bowel issues.

She mentioned, like Kazon, that Grendel can never again have vaccinations.  His intestinal disease is caused by an overzealous immune system.  Since vaccinations activate the immune system and heighten its sensitivity, giving him any vaccination would only aggravate the problem.

That means two of The Kids will forgo vaccinations.  So be it.

A close-up of al-Zill as he sleeps on the patio in the fading light of sunset (20080516_05305)

Finally, al-Zill is in the bathroom, captured earlier today and awaiting his chance to visit the doctor tomorrow before becoming the latest member of The Kids.  His reaction to being caught has been less than disruptive, more like reserved curiosity than uninhibited panic.  I find that a good sign.

Of him I know this: he needs tapeworm treatment, upper respiratory and rabies vaccinations, and flea and tick treatment (along with heartworm and other preventative medicines, the same as The Kids get on a monthly basis).  Once he returns from the vet tomorrow, I will begin the integration process just as I did with Vazra and Larenti.

Despite worries to the contrary, seven is not a terrible number, and it certainly doesn’t make me some bizarre feline fetishist who intends to grow a home full of cats until it becomes a health hazard.  I cannot rescue more, cannot fathom the weight of such an idea.

But I also know that, despite all those who have reminded me that we—I—can’t save every animal in need, I remain adamant with my response: “Why not try?”  Too many feel that self-imposed prerequisite burden is enough of a reason to abstain from attempt.  I feel no such limits.  Only my self-control and logical outlook tell me I can’t rescue more, can’t provide safe home and hearth for additional lives.

Nevertheless, he will no longer be an outside cat, no longer be a homeless vagabond living on my patio and, given his neurological damage and physical limitations, hoping to get through another day without suffering an unspeakable fate.

It’s mine!

Did you have a toy at sunset?  Was your evening filled with play that no one dared interrupt?  What happiness did you experience as the sun fell below the horizon, as you held firmly to a bit of catnip fun?

Kako gripping a catnip toy in the feeble light of sunset (20080223_02248)
Kako gripping a catnip toy in the feeble light of sunset (20080223_02273)

[Kako]

Like he said

“Sometimes being a bitch is all a woman has to hang on to.”

— Vera Donovan in Stephen King’s Dolores Claiborne

A close-up of Kako lying on the desk next to me and my laptop

In a house full of boys, Kako agrees.  Wholeheartedly.

— — — — — — — — — —

Some notes:

  1. This is a photo of Kako lying on the desk next to my laptop.  Many of The Kids do the same in various positions and locations, but always close to me—if not on me.
  2. On one side you can see my laptop screen where I do much of my writing and online work; on the other side are books.  From bottom to top: all of my high school yearbooks for something I’m working on called “Yearbook Remembrances” or something equally mundane, a phone book I used that day for what I can’t remember, and one of my old journals (this one, like the rest, tattered and worn, pages yellowed with time, but holy writs to me nonetheless, items to be respected and admired, protected and secured).
  3. This photo was taken October 29, 2007.
  4. Notice the two white whiskers, one on each side?  Now she has more.

More white whiskers

Like the caterpillar who cocoons itself in order to change, to metamorphose into something quite different, but only at the behest and with the help of time, Kako surprises me with the vexation of her dramatic revolution.  It was but yesterday, at least in my mind, when she was the mostly-white black cat.

Then came the one white whisker, something evident in this photo.

But still I watched as she changed, as she varied from what was to what was to be.

And now this. . .

A close-up of Kako's face showing more white whiskers

Two prominently white whiskers with yet a third presenting itself behind its brethren.

What’s to come of this?  What means this alteration?