This video reminds me of our cat, Buster–one of the jolliest cats who ever drew breath. Any game you wanted, he’d play it with out. He liked everyone.
Do orange cats naturally tend in that direction?
This video reminds me of our cat, Buster–one of the jolliest cats who ever drew breath. Any game you wanted, he’d play it with out. He liked everyone.
Do orange cats naturally tend in that direction?
I’ve come. To the conclusion that much of what governs cat behavior comes down to having fun. There are behaviors that obviously rooted in hunting instincts; a behavior that cats living in homes don’t get to exercise all that often, but I think that a well fed cat just likes to play, and play a lot. What ever looks like fun, for that moment, is fine with them. When there’s not much to do, they seem to act like a predator, chasing birds they will never catch, or in the case of my cat, stalking the Swifts that like to hang out near my home.
There are several cats that have shown up here from who knows where, and my younger son is feeding all of them. Two of the yellow cats have had kittens, and there are kittens and cats of all ages all over the place. Our female Aussie dog likes the kittens and goes to visit them
several times a day. It is quite a menagerie we have here.