It’s a short day, but long on dogs this morning!
I thought I would share the visual treat of dawn on the solstice.
Photos taken with a Lumix S9 camera, Panasonic 20-60mm lens.
In honor of Kiko’s acceptance into the household, we broke out the Kitty City cat tunnel, which at one time could have been zipped together with a cat bed in the center. The bed part is long gone, and it’s next to impossible to zip the two lengths of tunnel together and keep them zipped as the cats play in and out of it.
It has been quite a hit. And it encouraged Kiko to play chase-chase games with Kinikini, and with Kali. Bessie still hasn’t started playing with Kiko, but they’re friendly with each other whenever they meet.
Let’s see. We took Kiko for another vet visit. This time, she had her remaining stitches removed after being spayed two weeks ago, and she had the second dose of two vaccines for feline viruses. Ouch! But this was her first checkup with our regular vet, Ann Sakamoto, who pronounced her a healthy cat except for some gingivitis. We came home with some dog & cat toothpaste, and instructions for starting introducing “Healthy Mouth” into the cats’ water. We’re trying harder to introduce these into her life because she still has most of her teeth to be saved. The other cats, well, they paid a price for their time in the cat colony. All the other three have lost a majority of their teeth, sad to say.
Duke, our diabetic siamese who died several years ago, was toothless for more than a few of his golden years, and it didn’t seem to slow him down. He preferred to eat dry kibbles, which always amazed me. And the current cohort of felines also refuses to let their dental conditions dictate diet or preferences.
In any case, enjoy today’s Feline Friday. And, if you missed it, jump back to yesterday’s prelude as well.
I ran across this old photo today, and thought it would be worth sharing. It looks across the 18th fairway of the Waialae Golf Course in 1957. My mom took it from a vantage point along the Waialae Stream, before it was straightened and “channelized.”
The spread of residential developments up the ridges above Kahala was still in the future, and the banks of the stream are still natural, so the project to “channelize” the stream within concrete walls was still “coming soon.” It appears there were coconut trees being planted in the distance, and they would now be about 70 years old.