Why Evolution is True is a blog written by Jerry Coyne, centered on evolution and biology but also dealing with diverse topics like politics, culture, and cats.
I suspect there’s some sort of treat or other food under the saucer. Just look at it clawing at the bottom, and also sniffing the floor in the third minute roughly. As if the saucer leaves a scent behind when it pushes it.
I think you are right about the treat. She wants something under the bowl and might even have played the flip the bowl for a treat game before. I think this is a test to see if her desire for the treat can make her overcome her disgust at the lemon. I am sure she knows how to tip the bowl, but she doesn’t want to touch the lemon.
Don’t think so. Can’t think out the grammar’n’stuff, but e.g. “the lemon smote” – it hit something or someone (very odd, they’re usually quite passive), “the lemon was smitten”- something or someone hit it.
Once I was cutting up an onion and my young cat jumped up onto the counter, intensely interested in what I was doing: she kept getting in the way trying to check out the onion so I finally held a piece of it up to her nose, whereupon she immediately tore the back of my hand open with her dewclaw!
I suspect there’s some sort of treat or other food under the saucer. Just look at it clawing at the bottom, and also sniffing the floor in the third minute roughly. As if the saucer leaves a scent behind when it pushes it.
I think you are right about the treat. She wants something under the bowl and might even have played the flip the bowl for a treat game before. I think this is a test to see if her desire for the treat can make her overcome her disgust at the lemon. I am sure she knows how to tip the bowl, but she doesn’t want to touch the lemon.
Oh lemon, every time I get close to you, you assalt me with your aroma. I can feel it emanating from here, above you. Still, I am intrigued.
And something tasty may be lurking in the shadow of the dish.
What happens when he licks his lemon-tainted paw?
He becomes a sour puss.
+1
🐾
Smitten! (Not smited, even in pussy-cat speak).
Or maybe smote?
Don’t think so. Can’t think out the grammar’n’stuff, but e.g. “the lemon smote” – it hit something or someone (very odd, they’re usually quite passive), “the lemon was smitten”- something or someone hit it.
“Smited” must be smitten.
The delicate paw work. The parry and lunge. The Feint and attack.
+1
Kitteh really doesn’t like the smell of that lemon.
Am I the only one that wants to know what that is on the floor against the wall?
The cat was cute, but what the heck is that thing?
I thought it was some game for the cat as the cat looks at something moving through the “tubes”.
Yes, it is. They have many variations, some that can customized and combined, like a train track set. (And they’re real dust/dead bug magnets.)
Yes, Jerry Coyne The Cat has one of those toys.
Actually, I believe the proper wording would be “the citrus must be *smitten*” Sorry. I’m a retired editor. Love your blog, Jerry.
Blog? Lookin’ for a smite-down?
Reblogged this on peakmemory and commented:
This is why the Internet exists.
Once I was cutting up an onion and my young cat jumped up onto the counter, intensely interested in what I was doing: she kept getting in the way trying to check out the onion so I finally held a piece of it up to her nose, whereupon she immediately tore the back of my hand open with her dewclaw!