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Injectable Feral Cat Birth Control

Injectable birth control will be available in the near future for feral cats in the U.S.
(Photo by ShutterStock)

Earth is up to its whiskers in kitties- feral cats to be more specific. For ailurophiles, that’s Heaven; for the rest of the world—not so much. There’s an estimated 600 million domestic cats in the world.[1] Eighty percent of them are free-roaming.  In the U.S. alone there live between 60-100 million feral cats.[2] Girl kittens can find themselves in the family way as early as four months of age and can push out as many as three families a year. Holy cat, that’s a lot of cats!

Over the years, dedicated cat colony managers have waged a population explosion war, neutering every feline they can catch (literally), but Trap-Neuter-Return is labor-intensive, expensive and hit-and-miss. And not every wily feline can be convinced to go into a trap. 

Since cats can get pregnant as early as four months and can have three litters a year, kitties can quickly get out of hand. (Photo by ShutterStock)

Rescuers need safe, easier, cost-effective and permanent contraception.

The answer may almost be within paw’s reach. In a study published last month in the journal Nature Communications, a single shot of a gene therapy prevented pregnancy in cats for at least two years, maybe much longer with no apparent side effects.

Earlier scientific investigation of Antimüllerian hormone (AMH) in mice for a potential treatment of ovarian cancer made a serendipitous discovery. AMH is produced by follicles in the ovary that produce eggs. When amped up in female mice, AMH causes the ovaries to stop forming follicles. The mice’s ovaries shrunk to newborn size, suggesting AMH might have contraceptive properties.[3]

Injectable contraception would make caring for feral cat colonies a much easier venture. (Photo by ShutterStock)

Hopeful New Research for Feral Cats

In the new study, researchers inserted the cat version of the AMH gene into a harmless virus then injected into six young female domestic cats living in a feral cat colony at the Cincinnati Zoo. The cats’ sex hormones remained normal, except they developed low levels of progesterone—a hormone that is produced after ovulation. The treated cats did not ovulate. And when they were placed in a conjugal visit room with a male for several hours each day for four months, there were no little buns in the oven. Four of the females weren’t in the mood; the other two did the nasty but didn’t conceive. Meanwhile, three females given a viral injection without the AMH gene became pregnant and had a boatload of adorable furballs. The result seems to be safe and durable contraception in the female domestic cat. 

It isn’t known if the cat-raception is permanent or not, or how long it will keep Fluffy from getting knocked up. The gene doesn’t become part of the cat’s muscle cell DNA, so it’s possible that over time it will diminish and eventually disappear as muscle cells regenerate. AMH levels in all the treated cats decreased over the course of the study, but that they remained elevated in everyone, including a cat they followed for 5 years.

The Downsides

Now the downsides: AMH doesn’t impair sex steroids or prevent heat cycles. So we still enjoy all those endearing behaviors that accompany a horny girl cat estrus. Also, in order to get the injection, kitties still have to be trapped. I can assure you of two things, cats know how to multiply without a calculator and after being trapped once, it’s hard to fool a feral cat a second time.

Much more research would be needed to confirm these preliminary findings. After all, this is only six cats. And if larger studies confirm that the treatment is safe and effective over a cat’s lifetime, cat populations can be controlled without the expense, effort, transport and trauma of surgery.


Research Cited

[1] Vansandt, L.M., Meinsohn, MC., Godin, P. et al. Durable contraception in the female domestic cat using viral-vectored delivery of a feline anti-Müllerian hormone transgene. Nat Commun 14, 3140 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38721-0. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-38721-0. Accessed 2023-06-26.

[2] Roebling AD, Johnson D, Blanton JD, Levin M, Slate D, Fenwick G, Rupprecht CE. Rabies prevention and management of cats in the context of trap-neuter-vaccinate-release programmes. Zoonoses Public Health. 2014 Jun;61(4):290-6. doi: 10.1111/zph.12070. Epub 2013 Jul 17. PMID: 23859607; PMCID: PMC5120395. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23859607. Accessed 2023-06-26.

[3] Motohiro Kano, Amanda E. Sosulski, LiHua Zhang, David Pépin, et al. “AMH/MIS as a contraceptive that protects the ovarian reserve during chemotherapy.” 114 (9) E1688-E1697. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1620729114. January 30, 2017. Accessed 2023-06-26.

Toxoplasmosis Research: No Kittens Were Harmed in the Making of This Protozoa

New scientific research means kittens may longer have to be sacrificed to study Toxoplasmosis gondii (Art by Dusty Rainbolt from Shutterstock photos.)

VETERINARY MEDICINE (Grenoble, France) Toxoplasmosis gondii is an indiscriminant single cell organism that can infect most warm-blooded animals worldwide (including humans and even birds). While it’s not picky about whose muscle tissue it inhabits, it’s very shy where it does the nasty. Out of all the living organisms in the entire universe, within the privacy of a cat’s intestines is the only place where the magic happens.  (That’s big cats, domestic cats, Cat in the Hat, any cat.)

Inside a cat it’s too dark to see

Scientists haven’t been able to observe toxoplasmosis hanky panky because (to rephrase Groucho Marx) inside a cat it’s too dark.

Until 2019, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) used artificially infected kittens to incubate the protozoa for research purposes. But it was a short tenure for Fluffy.

According to the Cornell Feline Health Center, “Newly exposed cats usually begin shedding oocysts (eggs) three to 10 days after consuming infected tissue, and continue shedding for around 10 to 14 days.” 

The intestinal tract of a cat is only place in the entire universe that Toxoplasmosis gondii can do the nasty. (Photo by Shutterstock)

The poor research kitties’ usefulness spanned only two weeks. Once they stopped dropping magic turds, it was curtains. Typical government waste mentality. The USDA didn’t want to rehome infected kitties (even if they weren’t contagious!) They decided they should kill their furry incubators rather than the parasite. Treatment is no big deal—just a course of clindamycin and, sometimes steroids should take care of toxo. Even if the cat isn’t treated, it can’t transmit/pass on the parasite because he no longer sheds eggs.

USDA Idiocy

Finally in April 2019 the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (appropriate acronym ARS) stopped researching the parasite on kittens because U.S. citizens didn’t like their tax money going to kill kitties unnecessarily.

In the USDA announcement, I noticed sneaky wording. It said, “…the use of cats as part of any research protocol IN ANY ARS LABORATORY has been discontinued and will not be reinstated.” Notice the phrase “in any ARS laboratory.”  It didn’t say research on cats had stopped. Research in their own laboratories stopped. Just saying. What about contracted laboratories like Wuhan? Huh?

The USDA says they’ve stopped killing kittens when they stop pooping Toxoplasmosis, but have they really? (Photo by Shutterstock)

Stopping research on toxoplasmosis is unfortunate, because the parasite can harm fetuses of women who were infected while they are pregnant. So research is important, but they didn’t need to off the kitties once they cease to produce the eggs.

Toxoplasmosis and pregnancy

Don’t freak out, pregnant ladies. Remember, cats can only shed the parasite for the first two weeks. Even during that communicable 2 week period, the oocysts aren’t immediately infectious to humans or other animals.

According to Cornell, “Before becoming infectious, they [oocysts] must go through a process called sporulation, which takes one to five days depending on environmental conditions.” 

Have someone else scoop the box for you every day and wash your hands and you and your little bun will be just fine. (Don’t take my word. Read the sources below.)

Although cats are needed to complete the Toxoplasmosis gondii reproduction cycle, most people become infected from eating or handling raw meat. (Photo by Shutterstock)

Most common ways of being infected

By the way, toxo may only be able to make little protozoa inside a cat, but according to the Centers for Disease Control, humans become infected by:

  • Eating undercooked, contaminated meat (especially pork, lamb, and venison) or shellfish.
  • Accidentally ingesting eggs after handling contaminated meat or shellfish and not thoroughly washing hands.
  • Cutting raw meat and then slicing veggies with the same unwashed knife.
  • Not thoroughly washing your hands after gardening.

There’s good news, research is back on and no kittens will be harmed in the pooping of these protozoa.

Although biologists haven’t been able to fully reproduce (pun intended) the entire love-making cycle of toxo, they’re getting there. Recently, research out of  Grenoble Alpes University in France came up with a gene editing technique that pushes the parasite toward sexual congress in the laboratory.  The new technique can only replicate the toxo foreplay. No big bang yet. Maybe try some protozoa porn to get them in the mood.

Something’s Missing

The missing piece could be some ingredient or compound inside the cat’s intestines that triggers reproduction. Maybe they’re just too shy to shag with the lights on. Maybe the sound of gurgling cat guts is the toxo equivalent of Barry White singing, “Let’s Get It On” or “Earned It” from 50 Shades of Amoeba.” Scientists are still working on it.

In addition to saving kittens, the new research could help researchers identify drugs that halt or accelerate different stages of the parasite’s life cycle, and perhaps even make it sterile. 

Sources:

https://www.usda.gov/media/press-releases/2019/04/02/ars-announces-toxoplasmosis-research-review-discontinues-research

https://www.vet.cornell.edu/departments-centers-and-institutes/cornell-feline-health-center/health-information/feline-health-topics/toxoplasmosis-cats

https://www.avma.org/resources/pet-owners/petcare/toxoplasmosis https://www.cdc.gov/parasites/toxoplasmosis/toxoplasmosis_catowners.html

Book Signing Oct 1

Dusty Rainbolt at the Charming Cat Corner

Aloha Friends–Just in time for Halloween!

Wanted to let everyone know that I’ll be at a meet and greet at The Charming Cat Corner in Lewisville on Saturday, Oct 1 from 1 until 4. (Details below.)

Come by and say hello. Meet all the Charming Cat’s adorable and adoptable kitties and pick up some very cool cat memorabilia. The store carries Ghost Cats 2, so there will be plenty of books available for everyone. Let’s visit and trade stories.

I’ll be holding drawings for free books and other cool things. So be there or be square. #charmingcat#kittysave#dustyrainbolt#ghostcats

 

Charming Cat Corner

Inside Music City Mall Lewisville

2401 S Stemmons Fwy

Lewisville, TX  75067

972-315-2287

https://www.thecharmingcatcafe.com/

https://www.facebook.com/charmingcatcorner

Ringworm Shouldn’t be the End of the World for Kitties and Pups

By Jeffy the Journalist

Ringworm is never on a kitty’s Christmas list to Santa. (Composite photo Dusty Rainbolt from DepositPhotos.com)

Ringworm. The word strikes fear in the hearts of animal shelter staff and any human who lives with kitties (or pooches or kiddos). I can assure you, it’s never on the list we send to Santa Claws either.

Not a Worm

In the spirit of full disclosure, ringworm is a fungus among us. It got its name because of the round lesions that appear on the skin. No worm hitchhikers are involved. It’s not dangerous. It’s not the end of the world, except if you’re an animal in a shelter with it and they put you to sleep cuz they can’t adopt you out and you’re too much trouble. The truth is, it’s a pain in the tail, it’s contagious to other animals and people, but it’s self-limiting meaning it will go away on its own.

It’s generally a problem for young kittens and puppies, not so much in adult cats and dogs. Animals (meaning humans too) get it from infected animals. According to the paper, “Dermatophytosis,” by Dr. Karen A. Moriello of the University of Wisconsin at Madison (who has lots of letters behind her name), it’s in the soil, and rodents and other animals get it then pass it to larger animals. The most at-risk animals are those of us who live in groups (multipet homes, shelters, hoarders, and pet shops.)

The truth is, it’s not as easy to catch as humans think. Dr. M says a kitty (or pooch) has to be exposed to a large number of spores, our skin has to have moisture and the skin has to have microtrauma. That’s irritation or inflammation, like when we scratch or from wearing a collar. Dr. M says in labs it was hard to infect kitties with ringworm if they had healthy, undamaged skin.

Skin irritation makes a cat more susceptible to ringworm. (Photo from Getty.)

Cleaning up the Environment

It’s actually not as contagious as old wives claim, and surprisingly, the environment isn’t very inefficient in infecting kitties (and pooches.) Dr. M says exposure to a contaminated environment most commonly results in a lesion-free infection, but it is a risk factor for sick animals or if they already have skin issues.

Kitties with ringworm may have little (or big) bald spots, redness, scaling and crusting. The spots are often round, but can also be asymmetrical. Although the fungus can affect anyplace on the body, it usually appears first on the face, ears, and paws. It may be hard to spot in longhaired animals. Whether a kitty (or pooch) gets one little spot or its widespread depends on the animal’s.

So you have a round spot on your fur. Is it ringworm, flea irritation or allergies? Your vet can take a culture.

Old wives tales and internet articles about ringworm often have all the credibility of cat poop.

Dr. M says, “Owners should be informed that [ringworm] is a non-life–threatening zoonotic disease that causes easily treatable skin lesions and be instructed to consult their personal physician if they have questions or suspect they may have skin lesions.”

Ringworm cat appear as a circular lesion, a crusty place or scaliness. (Photo from Getty)

In healthy animals, ringworm usually self-resolves in a month or two. Treating pets shortens the course of the outbreak and limits the transmission.

Ignore Bad Information

“Misinformation regarding cleaning, disinfection, and environmental contamination is pervasive,” Dr. M says. “Owners should be advised that fungal spores do not invade home surfaces as do other molds (eg, mildew), do not cause respiratory disease, and can be easily removed.”

Since ringworm usually pops up when animals are young and socialization and bonding are especially important, she says owners should continue to socialize and play with the infected pet, but wear gloves and washable clothing and avoid direct skin-to-skin contact. Wash hands (use soap and sing Happy Birthday). Give the kitten (or pooch) washable toys. Keep the infected four-legger away from other pets and avoid communal bowls, brushes and bedding. Dr. M says if you can’t keep critters separated, everyone can be bathed with a topical antifungal shampoo or treated with lime sulfur and watched closely for development of lesions.

The entire home interior doesn’t have to be torched. “If cleaning is regularly performed while the patient receives topical therapy, most homes can be decontaminated with one or two cleanings after cure.5””Anything you can wash in the washer or can be scrubbed can also be decontaminated.1

Make sure cat hair is vacuumed up every day. Clean stuff with paper towels or disposable cloths. Hard surfaces should be washed with detergent until visibly clean, then rinsed, dried, and sprayed with a disinfectant (such as products that contain accelerated hydrogen peroxide) kills ringworm.6 Believe it or not, bleach isn’t recommended cuz it’s an irritant, it damages surfaces, and it has no detergent properties. Who knew? Wash bedding twice with any laundry detergent on the longest wash cycle possible. Bleach and/or hot water aren’t superior to cold water without bleach.  Agitation from the washing machine (not dryer heat) is antifungal. Carpets can be decontaminated by being washed with a beater-brush rug cleaner twice or steam cleaned once. Clean food dishes in hot, soapy water.

Your vet will tell the human the best way to treat you. It usually involves lots of unpleasant activities such as pilling, baths and yucky ointment. Humans should make sure to follow the vet’s instructions about shampoo dilutions cuz left on too long, some shampoos can cause skin irritation.

So if someone offers you a ring(worm) for Cat-mas remember, just say no. However, if you find a little red ring on your nose, it’s not for life and it doesn’t have to cost a life. Happy Holidays.

Source: Moriello, Karen A, DVM, University of Wisconsin–Madison. “Dermatophytosis.” Clinician’s Brief. August 2020.

Interview with Burt Ward, from Caped Crusader to Canine Crusader

This week I had the opportunity to interview television legend, Burt Ward, who played The Boy Wonder on the 1960s series, Batman. Burt has gone from TV superhero to super rescuer. He and his lovely wife Tracy have rescued over 15,000 large breed dogs (and a lot of small pooches as well.) Fellow ailurophiles, not to fret. He’s helped a boatload of kitties as well.

Hurricane Safety Tips Keep Your Cats Safe during Hurricane Dorian

Hurricane Dorian may reach a Cat 3 by the time it reaches Florida.

Hurricane Dorian is intensifying as it speeds toward the Florida coast. In its path, families are trying to determine whether they should flee the area or stay and protect their home. Regardless of whether you bug out or stay behind, here are some hurricane safety suggestions to help you keep your pets safe during the impending disaster.

  • If you manage cat colonies go the Alley Cat Allies website for keeping feral cats safe.
  • Microchip your cat / dog. If he’s already chipped, contact the chip registry database and update your contact info, especially a current cell phone.
  • Take recent photos of your cats with you and store them in Ziploc bags to protect them. This is proof of ownership should you need to claim your cats.
  • Set up a buddy system with your neighbors. If a disaster occurs and they can’t get to their pets, you will help them and vice versa. Exchange house keys, evacuation plans and pet information with your pet safety buddy.
  • Regardless of whether you bug out or stay behind, here are some suggestions to help you keep your pets safe during the impending disaster.

If you evacuate:

  • Don’t leave pets home alone. If it’s not safe for you, it’s not safe for your pets.
  • Put a harness with ID tags on your cats. (A harness makes it easier for volunteers or staff at a shelter to handle your frightened cat.) Include your current your cell phone number.
  • As soon as you decide to evacuate, make reservations at pet-friendly hotels out of the evacuation area.
  • Contact officials about the locations of pet friendly evacuation shelters.
  • Make sure you take proof of your cat’s current rabies vaccination. Evacuation shelters accepting animals will need proof of rabies vaccination.
  • Packing kitty necessities
    • Medications (at least a 2 week supply).
  • Vaccination records. You really need proof of rabies shots in order to go to a shelter that accepts animals.
  • Leash
  • A carrier for each pet large enough, not only to hold a litter box, but your cat must be able to stand up, turn around, lay down. If he’s ends up in an evacuation shelter, this will be his home until you can claim him. Give him a dirty T-shirts with your scent to sleep on. Evacuation is stressful. Never put two pets in the same carrier even if they’re good friends.
  • A two week supply of food (canned and / or dry, depending on what your cat normally eats) and water, plus food and water bowls for each pet.
  • Litter Box and litter for two weeks, litter scoop and baby wipes.
  • Comfort items like cat toys, favorite blanket or towel (with a familiar scent), and favorite treats.

If you shelter in place:

  • Bring your pets inside well ahead of the storm.
  • Close pet doors so your cat can’t go outside.
  • Set up a safe room in the most interior room in your home for you and your pets to take shelter until the storm passes. Keep carriers and flashlights, car keys, emergency provisions and emergency or equipment for you and your pets in the safety room.
  • In the Aftermath
  • Keep cats confined to the safe room until you know that your home and yard are safe.
  • Don’t let your pets outside until you know it’s safe. Outdoor hazards include contaminated water, sharp debris and downed live power lines.

If you must leave pets behind:

  • Microchip your pet. If he’s already chipped, contact the chip registry database and update your contact info, especially a current cell phone.
  • NEVER confine your pet to a carrier, close him inside a room or tie him to furniture. If your home floods, your pet’s need to be able to get away from rising waters.
  • Turn off your home’s electricity to prevent your pet from being electrocuted.
  • Leave enough food and water for at least a week.
  • Spray paint the words “PETS INSIDE” and the number of cats and dogs inside. This notifies rescuers that your pets need help.

Do you have any suggestions for keeping pets safe? Post them in the comments below.

Ed Lowe and the Evolution of the Cat Litter Box

AIn honor of the birth anniversary of Ed Lowe, the inventor of cat litter, I’m sharing the history of the litter box. Lowe was borne July 10, 1920.

Ed Lowe came up with the idea of cat litter by happy accident in 1947. Photo courtesy of the Ed Lowe Foundation.

I know most of us grumble as we pick up the litter scoop and approach the cat box. What a pain in the tail! But we do it because we love our kitties, and cleaning the litter box is a necessity just like changing a diaper or washing the dishes.

No one really gives much thought to the impact that cat litter has had on our daily lives. Without it, our day would go very differently.

Cats prefer large litter boxes and we no longer have to sift the litter with a fry strainer. Photo by Weems S. Hutto. Copyright 2013.

I learned how differently while researching my paranormal mystery, Death Under the Crescent Moon (Yard Dog Press, 2013). The story is set in 1939, almost a decade before the invention of KITTY LITTER®.

Have you ever thought about the Litter Box Process? I don’t mean the process involving the alimentary canal. I’m talking about custodial maintenance. Today’s clumping and silica gel litters allows us to simply scoop and toss. But our grandparents had to put a great deal of effort into keeping an inside cat.

According to Katherine Grier, Ph.D., professor of history at University of Delaware, most cats lived outside until after WWII. They did their business in backyards and neighbors’ flower beds. They lived separated from the people who loved them because of the elimination issue and also because few people altered them. (Intact kitties express themselves in ways not conducive with civilized indoor living.) But it’s a dog-eat-cat world, and increasingly, cat lovers wanted to keep their cats safely inside the home.

People couldn’t help but notice in a natural setting most cats relieved themselves in loose ground, then covered their waste. This tidy nature hid their presence from predators and protected them from disease and parasites. Unlike dogs, cats didn’t require housebreaking; they simply needed loose material.

People began providing inside kitties with “sanitary pans,” usually a 12” by 18” enamel baking pan or 22” by 4” deep galvanized iron roasting pan.

The original litter box was a 9″ by 12″ baking pan. Photo by Weems S. Hutto. Copyright 2013.

To these dedicated ailurophiles, the sand man had nothing to do with sweet dreams. His dump truck delivered a fresh supply of cat box sand. According to cat care books published between 1885 and the mid-1950s, inside cats might also find fireplace ashes, dirt, absorbent newspaper cat pads, shredded or folded newspaper, or sawdust in their pans. These books recommended changing and washing the sanitary pan twice daily, or once-a-day at the very least. 

A commercial precursor to clay cat litter came from an innovator named “Poppy” George Plitt, who sold Kleen Kitty, a cat box filler made from wood ashes. Between changings, cat owners removed the poop with a kitchen frying strainer. Just as today we can tell cat lovers by the telltale cat hair on their clothes, in the 1940s you looked for soot.  I imagine gray apparel was quite popular among cat fanatics.

Our kitties may have had to do their business in a turkey roaster. Photo by Weems S. Hutto. Copyright 2013.

In January, 1947 Kay Draper, a cat lover from Cassopolis, Michigan, couldn’t reach her cat sand pile because of a deep layer of snow, so consequently her Angora cat was tracking sooty paw prints all over the house. She asked her neighbor, Ed Lowe (who sold sand and clay granules), if she could purchase some sand. Fortunately for cat lovers around the world the snow also prevented Lowe from accessing his sand reserves. He suggested she try Fuller’s Earth, kiln-dried clay granules he’d been attempting to sell to chicken farmers as nesting material.

Like a stray cat who found a full food bowl, Kay returned for refills and brought her cat lady friends with her. Lowe wondered if other cat owners would be as enthusiastic. To test the market, he filled 10 five-pound sacks with what he called KITTY LITTER™ and asked a local pet store to sell them for 69 cents a bag. The shop owner  doubted his customers would pay that much. After all, in 1947 minimum wage was $0.43 per hour and a gallon of milk was $0.67. But within a few weeks the shop owner placed an order for more. By the early 1950s KITTY LITTER (which later became Tidy Cats™) became widely available in pet stores.



Today’s cats have abundant litter box options. Photo by Weems S. Hutto. Copyright 2013.

So what did cat care look like in the 1930s? In Death Under the Crescent Moon, Eva Dupree travels to a sanitarium with her cat, Ivan. Her maid, Rose, arrives at the clinic every day to bring Ivan minced chicken giblets and fresh ashes.

While a few brands of canned cat food were available in 1939, most people fed their cats table scraps and bread, and of course cream. (Imagine the smell of that litter box.) Despite the horrible diet provided by their people, I believe cats stayed healthy because they supplemented their diet with rodents.

What goes in must come out. In order to tend to the cat’s bathroom, every day Rose must collect cooled cinders from the fireplace, dispose of mushy used ashes, wash the enamel baking pan, dry it thoroughly and refill it. Of course, where there’s soot, there’s grime. As Ivan exits his sanitary pan he deposits dark paw prints all over the white bathroom tile floor. Daily mopping is just one more step in the process. Ash residue also migrates to the carpet and bed linens. Keeping an inside cat was truly a labor of love.

In the book Rose reveals that she learned about cat care from a real book, A Practical Cat Book for Amateurs and Professionals(Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York, 1939), written by a particularly enlightened biologist of the day, Ida Mellen. Mellen, it turns out, gave me peek into the past while she kept her eyes firmly on the feline future. Mellen encouraged keeping cat indoors, altering pets, going to a humane vet who uses anesthesia for surgery and even gives instructions on how to leash train a cat—trailblazing for 1939.

I have to admit it was fun and sometimes horrifying to look into cat care practices of the past. It certainly makes me grateful for my massive polypropylene litter boxes and my efficient Litter-Lifter scoop and especially my odor-controlling Dr. Elsey’s Cat Attract Litter. I will never take the litter box for granted again.

So next time you feel tempted to complain about litter box duty, think about those cat-loving pioneers who made your life more convenient and the air in your home more pleasant. I doubt that the task at hand will seem quite as bad.

National POW/MIA Recognition Day

 

 

HOMECOMING
Former POW and United States Air Force Capt. Darrel Edwin Pyle appears shortly after his release by the North Vietnamese in Hanoi on 12 Feb 1973. Pyle was captured on 13 Jun 1966.

Darrel Pyle photo 4When I was in high school and the Vietnam War blazed, I ordered a POW bracelet to honor and  remember an American prisoner of war. It was a simple stainless steel strip engraved with a POWs name and the date he was captured. You were supposed to wear it until your guy came home.

POW bracelet
Jerry Singleton\’s POW bracelet

My POW was a young pilot named Capt. Darrell Pyle who was held captive for seven years. Pyle was in the very first group of prisoners to be released on 12 Feb 1973. I placed a blue star sticker on my bracelet to indicate my POW had returned safely home.  I continued to wear Pyle’s bracelet for several years to remember those who  were still missing in action.  I only removed when it I feared it would break in half from wear.

Although I never got to meet Darrel Pyle, I had the honor of interviewing another Hanoi Hilton alumni, Jerry Singleton, in 1995. During that interview I learned the real horror of what these brave people went though. Jerry informed me that Major Darrel Pyle died in an aviation accident less than two years after his release.

Rest in peace, Major Pyle. Thank you for your sacrifice. And thank you Jerry Singleton. We are grateful.

HOMECOMING
Former POW and U.S. Air Force CPT Darrel Edwin Pyle, wife Karen, son and an escort look over the giant C-5 Galaxy aircraft on the flight line.

PowerNetwork.org says about Pyle’s capture: “On June 13, 1966, while on an armed reconnaissance mission in the southern part of North Vietnam, the F4C Phantom fighter bomber was hit by anti-aircraft fire and became uncontrollable. Both ejected, but Lurie ejected from low altitude (about 350 feet at 450 knots), and sustained a compression fracture of the spine. The DRV used Plye, the Systems Operator and Lurie as a traveling show until 29 June when they arrived in Hanoi and were thrown into Hoa Lo prison, more commonly known as the Hanoi Hilton.\r\n\r\nThe day was February 12, 1973. The location was Gia Lam Airport, North Vietnam.

The sky was broken to overcast and the air was chilled by the winds which swept down from China. I sat in a bus beside a bombed-out hangar and watched a plane taxiing toward the runway. The plane was a 141 and had big letters which said, “UNITED STATES AIR FORCE.” I was crying. Before the plane could take off another 141 broke through the overcast and roared over my head. My plane – my chariot had come to take me home.

Sadly Darell Pyle was killed in a plane crash in Alaska only a year-and-a-half after he returned home. Here’s the account of his tragic death less than two years later in the Anchorage Times, 29 Dec 1974

“27 Dec 1974: Maj Darrell Pyle died when his Piper PA-18 crashed around noon at Six Mile Lake, Elmendorf AFB. His nine year old son, Philip, survived with minor injuries.”

Darrel Pyle arrival
Former POW and U.S. Air Force CPT Darrel Edwin Pyle is greeted by MGEN John Gonge, Commander 22nd Air Force and BGEN Ralph Saunders after his arrival from Clark Air Base, Philippines.

The fuel tank in the plane ruptured on impact causing minor fires. Major Pyle was recovered from the wreckage and taken to the Elmendorf AFB Hospital where he died of injuries sustained in the crash. His son was treated for cuts and bruises and released.

“He was born on 24 April 1940 in Long Beach, CA; graduated from Compton High School, Compton, CA, in 1958; and the University of Arizona and joined the Air Force in 1963.\r\nHe had rowed down the Amazon River and spent time in the jungles of Ecuador. While in captivity, he dream ed of coming to Alaska.

“He was assigned to the 43rd Tactical Fighter Squadron as an F-4E pilot. Major Pyle had been awarded the Legion of Merit, the Silver Star with oak leaf cluster, the Bronze Star with V device with oak lead cluster and a second oak leaf cluster to the Air Force Commendation Medal. He was cited for his resistance to more than 40 days of extreme physical and mental torture. He had written a book about his POW experiences. The publisher, however, wanted more details on his torture, which he did not want to go into again, and it was never published. The 3rd Wing Headquarters Building is named after Major Pyle.

HOMECOMING
Former POW and U.S. Air Force CPT Darrel Edwin Pyle, wife Karen, son and an escort look over the giant C-5 Galaxy aircraft on the flight line in February 1973.

If you are interested in more information on heroic Major Pyle, visit TogetherWeServed.com,

 

 

 

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St. Gertrude, Patron Saint of Cats and Cat Lovers

Talk to St. Gertrude if you’re having problems with your cats.

PicMonkey CollageDear Einstein,

My humans tell me that St. Patrick’s Day is a big celebration because some guy chased the snakes out of Ireland. That’s nothing. Thanks to me, there’s not a snake or a lizard or rat in my neighborhood. They don’t dare come out. We need a cat saint day. Instead of drinking green beer, kitties can hold catnip parties in my honor. It can be the day of St. Fluffy.

Just remember, I’m not fat, I’m…

Fluffy

 

Greatest respect to Fluffy, hunter among hunters.

While I’m all for having a special cat saint, becoming a saint is a lengthy process that requires a lot of paperwork, and most of them die horrible early deaths. Being an energy efficient creature, I bet you’re not interested in reinventing the hamster wheel. Besides, there’s already a two-legged saint for we kitties and cat-lovers, St. Gertrude of Nivelles.

Her special day happens to be on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17. She’s the patron saint of gardeners, travelers, widows, recently deceased people, the sick, the poor and the mentally ill. People call upon Gertrude for protection from mice and rats, fever, insanity and mental illness.

When humans paint pictures of St. Gertrude, she’s usually holding a staff with a mouse on it. Maybe that was her way of always having snack food around. A lot of icons show her holding one our feline brothers.

gertrudeSt. Gertrude, who was born in 626 A.D. in Landen, Belgium, was never known to be a crazy cat lady, but her writings confirm that, as the abbess at the Benedictine Monastery at Nivelles, she kept kitties to control the four-legged rodent population.

Don’t most Mickeys have four legs, you ask? Not in Gertrude’s book. She looked at lost human souls as mice, and made it her mission to pray for them to get them out of Purgatory.

One the other paw, bread baked in her ovens and made with the water from her special well was said to repel mice and rats. Other contemporary accounts said she prayed for the mice to go away and they did. So Gertrude was known for her association with mice, although she wasn’t a fan of them overrunning her place. And cats and mice go together like saints and Heaven. So she became the patroness of cats and cat lovers.

Humans also call upon Gertrude for safe travel. One legend said a large sea monster threatened to capsize some pilgrims’ ship. When they called upon St. Gertrude for protection, the creature fled. So next time you end up in the carrier on the way to the vet’s office, you can meow to Gertrude for safe passage. (In the sense of full disclosure, she’s never been much help once I actually arrive at the clinic.)

Her patronage of gardeners and herbalists would also extend to growers of catnip and catmint. Nothing makes a kitty happier than to dig in freshly tilled soil, so, in the spirit of sharing the labor, we kitties honor St. Gertrude by fertilizing the neighbor’s flower bed.

Gertrude of Nivelles is also the patron of the insane and people who are unhinged, so she’s the perfect intercessor for our brothers and sister who are stuck in hoarder homes, and a protector of merely eccentric crazy cat ladies (and dudes.)

Next time your human pulls out the carrier, and you cry out in protest, make it count by yelling for St. Gertrude. She might be able to postpone your trip with a well-placed sea monster on the hood of your humans’ car.

Proposed KITTEN Act stops government funded kitten killing for toxoplasmosis research

In the Mews by investigative repurrter JeffyJeffyBadBoy

WASHINGTON A bipartisan group of lawmakers will introduce legislation Thursday to prevent the Department of Agriculture from killing kittens after getting toxoplasmosis-infected poop. You read right. They kill kittehs for no reason.

The USDA has been breeding kittens in Beltsville, Maryland, infecting them toxoplasmosis, harvesting their infected poop, then killing them. The agency claims they have to kill the kittens to stop the parasite from infecting people.

What a bunch of poop heads. If the USDA isn’t a bunch of cat haters, then they’re just stupid. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which is under the Dept of Health and Human Services says, “Cats only spread Toxoplasma in their feces for 1-3 weeks following infection with the parasite.” Hey, you cat-hating government idiots, kitties aren’t contagious after three weeks.

Even more stupid, Cornell Feline Health Center says toxo can be treated with the antibiotic, clindamycin and steroids. It’s hard to believe that these people don’t simply enjoy offing adorable little kittens.

The Kittens in Traumatic Testing Ends Now (KITTEN) Act will protect these innocent animals from being needlessly euthanized in government testing, and make sure that they can be adopted by loving families instead,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., the Senate bill’s lead sponsor.

“The fact that we need a piece of legislation to tell the federal government to stop killing kittens is ridiculous on its face,” said Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla., who is co-sponsoring a similar bill in the House. “What’s even worse is, when you hear the details that the government is actually breeding hundreds of these cats just to intentionally feed them parasite-ridden raw meat and then kill them even though they’re perfectly healthy.”

My sentiments exactly, Dude.

Hey, don’t take my word for it. Check out what the CDC and Cornell have to say about kitties and toxoplasmosis.

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