Ally and
the kittens
I
love watching animals and their behaviour to other creatures and to their own
kind. We’ve had all sorts of different animals over the years, and not just
cats and dawgs. We’ve had a goat, a horse that used to live in our paddock, guinea
pigs, mice, rats, ants and chooks. I
think that’s about all. Nothing particularly exciting except for the echidna
that got stuck in our laundry. But that’s another story.
Shortly
after I got Ally, my dawg, I acquired a cat we called Purzah. Before I had a
chance to get her fixed she came on heat. So for 5 weeks, I had this screaming,
female, feline who nothing more than to find the nearest man and root herself
silly. But I was adamant. I was not going to have kittens in the house. I was
not going to have any more animals. I had two cats and my dawg, and that was
sufficient.
Finally
the caterwauling diminished and I let the cat outside for the first time in
weeks. She disappeared for about 3 days, and yes, 9 weeks later, she had four
kittens.
As
many of you are aware, I’m a sucker for a pretty face, and Ally appears to be
as well. They were bedded down in the bottom of my wardrobe and Ally and I
would lie on the floor together and contemplate the miracles of nature.
As Purzah
became more confident, I was allowed to touch her babies and Ally was allow to
lick them.
Over
the next few weeks, the kittens grew and began exploring their new world. Ally
followed them around like a mother hen. When Purzah went outside to do her
business and to get something to eat, Ally would watch over the kittens. She
would lick their bottoms ever so gently, and they would snuggle up to her, just
like she was their mother.
As
they got older, they would climb on Ally. She would lick them ever so gently.
However, as they got bigger, you could see that Ally was aware that they were
bigger and stronger, and she would push them, again, gently, and play with
them. Exactly at the level they could handle. Never once was she ahead of them.
It
was amazing to watch. This little dog, who had never had a litter of her own,
knowing instinctively, what these kittens were capable of.
Ally
has her own chair in the lounge. As the kittens got big enough to climb up on
the chair, they would and Ally allowed them to. You could almost see the look
of pride on her face as they learned to negotiate the chair, and improved their
climbing skills on Ally’s favourite chair.
More
time passed, the kittens got bigger. One day I heard Ally growl. Something she
rarely does. I turned around and there she was growling at one of the kittens.
Ally had decided, as do all good mothers, that this chair was hers again and
the kittens were now big enough to be told that it was time for them to move
onto other people’s chairs and to claim hers back.
Madeleine
Wednesday,
18 January 2006