Cats are known as solitary animals. They don't hunt communally or share the
spoils of a hunt. Sometimes cats with adjoining territories
will get together for a pleasant
evening grooming session, but on the whole they are not the
most social creatures with
others of their kind. This general wisdom does not always
seem to hold up.
My barn
cats are a single family descended from a lone female who wandered
onto our place one day and decided to stay. She and her
children and grandchildren police
the local rodent population. Their behavior doesn't always
match the solitary hunter of
common wisdom.
The
original female, Patch, used to like to take her kittens for daytrips around
the
area. I've watched her bring her little brood back from
wherever they've been in the
evenings. One evening I watched her stop and sit down near
the edge of a small, lightly
used road running next to our farm. Two of her kittens
stopped next to her. As she turned
her head one way and then the other, carefully looking for
traffic, the kittens mimicked
her actions. The only one who didn't was the little orange
tiger who became distracted by
a butterfly. Patch retrieved her wandering kitten and
brought the whole family home.
Walks are still a part of kitten lessons.
I recently
watched Patch, her daughter and three of their kittens taking a walk
around the boundaries of our farm. Patch and her daughter
led the way. The two younger
kittens were in the middle. The oldest kitten, not quite a
year old brought up the rear.
When one of the younger kittens stopped too long, he tried
to move them along. If he
couldn't then one of the mother cats would come back and get
the little guy moving. I've
wondered what this little jaunt was about. Possibly Patch
was showing the newest
members of her family where their territorial boundaries
were?
Some of
the most interesting behavior I've seen regards family member who were
injured. One of Patches' sons is a big burley black and
white adult tom. A very handsome
and friendly boy, he unfortunately has a talent for trouble.
One day he came limping
heavily into the yard wailing at the top of his lungs. His
mother and sisters raced up to
him as fast as they could. While he continued to cry, Patch
began washing his face and
ears while his sisters lay down over top of him. They stayed
that way for some time while
I called the vet. I'm happy to report that he recovered just
fine with only a hitch in his
giddyup to remember his adventure by.
Another of
Patches sons, a brown and white tom just under a year old, got into a
fight with his eldest brother. During the fight his foot was
injured and began to swell. I
found him limping along on three legs the following morning.
I brought him onto our
porch where I could keep a close eye on him and he could
recover without further
injuring his foot. While he was recuperating, various
members of the family perched
outside the porch windows, keeping him company.
These
are just a few examples I've seen among my cats. Maybe they are unusual.
I've certainly never seen cats act this way before. Or
maybe, just maybe, cats aren't such
social isolates as everyone's always thought!
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