Thursday, September 16, 2021

Cat-minding

There can be more to cat-minding than you might think.

Our only instructions were for a two-day stint of unlocking a thief-proof house, feeding three cats with a fishy kind of paté, top up feeders with dry cat food, give clear water, and leave a tap dripping as the cats liked to drink it that way. 

And there was the matter of litter mess to be extracted from two covered litter boxes and disposed of. This was my job as Margreet did the rest.

Well, that was all pretty clear and simple. Moreover our reward consisted of two bottles of good red wine.

On the second of our two visits we noticed that some sliding glass doors were held apart by a spacer on the lower rail, leaving just enough room for cats to squeeze through to reach a high-walled courtyard - considered to be too high for a cat to climb.

We hadn't noticed this gap before, so we telephone the owner to ask if this was intended. It was. All was well.

The owners arrived from the country the following day to find that one cat was missing. 

This one happened to be the one I liked best and, when I was sitting down, would lie on my upper legs and purr. So we were friends.

The search was on. The owners and I scoured the district, and Margreet rattled a tin of the dry cat food.

The cat had been seen and even turfed out into the street by the owner of a garden into which it has probably escaped.

Tired of leg and of calling "Jigsaw", we all retired as darkness fell, with the cat still at large.

With daylight the following morning came rain - thick, heavy, penetrating rain.

I telephoned the owners to find out where might be the best area for search.

So, with umbrella aloft, I was once more peering into gardens and below bushes. 

I was getting a bit wet, when, glory be, there was Jigsaw under the cover of the porch of an industrial building, looking sad and miserable.

I folded my umbrella and picked her up. Cradling her like a baby we set off for her rightful home.

Unable to hold the cat safely and the umbrella aloft at the same time, we both became thoroughly soaked.

Just to see the joy on her owner's face as she hugged Jigsaw made it all worth while. 

So, should you be asked to cat-sit at some future date, there may be more to it than you think.