Many apologies, but for reasons too complex to go into, I'm running way behind this week. Rather than leave a blank space (cue for a Taylor Swift song?) I've posted a few of my favorite cat memes to make you smile.
Normal service will be resumed in two weeks time.
Grace xxx
There's this one...
and this aspirational cat meme...
and sinister is always funny - especially when the cat comes off best
Then there's the way cats have life so sorted...
and this one reminds me of Widget - only in her case she wanted to taste the guinea pig food...
Then there are the cats that comment on the state of society
and the cats with a keen sense of observation
and not forgetting their sense of irony...
their unrivaled cuteness
and this...
That's quite a lot of favorites isn't it....and I haven't even scratched the surface.
Night all,
sleep well.
G x
Sunday, 13 September 2015
Sunday, 6 September 2015
Portaloos and Puppies: Reflections on the Popularity of Spaniels
Yesterday I spent the day sitting in a field in the freezing cold, listening to various lectures on topics such as 'neuropathic pain' and 'cranial nerve examination'. This was part of my undertaking as a veterinarian to keep to date with developments in veterinary science. The event was called "Vet Festival" but what I had failed to appreciate before setting off was "Festival" was as in an outdoor music event rather than meaning a celebration. Hence the portaloos, tents, and me being desperately under-dressed in sandals!
However it was all worthwhile because the lectures were excellent and very practical. Also, the organizer, Noel Fitzpatrick, wanted to emphasize / rekindle a love for animals - which he very much did. This set me thinking about pet keeping over the centuries, and hence the topic for this week's blog post - a royal loves of spaniels!
The history linking England’s monarchs to spaniel breeds goes back
centuries. In the 16th century Henry VIII decreed that only “some small spanyells for the ladies”
would be allowed at court, and the spaniels were described as “smalle ladyes puppees”
Perhaps the king
most associated with dogs was Charles II. He owned so many spaniels that his
Gentleman of the Bedchamber, the Earl of Ailesbury [sic], used them as a metaphor
for currying-favour, describing certain courtiers as: “Pliant as a spaniel dog.” The dogs Charles prefered are today
known as King Charles Spaniels – a name which was never applied to them in
their day. These dogs were much beloved of King Charles I – and folk lore has
it that every dog across the land wept when at Charles I’s execution.
A subtly different
strain of spaniel was favoured by Charles II – and became known as the
‘Cavalier’ King Charles Spaniel – a term synonymously linked to the Royalist
cause and therefore potentially dangerous to own during the Civil War. With the eventual restoration of the monarch
in 1660, in celebration the new king was said to award Cavalier spaniels the
freedom of every inn in the land, that they were not to be denied access to any
public place and they alone were allowed the freedom to roam the royal parks!
Indeed Samuel
Pepys accompanied Charles aboard the Naseby,
in 1660, on his return to England. He records the presence of a dog: “That the King loved, which sh*t in the
boat, which made us laugh and me think that a King and all that belong to him
are but just as others are.”
In the 18th
century and the Hanovarians now on the throne, spaniels were well established
as part of court life, and regularly featured in portraits of royal children.
Indeed, in the early 19th century the Prince Regent commissioned a
portrait of his father, George III, with a spaniel at his feet and a statue of
Charles II in the background. By 1841 it was estimated that five thousand
spaniels were kept as pets in London alone, but it was to be over a hundred
years later, in 1945 that the breed was first officially recognised as Cavalier
King Charles Spaniel.
In the early 18th
century, the Duke of Marlborough, John Churchill, kept red and white coloured
King Charles spaniels, which he records as trotting alongside his horse. His
estate was named Blenheim, after the Battle of Blenheim, and as a patron of the
red and white spaniel, this colour variety of King Charles and Cavalier King
Charles became called Blenheim.
Now of course spaniels are much loved companions for all dogs lovers, although their popularity has meant in-breeding has produced conditions such as Chiari-like malformation, syringomyelia and a propensity to heart disease, which are excrutiatingly painful (the former - as show in the lectures yesterday) and heart-breaking (the later.) Hence sometimes being popular is not always a good thing.
Sunday, 30 August 2015
Cats in Fiction: Some Musings
Is it just me, or is a house not a home
without a pet?
OK, I admit to being biased because I’m a
bit bonkers when it comes to cats, but for me animals give a place soul – and
the same is so for animals in books – their presence gives an extra dimension
and by seeing how characters react to felines, give extra clues to their
character. References to cats in particular can be found in classic literature
from Charles Dickens to Henry James, Rudyard Kipling to Emile Zola.
Indeed, I suspect the Victorian novelist
George Moore thinks much the same as me as he bemoaned the absence of pets from
those most august of novels ‘Tom Jones’ and ‘Vanity Fair’. His reasoning went
like this:
“Both
books lack intimacy of thought and feeling. No one sits by the fire and thinks…and
welcomes the approach of a familiar bird or animal.”
To my view, Charles Dickens was on the
right track. He knew that animals are important in making a book come to life.
Take for example ‘Bleak House’ which features several cats. There is Krook’s
cat Lady Jane who follows her master or perches hissing on his shoulder. Then
there is Mr Jellyby’s cat who finishes his morning milk, and finally, Mrs
Pipchin’s old cat who likes to purr... “While the contracting pupils of his eyes
looked like two notes of admiration.”
Come to think of it, Dickens has quite an
association with cats because he made several references to cat pies…but that’s
another story.
Perhaps the master of feline literature is
Rudyard Kipling in his “Just So”
stories. He wrote a story titled “The cat
that walked by himself”. In this tale the cat makes a bargain with the
woman that he will accept milk and a place by the hearth, and in return will do
only what he wants to do– which deliciously sums up the independent nature of
the cats.
In one of my favorite novels, ‘Wolf Hall’
by Hilary Mantel, there is a delicious evocative passage that describing an
interaction with Cromwell’s cat, Marlinspike.
“A
cat may look at a king,” he [Cromwell] says. He is cradling Marlinspike in his
arms, and talking to Thomas Avery, the boy he’s teaching his trade…
…He
puts the cat down, opens the bag. He fishes up on a finger a string of rosary
beads; for show says Avery, and he says, good boy. Marlinspike leaps on to his
desk; he peers into the bag, dabbing with a paw. “The only mice in there are
sugar ones.” The boy [Avery] pulls the cat’s ears, tussles with him. “We don’t
have any little pets in Master Vaughan’s house.”
Sunday, 23 August 2015
Musings on London's Urban Foxes
I live in suburban London. On Tuesday I went to the
shops and stopped on the corner of the street to speak to a neighbour. However,
our conversation came to an abrupt halt when a pair of juvenile foxes
ambled out of the garden to play on the road. Even though I’ve grown used to
seeing foxes at night, this brazen disregard for our proximity was surprising.
Foxes are an increasing problem in our cities, because
of the easy availability of food. Some misguided people deliberately feed the
foxes, whilst another subset of people leave food litter on the streets which
encourages not only foxes but also rats.
A History of Urban Foxes in London
Urban foxes are nothing new, but the high numbers are
exceptional. But believe it or not, many of these first foxes were deliberately
imported into London from Scotland or Wales. This was because in Victorian
times there was a ready market for the sale of foxes to supply the hunt.
If a wealthy landowner’s estate was low on fox
numbers, which made the foxhunt unsatisfactory, then a trip to London was the
answer. Live foxes could be purchased in bulk at Leadenhall Market, transported
to your estate and then released.
A Most Unfortunate Fox
One exceptionally unlucky fox had an extremely
traumatic life. He was sold, released, hunted, and resold, not once, not twice,
but three times – and only met his death by the hunt on the fourth occasion.
The fox was identified by a slit ear and holes in the other ear which marked
him out as unique. He was repeatedly bought by the Duke of Grafton, but on
learning of this remarkable tale there were protests.
It was argued in the press that the fox had earnt the
right to be hunted no more.
“[His continued survival]…ought to have entitled him to the privilege formerly granted to a stag
who had been fortunate enough to escape from his royal pursuers.”
Truly Wild Foxes
The population of truly wild foxes in London started
to rise with the advent of the railways. The foxes followed the path cleared by
the rail tracks and the burgeoning road network, and found rich pickings in the
urban environment.
What constantly amazes me is that many people who put food
out for foxes are either own dogs or are dog lovers. Of course I’m a huge
animal lover and have nothing personal against foxes. However, feeding the
urban fox population is a huge mistake because it encourages them to breed.
The Deadly Threat of Lungworm
A larger fox population means a greater reservoir of
hosts for the deadly parasite, lungworm. This is a fox parasite, and when it
infects dogs can cause death. If lungworm goes untreated the dog develops vague
symptoms such as a cough or tummy upset. But far worse than this is that
lungworm interferes with blood clotting.
Seemingly healthy dogs can die in the space of 24
hours from a minor cut which refuses to stop bleeding. Or some dogs bleed
internally and collapse, much to the distress of their owner (who
co-incidentally may have been attracting foxes into the garden with food).
Avoiding Lungworm
If you are a dog owner then don’t encourage foxes. In
addition, to protect your pet take the following steps:
·
Your vet can recommend a product licensed to prevent
lungworm. Use it regularly
·
Don’t leave toys or water bowls outside. This is
because slugs and snails act as an intermediate host and have larvae in their slime.
Dogs can become infected by contact with the snail trail
·
De-slug your garden
·
Don’t encourage foxes
Sunday, 9 August 2015
Medieval LOL Cats: Why the Victorians may not have invented cat memes after all
Last week we looked at how the Victorians were way
ahead of the internet, and did in fact invent the LOLCat (The 19th Century Origins of theCat Meme). But is that correct? Delving deeper into the wonderful world of
feline imagery I find funny images of cats that predate photography and date
back to medieval times.
The
above shows an illuminated letter “O” taken from a German document dating back
to the late 12th century. It shows a dog catching a cat catching a
mouse. An allegory perhaps on the nature the predator becoming prey.
Whereas
in the modern meme it is the cat who has at last assumed their rightful place
(comment if you disagree!) as the superior species. It only took from nearly
900 years of meme development for this to truth to be realized.
This
image is rich with comedic irony, as the cat is assailed by his dinner, the mouse. This
cat in his castle dates to around 1320 and a Book of Hours, from London, England.
Whereas
the modern way is reflect on the fickle nature of felines and how their role
protecting crops from vermin has evolved over the centuries (or something like
that.)
Then
of course we had this marginalia drawing, which went viral on the internet
under the title “Cedric is not a cat lover”. A classic meme if ever there was one.
And
of course, cats have never forgotten it. Over the intervening centuries they evolved
into the ceiling cat to protect their furry brethren by keeping man under constant surveillance
at all times.
Sunday, 2 August 2015
The 19th Century Origins of the Cat Meme
Love cat memes?
Of course you do. After all it’s why the internet was
invented. But when do you think the cat meme was first invented?
It may surprise you to know that it was the Victorian’s
who came up with the innovation of cute cats pics with a funny caption.
Harry Pointer is arguably the earliest master of the cat
meme. Englishman Pointer was born in 1822 and an early adopter of kitten
photography. He started out taking naturalistic photographs of cats, until in
the 1870s he realised there was a niche to be had in pictures of kittens in
ludicrous poses. He wasn’t wrong.
Pointer completed around 200 early memes, which he
called is “Brighton Cats”. However, he went on to hand the baton another later photographer,
Harry Whittier Frees.
Harry Whittier Frees
The term “LOLCats” was coined in 2006, but as this
picture shows the first LOLcats (cute pictures of cats with a humours caption)
appeared in 1914. Harry Whittier Frees specialized in taking funny photos of
cats. An American born in 1873 he made a living selling his images as postcards
of live animals dressed in human clothing. Posing living animals was a new
idea, because previously similar photographs had been of stuffed animals.
Henriette Ronner-Knip
Born
in Amsterdam in 1821, Henriette made her reputation painting cutesy pictures of
animals, especially cats. She had a special studio space with a glass front so
that she could watch the kittens at play without disturbing them, in order to
choose the sweetest poses.
Although
not a meme as such, there had a similar effect on the viewer, of making them go
“Ahhh” and want to share the image with their friends.
Cornelius Raaphorst
Another
person of Dutch origin Cornelius was born in 1875 and maxed out on paintings of
cute kittens. Typical titles included “Kittens at Play” and "The Birdcage", the subject of which
is self-explanatory.
Louis Wain
Another supremo of LOLCats was Louis Wain. His
paintings of anthropomorphic cats were hugely popular. His amazing pictures
adorned postcards, greetings cards, calendars and posters and were the late
Victorian equivalent of Wallace and Gromit.
Sunday, 26 July 2015
Cats of the Tower of London: Sir Henry Wyatt and the Caterer Cat
In this our
second post about cats and the Tower of London, we look at Sir Henry Wyatt and
the “Caterer” cat.
![]() |
| Sir Henry Wyatt in later life (he was in his 20s when imprisoned) Note the cat dragging a bird through the window |
Born in 1460,
Sir Henry Wyatt was a Yorkshireman and attended Eton with Henry Tudor. Unfortunately
for Wyatt at the time of our story, it was not Henry Tudor on the throne but Richard III, and the
later was distinctly twitchy about anyone who might support the Tudor line of accession.
Richard
decided to limit any damage Wyatt might be tempted to do by imprisoning him in the
Tower of London. Just to make sure he felt completely unwelcome, Wyatt was
tortured, and kept in squalid conditions sleeping on straw on a stone floor and
with his clothes in rags. Given very little food, he was also starving.
![]() |
| The Tower of London |
“He [Wyatt] was
imprisoned often, once in a cold and narrow Tower, where he had neither bed to
oie on, nor clothes sufficient to warm him, nor meat for his mouth.”
But at this
his most desperate hour an unlikely angel came to him. This angel had four-legs
and a furry coat, and was actually a cat.
![]() |
| Earliest known surviving portrait of Richard III |
“A cat came into the dungeon with him,
and, as it were, offered herself unto him. He was glad of her, laid her in his
bosom to warm him, and by making much of her won her love. After that she would
come at diverse time, and when she could get him one, bring him a pigeon.”
The pigeon
was then duly cooked by a friendly jailor, providing much needed nourishment.
Indeed, such was the cat’s provision for hm that she became nicknamed as “the
caterer cat”.
In later
years when Wyatt was free, and Henry Tudor on the throne, Wyatt was notorious
for having a fondness for cats. Papers belonging to the Wyatt family, written
in 1727, remark how: “Sir Henry always made much of a cat, and
was always to be found with a cat beside him.”
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