Cat Behavior
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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