flamingkat:

deanpleasepassthegravy:

forestbeneathme:

keepmywhiskeyneat:

wyvernchild:

lavender-ice:

please.

That is the exact spot my parents found a stray kitten. Nice little addition to the family, but would have been a terrible addition to the pavement had she not been very vocal OTL

No joke, the place where that cat is resting in this picture is called a “dead cat hole” it’s an automotive term.  Don’t believe me, look it up.

This is also where I found a stray cat, she was up in there during a thunderstorm and I begged my dad to let me being her inside and that’s the story of how I got my first cat.

Please don’t skip over this without reading it and making a mental note. Even if you don’t have a car, tell your parents or whoever, and make sure to do this. You think that’ll never happen but that’s what everyone thought who had this happen and didn’t check, and that poor cold cat met with a terribly sad end.

REBLOG WHETHER YOU LIKE CATS OR NOT

I found two kittens like this some years ago. Couldn’t afford to adopt them myself, much to the surprise of my coworkers (I was like two hours late to work because of this). I only found them because I thought the tiny little meows were birds and was confused because it was too cold for birds.

mojave-red:

johnnyslittleanimalblog:

Man Installs Night Vision Camera To Catch Whoever Keeps Bringing Him Newspapers

Last week, something strange started happening to James Eubanks. Inexplicably, newspapers began being delivered to his North Carolina home — newspapers he did not request.

Some days, he’d find just one paper; other days, as many as 10.

Eubanks was perplexed. Then the mystery grew deeper.

As if the unsolicited newspaper deliveries weren’t enough, Eubanks then began finding something else being dropped off at his place. The haywire paperboy had started delivering phone books, too. One day, Eubanks found nine — far more than he would ever want or need.

That one pushed Eubanks’ curiosity over the edge.

He decided to set up a motion-sensing camera in his yard to catch his tormentor red-handed. And sure enough, he did.

“Mystery solved!” Eubanks exclaimed in a post on Facebook.

Turns out, the overzealous paperboy was actually a gray fox — or, rather, a group of gray foxes.

“Without the pictures no one would believe it. I assure you,” Eubanks told (coincidentally enough) FOX 8 News in Winston-Salem.

The perpetrators have been identified, but other questions remain — namely, why do these foxes keep bringing newspapers and phone books to James Eubanks? Well, that’s anyone’s guess.

Chances are better than not, however, that he’s not the only one being affected by these unwanted deliveries. After all, the foxes’ papers have had to come from somewhere, and that somewhere is presumably the porches of paying subscribers.

via 

The Dodo

Fox News

he’s clearly pleased some form of trickster spirit

or caught its attention

jumpingjacktrash:

silverhawk:

catopumas are so interesting 2 me bc theres only two species so far in the genus, and its either

a very gentle looking asian golden cat

very kind looking, round. 10/10

and then the other in the genus is

the bay cat, or as i like to call them – the weasel cat. long, kinda weird looking, but still 10/10 despite the weaselness.

metal cat and punk cat are both great

junk-hed:

animals portrayed as “evil” in media: sharks, bats, snakes, spiders, crows, bees, dobermans

animals that are actually evil: geese, mosquitoes, ticks, capuchins, maggots, candiru, people who like hamilton

Wait maggots can be used for medical sterilization and have been for literally centuries. Move those off that list.