The World Beyond BetterMost > The Culture Tent
In the New Yorker...
Jeff Wrangler:
I haven't yet had the opportunity to read the Scott Frank article. I enjoyed the Genghis Khan article.
In the "Goings On" section, I also enjoyed the short piece on Leonard Nimoy's widow. I'd never heard of her, but she's described as an actress, a writer, a director and a philanthropist.
It's funny, I guess. I've never been a Star Trek fan, but it's become such a pervasive part of popular culture that I think it's possible to learn a lot about the show, particularly the people involved in it, without ever having watched an episode.
I enjoy spotting Leonard Nimoy in roles from before he became famous through Star Trek. Twice I've spotted him playing a Native American.
Jeff Wrangler:
I am reading but have not yet finished Jonathan Franzen on outdoor cats (Jan. 1 and 8 ). I would be very interested in hearing what others may think of it.
While I have not yet finished the article, in the interest of full disclosure I will say that I came to the article unalterably opposed to outdoor cats/cats allowed outdoors (unsupervised) since I saw one kill a robin in Williamsburg, Virginia, in the spring of 1981.
I am presently concerned about a cat without a collar that seems to be skulking around my father's neighborhood. I worry about the birds that gather on the ground underneath my father's bird feeder, and I guess a skulking cat means we will no longer have rabbits in the neighborhood.
Front-Ranger:
Well, for one thing, the illustration is amazing. The more you look at it, the more cats you see.
The article is terribly long but this is a complex problem. Franzen starts by describing the trap/neuter/release method that is used in LA but this is obviously not going to make a big enough dent in the outdoor cat population. There needs to be a multifaceted approach that includes not interfering with the natural order. Instead, people in Pasadena actually considered an eradication program for coyotes because they were killing the outdoor cats! Fortunately, they voted it down. I lived in Los Angeles for almost a decade and there is much wildlife there, including not only coyotes but birds of prey such as the California condor.
There should be a place where unhomed cats can live relatively safely. When I was in Rome, I loved the cats that lived among the ruins such as the Pantheon. These cats are fed and protected. I don't know what all the people do to manage the populations but they should be consulted. As always, we could learn much from Europe but we don't bother to.
Midway through, Franzen starts talking about his real love, birds. It's true that the bird population has fallen alarmingly. My upstairs renter always has a full bird feeder or two on the raised deck, and I've started seeing more birds. But bird lovers unfairly demonize cats. The decrease in birds is also a complex problem and pollution is a bigger threat than domestic cats. My cat has never caught or killed a bird or anything bigger than a spider. As you know, she did bring in a chipmunk one time, but she didn't harm it. She was carrying it like she would a kitten.
I was at a workshop last fall when we heard a lot of cheeping around a tree. The baby birds had gotten too big for the nest and the mother bird was pushing them out. There were about eight small birds hopping around on the ground. They weren't able to fly yet. We asked our teacher/owner what to do and he said, "Let nature take its course." I knew there were many natural predators around. One of the babies hopped into my hand and I took it over and let it loose under some sunflower plants that were enclosed in a fence. Birds are the descendants of dinosaurs so you would expect them to be more resilient.
serious crayons:
--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on January 02, 2024, 02:05:53 pm ---The article is terribly long but this is a complex problem. Franzen starts by describing the trap/neuter/release method that is used in LA but this is obviously not going to make a big enough dent in the outdoor cat population. There needs to be a multifaceted approach that includes not interfering with the natural order. Instead, people in Pasadena actually considered an eradication program for coyotes because they were killing the outdoor cats! Fortunately, they voted it down. I lived in Los Angeles for almost a decade and there is much wildlife there, including not only coyotes but birds of prey such as the California condor.
--- End quote ---
Whenever anyone in my area reports a missing cat on Nextdoor, the neighbors pile on the scorn for the person having let the cat go outside and exposing it to coyotes. I've never heard anyone here propose eradicating coyotes, luckily.
--- Quote ---There should be a place where unhomed cats can live relatively safely. When I was in Rome, I loved the cats that lived among the ruins such as the Pantheon. These cats are fed and protected. I don't know what all the people do to manage the populations but they should be consulted. As always, we could learn much from Europe but we don't bother to.
--- End quote ---
Actually I think European stray cats are more problematic than that. I wrote a story in 2022 about them. I'm not sure about the Parthenon cats but in general the stray cats are fed haphazardly, often have health problems and rarely get sterilized. My story was about a program that rounds up cats in Greece and keeps them in a big comfortable country home while they get health care from American veterinary student volunteers, including spaying and neutering. Then the ones that are young enough to adjust to human company are adopted and the others released.
Front-Ranger:
This article tells about how Holland is taking care of its stray dog problem. IMO dogs are even more of a problem than cats but are hardly even mentioned in Franzen's article. Most every municipality has an animal control department that you can call when there's a stray dog or cat. When I lived in a semi-rural area, they wouldn't come out for nuisance animals. When a skunk family moved in under my deck, they wouldn't come out. Also, when there was a dead deer by the side of the road, I called but they said to leave it and mountain lions or coyotes would take care of it.
But we have domesticated dogs and cats to work for us and be our companions so we are obligated to manage and care for them. And that includes managing the population growth. Wild animals can do this. I read in the book Watership Down that when the rabbit warren gets too crowded, the female rabbits don't have as many babies. The embryos start to form but then are dissolved back into the mothers' bodies. Perhaps humans and all animals used to know how to do this but lost the ability over time. Also, many plants are natural abortifacients.
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