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Well with the slew (sp?) of babies popping up, thought was fitting. Since our other thread was closed, here's the new one.
LOL @ the hairy babysitter! I think somebody is anticipating a lot of dropped food.JP said:The dingo knows better then to eat the baby.
JP, does your kid respond to external stimuli yet? (limited kid experience) That lick isn't getting any attention which makes me think "implicit trust" or something.JP said:The dingo knows better then to eat the baby.
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Not yet, we have tried to stimulate him by using his hand to pet the dog, or the cats. He's only 7 weeks though, we are just getting smiles out of him.JP said:Hey totally responds. That was the first lick, about a millisecond later he was all like WTF.
Dogs would probably be a safer choice, unless you trim your cats' nails. I still have some scratch scars from when i was a kid; it took me a few incidents to realize how easily startled cats can be, according to my siblings. Of course, dog hair is coarser than cat hair.JP said:Not yet, we have tried to stimulate him by using his hand to pet the dog, or the cats. He's only 7 weeks though, we are just getting smiles out of him.
What!?! no "bitches"?IcedC said:mornin
Ouch! I guess that does make sense for urban, all-indoor kitties with babies sharing their space. I can't do it to mine; for one thing, they would hairball me in my sleep, for another they wouldn't be able to enjoy all the killing in the yard. One of them is on some kind of mission to eliminate tree frogs; little froggy skeletons all over the porch.JP said:All but one are front paw declawed.
That is good, bridges of ash are not very useful. It sounds like you could probably bail and go back if the new gig is majorly flawed.sje0123 said:Talking to the boss went well.