Do Cats Hear with Their Feet?: Where Cats Come From, What We Know About Them, and What They Think About Us
By Jake Page
()
About this ebook
Do Cats Hear with Their Feet? traces the evolution of cats from the time they first adapted their feline form about 20 million years ago. Exploring every aspect of a cat's life—from predation, to play, to communication—Jake Page shows us what a cat's daily life is really like. He gives us a cat's-eye view of a bird hunt in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains and explains why cats will hunt even when they are full, and why no self-respecting cat would eat vegetables. In sections that will be of interest to every cat owner, Jake Page demonstrates why territory is all-important to cats, investigates cat ESP, and shows that cats have, in fact, never been fully domesticated; they've just graciously decided to reside with us. Beautifully illustrated, this engaging book is full of surprising facts. Did you know: Black cats do better in the crowded conditions of cities than any other color? Cats are as allergic to humans as humans are to cats? Cats have survived falls from heights of over seven stories?
Do Cats Hear with Their Feet? will show readers exactly why cats are such amazing creatures, and why humans have been crazy about them for centuries.
Jake Page
Jake Page was the founding editor of Doubleday's Natural History Press, as well as editorial director of Natural History magazine and science editor of Smithsonian magazine. He has written more than forty books on the natural sciences, zoological topics, and Native American affairs, as well as mystery fiction. He and his wife live in northern Colorado with six dogs and a steady supply of dog hair, available free.
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Do Cats Hear with Their Feet? - Jake Page
Do Cats Hear with Their Feet?
Where Cats Come From, What We Know About Them, and What They Think About Us
Jake Page
Illustrations by Jake Page
Photographs by Susanne Page
(Except as Noted)
Preface by Michael W. Fox
FOR SUSANNE, AS ALWAYS,
NOT TO MENTION
CAT, RUDOLPH, AND FIG NEWTON
Contents
Preface by Michael W. Fox
Introduction
Part One
Transformations
1 Just-So Tales of Cat Beginnings
2 The Taming of the Cat
3 Black Cats and Feline Reputations
Part Two
Catwork
4 On Being a Predator
5 Homeland Security
Part Three
The Cat’s World
6 Kittens
7 The Senses of Cats
8 The Mysteries of Play
9 How Cats Communicate
10 The Association of Cats
11 Breeds, Individuals, and Friends
Appendices
Appendix A The Wild Cats of the World
Appendix B Cat Food Alert
Appendix C Feline Health Problems by Breed
Acknowledgments
Further Reading
Searchable Terms
About the Author
Other Books by Jake Page
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
PREFACE
As a veterinarian and animal behaviorist, I tend to approach animals and the books about them I review the same way. Like taking a cat’s temperature, I first check the back end as soon as I have glanced at the cover.
I look for reference citations that could be a temperature gauge as to the veracity of the book in question. The scientific and other published documentation that an author includes at the back of the book is good form, since it gives credibility to what he/she writes.
Jake Page’s book checked out fine in this respect, and when I saw his appendices I felt that this was a healthy cat book, not stuffed with fluff and nonsense. Some cat books, like many cats, are warm and fuzzy but actually quite boring, or worse, rather sickly, not put together well and soon to be buried and forgotten. Yet others are highly inbred, copycat books, inferior rip-offs of better originals. A few make a lifetime’s impression. I have known a few cool cats like that, and this book is one of which they would certainly not disapprove.
I sensed Page’s love and concern for cats, clearly evident in the appendices that draw attention to the epidemic of nutrition-related disease linked to feeding cats manufactured pet food, especially the dry kibble types. I was glad to see him focus on the most common ailments in the various purebreds, some of which may be hereditary—an increasing problem—or linked to breed sensitivities to certain food ingredients, antiflea and other veterinary drugs, anesthetics, and vaccines.
So I felt that further examination of this book was called for. Like opening a cat’s mouth, I wasn’t sure what I might find when I scanned the contents and began to sniff out the introduction. Would it bite and grab my attention?
Catchy titles aside, the introduction was like being greeted by my cat Igor when I come home from work. I felt the immediate embrace of a kindred spirit dedicated to the task of helping people better understand the nature of animals, and the animals of nature. What better way for us to see, or at least get a better glimpse of, the cats’ world than through their eyes?
Satisfied and encouraged by the introduction, I stalked through the book swiftly, enjoying it, and then returned to savor the heart and marrow of each chapter like a big cat who first surveys the herd of wildebeest or antelope before deciding where to start first.
From the first chapter on I was captivated and appreciative of Page’s accumulated and well-integrated natural history knowledge. Thanks to writers like him, the often painstaking and patience-demanding observations of ethologists—scientists who study the ethos/behavior of fellow creatures, and whose findings, along with those of other natural scientists, are too often buried and forgotten in academic journals—are rescued and shared with a wider readership.
People’s attitudes toward cats vacillate between revulsion and reverence, fear and kinship, from age to age and individual to individual. Cats, as you will read, have been victims of human prejudice and cruelties based primarily on ignorance and indifference for centuries. This book is an antidote and will do much to further people’s acceptance and enjoyment of cats. It is also an antidote to cats being victims of misperception and misunderstanding that can cause them to be overindulged, inappropriately disciplined, or otherwise mistreated; and to be so highly anthropomorphized as to be regarded and treated like infant children or surrogate offspring rather than as cats with their own special nature, ethos, spirit.
I was hoping to see some mention of the psychic and spiritual aspects of cat mythology and phenomenology so as to compare my findings and conclusions with the author’s. This is not within the scope of feline natural history, however, so I respectfully refer the reader to my own work, Cat Body, Cat Mind. As a scientist I became intrigued when many years ago a reader of my syndicated newspaper column, Animal Doctor, told me of the family cat who suddenly began to pace and cry in evident distress one morning around ten. Then, around 11:00 a.m., the veterinary hospital called to say that the family’s beloved dog, which was very closely bonded with the cat, had expired on the operating table at around 10 a.m. Somehow the cat seemed to know when her beloved canine companion had passed on. But how? Over the years I have collected many such anecdotes, and they do make one wonder about the awareness and sensitivities of other creatures, and our own limited senses.
Scientific studies of feline behavioral genetics and the almost ephemeral, matrifocal, littercentric social psyche and ethos of the domestic cat are usefully summarized in this book. You will learn about the sociability of cats, and the feral cat societies
that congregate around garbage dumps and warehouses. A common contemporary prejudice toward cats is over the free-roaming cats’ predatory behavior, killing and maiming songbirds and other wildlife. Others put food out for such homeless cats, or see nothing wrong with allowing their own cats to roam free and hunt and kill. Importantly this bioethical controversy—kill them or feed them, trap and adopt them, or spay-neuter-vaccinate and release them—is laid out in this book. It makes for a good foundation for conflict resolution between the polarized extremes of cat lovers and protectors and cat haters and exterminators.
Rather than being another sentimental celebration of cats, Do Cats Hear With Their Feet? provides the knowledge and insights to better our appreciation, understanding, care, and concern for all cats great and small—and the promise of a more fulfilling relationship and communion with those felines who enrich our personal lives. A gift indeed.
Dr. Michael W. Fox
Author of Cat Body, Cat Mind
FIGGY WATCHES CAT TV.
INTRODUCTION
Her golden eyes
Gaze upon
Silken chocolate
Her whiskers
Are aristocratic lace
She surveys
Flurried winds
In the grass below her
And settles more comfortably
On the provided fence
The sun bestows its luster
On her rippling fur coat
And if, perhaps, a clumsy horse
Should amble by,
Le Chat
Will only flick an ear
With elegant
Disdain
–NINA KUNTZ
From the young Montana poet above to the Egyptian priests of the time of the pharaohs, people have sung of cats, seeking to fix in our minds (or at least theirs) the myriad facets of that familiar but enigmatic creation of nature and mankind. Being neither poet nor priest, I have resorted to a rather comfortable and old-fashioned mode—natural history—to shed some light on cats, the most popular pets in the United States with numbers ranging in the eighty millions, and by other estimates accounting for approximately one-fourth of the 400-odd million pet cats in the world.
Natural history is a courteous form of inquiry that asks where a given creature came from, how it lives its life, and what it can do for us, at the same time asking what we can do for it. Natural history typically looks at the whole animal, rather than its intimate chemistry, and asks how it gets along in its environment. Of course, in these days of the unveiling of the genetic code of humans, dogs, mice, and cats (among others), and of the cloning of sheep and, one supposes, humans before long, as well as high-tech genetic engineering capable of creating a cat that glows in the dark with an eerie reddish light, natural history needs to open its old hand-carved oaken doors of knowledge and allow the shiny titanium of DNA labs into its old precincts—but not so far in as to be confusing. Natural history also looks at bones that have turned to stone—fossils—to fill in the long story of life on this earth, and we will peer at a few of those in passing.
Contemplating this grand old field of study, I consulted (for courage if nothing else) a book first published in 1950 and still in print, The Nature of Natural History, by Marston Bates. Bates was a professor of biology when I met him in the late 1960s who held a weekly seminar in his house called Biology and Human Affairs,
lubricated with copious free beer and touching on topics too numerous to list. He also had added to the back of his house a large greenhouse that contained an amazing array of tropical life forms—plants, of course, and animals ranging from monkeys to exotic birds, including a hummingbird who insisted on checking out every visitor close up as they came through the beaded curtains into the greenhouse. This installation was what Bates wrote about in Natural History magazine, and later in a book of the same name, as a jungle in the house.
It is the reason, at least indirectly, that my wife Susanne and I, hosts to multiple dogs, chickens, guinea pigs, and bearded dragons, no longer can have cats inside the house. (We do help support a number of feral cats who patrol the small agricultural valley where we live.)
To build a jungle in one’s house calls for patience. Tropical forests, no matter how small, do not come about overnight. We began in the 1970s with a home-built flight cage into which we introduced a few pairs of tropical finches and a bunch of ferns. Monkeys, after all, are a bit hard to come by and harder yet to manage. We soon noticed that the finches liked to tear pieces of fern off and leave them lying around, so we experimented with other plants. I also noticed that the finches, regardless of what species they were, reproduced with startling, almost unseemly rapidity, creating new pairs of new and different species and colors. While I pondered this biological anomaly, Susanne (who I suspected had something to do with the anomaly) began to plan the conversion of a side porch into a full-fledged ecosystem, with small trees, gardenia plants, a waterfall with a pond housing the turtles that already inhabited an aquarium in the kitchen, and plenty more finches of varying colors and behaviors. In all, we would eventually wind up with some twenty-eight finches and waxbills, button quail, turtles (of course), and a lot of uninvited mice. Eventually cardinals, beset by winter snows, looked in enviously at these equally colorful denizens in their hot humid world.
But in our jungle’s infant stage, we began to notice that the flight cage was not only adding pairs of other species but losing the occasional singleton. We had strung the front of the cage with piano wire, just as they did in exhibits at the National Zoo, the idea being that the piano wire was almost invisible because it was highly unreflective. We failed to notice (at first) that the piano wire did not remain taut, though it looked taut.
We soon discovered that the missing finches were being caught at night by a member of our household known familiarly as Figgy, or more formally as Fig Newton. Figgy was, of course, a cat. To be particular, a Chinchilla Persian, mostly gray and utterly friendly to the human members of the household, which included at least six teenagers at any given time.
Figgy, a gift to us, was smart enough to reach a paw through the vertical strands of piano wire and fetch unwary finches. On the other hand, Figgy seemed to lack a certain understanding of personal safety. He spent a lot of each day sleeping in the street outside our house, which was located in Washington, D.C. He was run over and lost a rear leg, but persisted in lying in the street and got hit again, this time without loss of limb. He was not much interested in mice. We realized that however hampered he may have been by being a tripod, and not a very smart tripod, he was a clever and highly successful predator of expensive tropical finches. And so, sadly, reluctantly, but necessarily, we handed Figgy off to a friend—a very proper fellow with daughters who wouldn’t ever have dreamed of keeping birds in his house.
That was long ago. Even earlier, we had hosted an orange Persian named Rudolph whom the reader will meet later and who was stolen by a man of God. By the time the topic of this book came up, Susanne and I had already produced one book about the natural history of dogs, which had accumulated to a full half-dozen in our house while the great avian empire had dwindled to naught as empires often do. Wistfully we went to the local humane society and looked at the (mostly) tabbies seeking a home. The lady there, upon hearing about our dogs, discouraged us from taking a cat home, the assumption being that if it were to run away, it would be—simply—curtains. So this book draws upon old memories and some stories supplied by friends that, I hope, illustrate in a pleasing way some of the amazing things about cats that science—in the form of natural historians (and, yes, a few molecular types)—has discovered about these remarkable animals, the last animals on earth to be domesticated…if indeed they have been.
This book, then, is about how some strange little weasel-like animals living forty million years ago came to be felines, how one of them recently came to live with us humans, how we have viewed these companions through the millennia, and what we know about how their minds work. Or to put it another way, what they appear to think about us.
PART ONE
TRANSFORMATIONS
We include signposts along the route to becoming feline, detour briefly into the world of the saber-tooths, meet the one species of wild cat who came to be domesticated, find where and when it probably took place, and examine some of the ways the idea of the cat has been applied to the dreams, bugaboos, and goals of humankind, even today.
MARY’S CRICKET IS PERIPHERALLY OBSERVING THE PHOTOGRAPHER.
Chapter 1
Just-So Tales of Cat Beginnings
But I tell you, a cat needs a name that’s particular, A name that’s peculiar, and more dignified, Else how can he keep up his tail perpendicular. Or spread out his whiskers, or cherish his pride?
–T. S. ELIOT
I am not in any position to argue with t. s. eliot, so we must begin this long contemplation of the cat by looking at names, specifically scientific names. For some people, the names that scientists assign to animals and plants are a pain in the neck to remember, being made up of two words (at least) and expressed in a kind of Greco-Latin mongrel language that is hard to pronounce or remember and that begs translation. this is done for purposes of