Xmas Holidays activities no 3: lunch at ‘The Cat’s Back’

Apparently, a rather nice pub! I like the name for sure 🙂 apparently the owners named the pub after the miraculous return of their cat, who had wandered off , and then returned after a few weeks.

I have never been there but I actually will, to sample food and drinks and will let you know! 🙂 the reviews are indeed encouraging!

http://www.yelp.co.uk/biz/the-cats-back-london

http://www.londononline.co.uk/restaurant/1759/

http://www.spoonfed.co.uk/london/venue/wandsworth-89/the-cats-back-5523/

Xmas Holidays activities no 2: ‘Cats’, the musical

http://www.catsthemusical.com/

Still going strong!

Xmas Holidays activities no 1: British Museum, see the mummy of an Egyptian cat!

From the British Musem website!

From Abydos, Upper Egypt
Roman Period, perhaps 1st century AD

Animals associated with deities were regularly mummified in the later periods of Egyptian history. The main concentration of cat burials was at sites with an association with a feline deity. The cat is associated with the goddess Bastet, whose cult centre was at Bubastis in the Delta, but there were other feline deities elsewhere in Egypt.

This cat was very elaborately wrapped, following a style which is common in the Greek and Roman periods in ancient Egypt. A lot of effort was frequently spent on the wrapping and external appearance, while the remains inside are often incomplete. It seems likely that many cats did not die a natural death; examination at The British Museum has shown many to have been aged less than one year old. Presumably a cull was made periodically in the temple catteries to provide subjects for mummification and sale to the pious.

The purchase and burial of an animal mummy in a specially designedcatacombwas seen as a pious act towards the deity represented by the animal.

Unfortunately, many cat cemeteries were plundered before archaeologists could work in them: A shipment of as many as 180,000 mummified cats was brought to Britain at the end of the nineteenth century to be processed into fertiliser.

J. Malek, The cat in ancient Egypt (London, The British Museum Press, 1993)

C.A.R. Andrews, Egyptian mummies (London, The British Museum Press, 1984)

Christmas kitties

A pet is forever

It’s a sad reality of the holiday season, that many pets will be ‘discarded’ during the holidays; this is all the more heartbreaking, as temperatures are rather severe. Many animals will die of hypothermia or starvation.  Animal charities and shelters register  record numbers of arrivals during festivities or Summer. This has been aggravated by the current financial climate of uncertainty or duress for certain families.

All the above is incredibly sad; especially due to the fact that, in my opinion, there is something skewed with the motivations that lead someone to acquire a pet in first place. The pet is not viewed as a living being who has feelings and is emotionally able of attachment, but merely as a little more than a teddy-bear, or a ‘commodity’ to enjoy. This is the only explanation for ‘discarding’ the pet once it becomes inconvenient, the same way one would get rid of the old TV or the Christmas tree, once Christmas is over.

A pet is forever! A pet is a living being; cats and dogs especially have distinct personalities, emotions that are as evolved as the ones of a child, and strong feelings of attachments and loyalty towards their mum/dad and human family. We are, to our pets, like parents!

When I lost my cat for  a week, I could not believe how empty the house seemed, without her quiet presence (and constant requests for food: but that’s another story!).  I felt incredibly sad. People must have a heart of stone, to abandon a pet that way! I personally blame the ‘consumerist’ mentality created by the media. Pets are not goods! They are small people 🙂

 

Cats for you!