Never Alone

Much went on in the backyard today, but trying to record it now would be a waste. After I have sorted pictures, I’ll get to that.

Meanwhile, in other news…

I may have given the impression that I go hunting for wild animals on my own.

I do not.IMG_4194

Over the past six months, BlackCat has been on nearly every excursion. She even ventured to enter the canoe twice but decided she wasn’t ready for that just yet.

She has been companion, bodyguard, and a listening ear.

Impatient with my photography of her, BlackCat turns away whenever she sees the camera. I called her name and she looked around swiftly, then looked away again.
Impatient with my photography of her, BlackCat turns away whenever she sees the camera. I called her name and she looked around swiftly, then looked away again – hence the blur.

She does not approve of everything I do and is not shy about telling me so. But she absolutely endorses my endeavors outdoors, and insists on us going out – even when it rains. Well, when it drizzles. She cannot endure thunderstorms or heavy down pours, and is either indoors or in misery at such times.

When she was younger we called her a cat-dog because she used to go on walks in the evening. Her sister, WhiteCat, who sadly died last year, would go to some boundary from the house, but BlackCat would walk with us as far as we would walk.

This neighborhood is not as conducive to that, so I think she must have been missing those walks – though she is an indoor-outdoor cat here, too.IMG_4191

She is extremely pleasant to be around and is a hugely intelligent animal. She comes to the sliding door and asks me to go for walks whenever she thinks I’ve been inside too long.

She comes to the door and knocks or just looks in, pleadingly. I open it. She does not come in.

I say, “I can’t go out right now. Do you want to come in?” She pleads. BlackCat, like every cat I imagine, has different cries and asking to go on the hunt is a different cry. She’ll then

I hide behind bushes and take photos of her like these to enable me to catch a direct look on her face.
I hide behind bushes and take photos of her like these to enable me to catch a direct look on her face.

turn around and sit on the mat, but only after vocalizing her disappointment with whatever the strength of her feeling.IMG_4177

She’s the first cat I’ve come to know so well, and marvelously, she knows me well too. I didn’t used to understand cat people because cats always seem so inscrutable and independent – unless they want something.

She’s not inscrutable, and though always determined to get her own way, will respond to my voice when sufficiently stern.

She’s also excellent around the wildlife. I have no idea why she doesn’t chase birds – WhiteCat often did.

Photo taken March 27, 2015, the day before she died.
Photo taken March 27, 2015, the day before she died. She was not camera shy at all, so there are excellent images of her floating around, while I try desperately to .

On occasion, she half-heartedly sinks into the grass to try to sneak up on a bird, but she never chases them. She does hunt and catch frogs and lizards in the spring and summer. I truly dislike this. She brings them to the door as gifts, I suppose, and I turn her away in disgust.

This long treatise is simply to acknowledge my partner during this month long challenge. A reflection on the experience comes tomorrow.

  • Aperture: ƒ/8
  • Camera: Canon PowerShot SX510 HS
  • Taken: 1 February, 2016
  • Flash fired: no
  • Focal length: 23.587mm
  • ISO: 80
  • Shutter speed: 1/25s

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