Pois é, quem tem a capacidade de se apaixonar por estes seres unicos, e nunca conviveu de perto com eles, nem imagina o que perde
Eu estou a ficar uma devota incondicional (já deu para notar? ) e inicio este tópico de tributo a esses malucos fofis, o bicho mais cool do universo.
Algumas das características extraordinárias (ilustrações pescadas no site http://www.student.ipfw.edu/~osbodr01/h ... ark00.html onde há muitas mais) dos nossos felinos:
São exímios caçadores
Curiosidade é o seu nome do meio
_____________
Adoram calorzinho
são adeptos da lei do menor esforço
e são muito dorminhocos
_____________
São intuitivos e carividentes
até têm um radar que detecta actividade paranormal
_____________
São muito comunicativos
com apurado sentido de humor
e sabem fazer-se de desentendidos
_____________
São elásticos e flexíveis
e tanto têm ataques de ternura
como de repente se armam em importantes e se transformam nos maiores convencidos
_____________
São muito open mind depressa mudam de opinião e de planos
mas fixam-se no que é realmente importante
e encontram sempre a luz ao fundo do tunel
_____________
Por vezes deixam marcas
e Tanto são capazes de nos enlouquecer
como são os melhores companheiros
Por tudo isto e muito mais, não são "negociáveis"
Completamente rendida (tópico tributo aos felinos em geral)
Moderador: mcerqueira
eheh essas ilustrações são deliciosas
Não sei se já conhecem o documentario do Projeto Nina Rosa "O Gato como ele é"
descrevem-se assim:
parte 1 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRGP7DZhO2M
parte 2 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YlaxIjO_Vdg
parte 3 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IG4uR_RxBM
vale a pena ver, é um bocadinho de sabado bem passado
Não sei se já conhecem o documentario do Projeto Nina Rosa "O Gato como ele é"
descrevem-se assim:
são 3 videos:Se você nunca conviveu com um gato e quer saber o que está perdendo, O Gato Como Ele É pode lhe dizer. Através de depoimentos de veterinários, psicólogos ou simplesmente felizes companheiros desses pequenos felinos, você vai saber um pouco mais sobre sua história, suas características e temperamento. E quem sabe, depois de compreender melhor os gatos, você já poderá ser adotado por um...
parte 1 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRGP7DZhO2M
parte 2 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YlaxIjO_Vdg
parte 3 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IG4uR_RxBM
vale a pena ver, é um bocadinho de sabado bem passado
Última edição por LauraMM em sábado out 10, 2009 3:00 pm, editado 1 vez no total.
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Fantástico!!!
Mariana
eheh estou mesmo muito atacada e como, já dizia Hemingway, "one cat just leads to another"... tenho para mim que, se não me trato, ainda acabo assim
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwM6f0liHpo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwM6f0liHpo
LOL isto acontece-me todos os dias... Às páginas tantas agarro na cadeira e começo a agitá-la quase aos berros
5 estrelas!
5 estrelas!
<p> Até Sempre... A questão não é, eles pensam? Ou, eles falam? A questão é, eles sofrem! </p>
<p>Tourada não é tradição, é crueldade- Assine aqui, divulgue e ajude a acabar com esta violência</p>
<p>Tourada não é tradição, é crueldade- Assine aqui, divulgue e ajude a acabar com esta violência</p>
O Gato Preto
excertos de
The Beautiful Truth About Black Cats
by Dusty Rainbolt
This world has a love-hate relationship the black cat. The gentle little couch panther has a duel identity: to some she’s the portent of doom; to others—their only chance of salvation. […] All over the world, cats are associated with luck, both good and ill. Whether a black cat is good fortune or bad luck depends where she was born. […] In the U.S., humane societies and rescue groups struggle to find homes for friendly black strays because of their unearned reputation for havoc. Their shelters are brimming with abandoned or stray black cats. Is it because they are evil and back luck as so many think? There’s no doubt that people’s fear of the black cat contribute to the numbers who find themselves incarcerated. But there’s something else: Recently genetic researchers have connected the mutation that gives a cat a black coat may also make him more resistant to disease. It’s possible that there are so many black cats because they are the ones that survive. The moral of the story: if you want your kitty to have a long healthy life, consider adopting one of the many black cats at your local shelter. […] Fortunately, the rest of the world has a much more positive opinion of the coal-coated cats than in the U.S.. In Egypt, Great Britain, Australia and Japan, owning or encountering a black cat is thought to be a portent of good fortune. An old English charm promises, “Whenever the cat of the house is black, the lasses of lovers will have no lack.” If a black cat entered a home, she should be welcomed. Chasing the cat away, assures the luck will leave with her. Whether the cat abandons a home or ship of her own accord or someone chases her off, there will be a great disaster there soon. […] King Charles I owned a black cat who he believed to be lucky. He so feared losing his friend that he placed a 24-hour guard around him. The day after the cat died, Oliver Cromwell’s troops arrested the king. In 1649, Charles was beheaded. Although Buddhists respected all types of cats; the home of a dark cat would be blessed with gold, while a light-colored cat attracted silver.
Black Cats and Sailors
Black cats and mariners have always shared a special relationship. From early seafaring days, ancient ships have always had at least one cat, not only rodent control, but also for companionship and good luck. Sailors believed if the ship’s cat approached them, it promised them good fortune. If the cat came toward them, then changed her mind, trouble was a’coming. While any hue of cat provided a vessel with good fortune, a black ship’s cat (with no white hair at all) blessed the ship and everyone aboard it.
Carrying a black cat on board promised to bring Yorkshire fishermen safely home from the seas. Cats as lucky charms extended well beyond the ship. Sailor’s wives always had an ebony feline as a pet to keep their husbands safe. A black-cat-shortage at the height of the fishing industry boom spawned a black cat-black market in the village of Yorkshire. Fishermen’s wives had to keep constant watch on their valued raven cats for fear that racketeers would snatch them and sell them to another fisherman’s wife.
[…] The association of the black cat with good luck is believed to have begun with Bastet. Because the cat saved early Egyptians from famine by controlling the rodent population and asking nothing in return, Pharaoh elevated her from adorable pest control to demigod around 2000 B.C. Bastet, the Egyptian goddess had the body of a woman and the head of a black cat, was the daughter of the sun god Ra and was the goddess of motherhood, fertility, grace, and beauty, and of course, cats. It is said that Egyptian courted her favors by keeping black cats in their homes. They believed that Bastet herself would merge with their pet cat and bless the home with riches and prosperity.
While the Egyptians love of cats is legendary, they weren’t the only ancients who held the creatures in high esteem. The Romans portrayed the goddess, Liberty, with a cat at her feet. According to Finnish folklore, black cats carry the souls of the dead to the afterworld. While the Celts believed black cats were reincarnated beings able to foresee the future. Followers of the Roman goddess Diana deemed the cat divine because Diana once assumed the form of her brother’s black cat. She, too, was considered the protector or cats. So remember next time you decide to adopt a kitty, consider adding a miniature panther to your family. With those lucky, disease-resistant black cats genes, your ebony feline will bestow good fortune on you and your home for many years to come.
excertos de
The Beautiful Truth About Black Cats
by Dusty Rainbolt
This world has a love-hate relationship the black cat. The gentle little couch panther has a duel identity: to some she’s the portent of doom; to others—their only chance of salvation. […] All over the world, cats are associated with luck, both good and ill. Whether a black cat is good fortune or bad luck depends where she was born. […] In the U.S., humane societies and rescue groups struggle to find homes for friendly black strays because of their unearned reputation for havoc. Their shelters are brimming with abandoned or stray black cats. Is it because they are evil and back luck as so many think? There’s no doubt that people’s fear of the black cat contribute to the numbers who find themselves incarcerated. But there’s something else: Recently genetic researchers have connected the mutation that gives a cat a black coat may also make him more resistant to disease. It’s possible that there are so many black cats because they are the ones that survive. The moral of the story: if you want your kitty to have a long healthy life, consider adopting one of the many black cats at your local shelter. […] Fortunately, the rest of the world has a much more positive opinion of the coal-coated cats than in the U.S.. In Egypt, Great Britain, Australia and Japan, owning or encountering a black cat is thought to be a portent of good fortune. An old English charm promises, “Whenever the cat of the house is black, the lasses of lovers will have no lack.” If a black cat entered a home, she should be welcomed. Chasing the cat away, assures the luck will leave with her. Whether the cat abandons a home or ship of her own accord or someone chases her off, there will be a great disaster there soon. […] King Charles I owned a black cat who he believed to be lucky. He so feared losing his friend that he placed a 24-hour guard around him. The day after the cat died, Oliver Cromwell’s troops arrested the king. In 1649, Charles was beheaded. Although Buddhists respected all types of cats; the home of a dark cat would be blessed with gold, while a light-colored cat attracted silver.
Black Cats and Sailors
Black cats and mariners have always shared a special relationship. From early seafaring days, ancient ships have always had at least one cat, not only rodent control, but also for companionship and good luck. Sailors believed if the ship’s cat approached them, it promised them good fortune. If the cat came toward them, then changed her mind, trouble was a’coming. While any hue of cat provided a vessel with good fortune, a black ship’s cat (with no white hair at all) blessed the ship and everyone aboard it.
Carrying a black cat on board promised to bring Yorkshire fishermen safely home from the seas. Cats as lucky charms extended well beyond the ship. Sailor’s wives always had an ebony feline as a pet to keep their husbands safe. A black-cat-shortage at the height of the fishing industry boom spawned a black cat-black market in the village of Yorkshire. Fishermen’s wives had to keep constant watch on their valued raven cats for fear that racketeers would snatch them and sell them to another fisherman’s wife.
[…] The association of the black cat with good luck is believed to have begun with Bastet. Because the cat saved early Egyptians from famine by controlling the rodent population and asking nothing in return, Pharaoh elevated her from adorable pest control to demigod around 2000 B.C. Bastet, the Egyptian goddess had the body of a woman and the head of a black cat, was the daughter of the sun god Ra and was the goddess of motherhood, fertility, grace, and beauty, and of course, cats. It is said that Egyptian courted her favors by keeping black cats in their homes. They believed that Bastet herself would merge with their pet cat and bless the home with riches and prosperity.
While the Egyptians love of cats is legendary, they weren’t the only ancients who held the creatures in high esteem. The Romans portrayed the goddess, Liberty, with a cat at her feet. According to Finnish folklore, black cats carry the souls of the dead to the afterworld. While the Celts believed black cats were reincarnated beings able to foresee the future. Followers of the Roman goddess Diana deemed the cat divine because Diana once assumed the form of her brother’s black cat. She, too, was considered the protector or cats. So remember next time you decide to adopt a kitty, consider adding a miniature panther to your family. With those lucky, disease-resistant black cats genes, your ebony feline will bestow good fortune on you and your home for many years to come.
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Adorei, fartei-me de rir Está mesmo giro, ia lendo e pensando... Hey isto realmente acontece-me