We once had a cat that did not kill birds. She killed snakes. And then brought their ugly corpses to us as tribute. We praised her for her skilled hunting. I would not have thought there were that many snakes around our place, but the sly buggers were all hiding. Our Miss Meena took care of the problem beautifully, and the birds sang freely.
BTW, I just noticed (I am notoriously slow at these things) Scratch wears trousers a la Raymond. Is he going to be a fixture on the ship, another escapee from the Green ship?
Not so many, apparently. Cats were never fully domesticated the way (most) dogs are. A significant percentage of “house cats” go hunting when they get out. Just for fun. Because they’re cats.
This so-called study has been debunked. Think about it—-BILLIONS of songbirds? True, cats are predators, but they typically take old and sick prey, allowing the strong to survive on the available food supply. They catch many more rodents than birds—-and the birds they do catch [sparrows, starlings, pigeons, etc] no one seems to care about anyway. BTW—-enjoy your turkey/chicken dinner at TG.
There used to be a Tufted Titmouse who would spend time in my yard. He used to drive me crazy because he would wake me up with his song promptly at 6:30 every morning—even on weekends—without fail. Then, one day, he stopped and I never heard him again. I’m not saying my Russian Blue mix cat was responsible for this, but she is very predatory with the local wildlife.
amethyst52 Premium Member about 6 years ago
Can all those deaths be blamed on cats? How about dogs, snakes, eagles, hawks, falcons, windows, cars?
TazzTec about 6 years ago
And humans deliberately kill 60 billion animals every year. Yum.
danketaz Premium Member about 6 years ago
Save us Scratch, save us!
Ratbrat about 6 years ago
We once had a cat that did not kill birds. She killed snakes. And then brought their ugly corpses to us as tribute. We praised her for her skilled hunting. I would not have thought there were that many snakes around our place, but the sly buggers were all hiding. Our Miss Meena took care of the problem beautifully, and the birds sang freely.
BTW, I just noticed (I am notoriously slow at these things) Scratch wears trousers a la Raymond. Is he going to be a fixture on the ship, another escapee from the Green ship?
jpayne4040 about 6 years ago
Bad kitty! Leave those songbirds alone!
Kalkkuna about 6 years ago
That’s about 47 billion rodents per year as well.
jeffiekins about 6 years ago
Not so many, apparently. Cats were never fully domesticated the way (most) dogs are. A significant percentage of “house cats” go hunting when they get out. Just for fun. Because they’re cats.
Stocky One about 6 years ago
And that number could so easily be reduced, if Scratch would just wear a bell…
I'll fly away about 6 years ago
Too bad they don’t go after European Starlings and Brown-headed Cowbirds- there’s plenty of them around.
capkidd about 6 years ago
We have 7 bird/squirrel feeders. Only good cat we know is the one who bit off the chipmunks’ heads, left his trophies at our neighbor’s back door.
Indianapolis Smith about 6 years ago
They eat the swallows. Thus the lack of coconut shells. This wasn’t true in the days of King Arthur!
Ed The Red Premium Member about 6 years ago
It’s the circle of life.
dadlivonia about 6 years ago
I have a marvelous use for a brick and a burlap bag
Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member about 6 years ago
Indoor cats are not part of the problem.
Dry and Dusty Premium Member about 6 years ago
Good morning Crew!
zippykatz about 6 years ago
This so-called study has been debunked. Think about it—-BILLIONS of songbirds? True, cats are predators, but they typically take old and sick prey, allowing the strong to survive on the available food supply. They catch many more rodents than birds—-and the birds they do catch [sparrows, starlings, pigeons, etc] no one seems to care about anyway. BTW—-enjoy your turkey/chicken dinner at TG.
pchemcat about 6 years ago
Cat=predator, birds=prey. Now this changes if the bird is a hawk, owl, or eagle then cat=prey and bird=predator. It is called nature.
BeniHanna6 Premium Member about 6 years ago
More propaganda bullshit.
Chris Sherlock about 6 years ago
There used to be a Tufted Titmouse who would spend time in my yard. He used to drive me crazy because he would wake me up with his song promptly at 6:30 every morning—even on weekends—without fail. Then, one day, he stopped and I never heard him again. I’m not saying my Russian Blue mix cat was responsible for this, but she is very predatory with the local wildlife.
abagwell Premium Member about 6 years ago
Stop dissing cats. I love my cat just as much as my dog.
rgcviper about 6 years ago
Wow … that’s a lot of songbirds. I can see why Scratch would take pride in this number, even if I don’t have the same perspective he does.
Good Evening, Crew.