Well, ok, maybe it is a bit of a mental deficiency.
About a week ago I am going into my shop in the morning and there is this tangled pile of swarf just outside the door. The door is open to the house at night. Scratching my head, I remember seeing my cat sniffing around the pile of swarf that I keep swept up. I don't think too much of it and just clean it up. (Metal chips in the house are frowned upon.)
A few days later, I am making my coffee in the kitchen and I notice a little glass bowl on the kitchen counter, and I am thinking, Oh, my wife left a little bowl of chocolate chips that she had been eating in bed, out for me for a breakfast snack. I only had the counter lights on at the time so it was still kinda dark in the kitchen. I reach in to get a handful of choc chips and realize that no, it is the cats food bowl full of kibble. But why up on the counter?
I turn the overhead light on and take a look and think, uh-oh, I am in big trouble. There in the bottom of the bowl, in a puddle of kitty barf, is a spiral of lathe swarf.
I find the kitty and she seems like her usual neurotic self, wanting to be petted and brushed. I take care of that and call the vet to bring her in for an x-ray. I had to leave her there for observation.
In the end, all came out fine.
(These aren't the actual spirals, the vet staff wanted the actual ones as souvenirs.)
Everyone at the vet clinic said they had fun looking at the periodic x-rays and seeing how things were moving along. I don't know if they had a betting pool going or not. But one of the techs did get the grand prize of being able to dig one of the metal spirals out of a fresh kitty poop. A good time was had by one and all.
Afterwards, because our cat is an indoor cat, I dug up a big clump of grass and put it in a container next to her food bowl. Now we can inspect the cat barf right on the bed spread to look for grass, hair balls, and lathe swarf.
Cats can be a pain in the butt, but the entertainment value is priceless, and endless.
Lloyd
About a week ago I am going into my shop in the morning and there is this tangled pile of swarf just outside the door. The door is open to the house at night. Scratching my head, I remember seeing my cat sniffing around the pile of swarf that I keep swept up. I don't think too much of it and just clean it up. (Metal chips in the house are frowned upon.)
A few days later, I am making my coffee in the kitchen and I notice a little glass bowl on the kitchen counter, and I am thinking, Oh, my wife left a little bowl of chocolate chips that she had been eating in bed, out for me for a breakfast snack. I only had the counter lights on at the time so it was still kinda dark in the kitchen. I reach in to get a handful of choc chips and realize that no, it is the cats food bowl full of kibble. But why up on the counter?
I turn the overhead light on and take a look and think, uh-oh, I am in big trouble. There in the bottom of the bowl, in a puddle of kitty barf, is a spiral of lathe swarf.
I find the kitty and she seems like her usual neurotic self, wanting to be petted and brushed. I take care of that and call the vet to bring her in for an x-ray. I had to leave her there for observation.
In the end, all came out fine.
(These aren't the actual spirals, the vet staff wanted the actual ones as souvenirs.)
Everyone at the vet clinic said they had fun looking at the periodic x-rays and seeing how things were moving along. I don't know if they had a betting pool going or not. But one of the techs did get the grand prize of being able to dig one of the metal spirals out of a fresh kitty poop. A good time was had by one and all.
Afterwards, because our cat is an indoor cat, I dug up a big clump of grass and put it in a container next to her food bowl. Now we can inspect the cat barf right on the bed spread to look for grass, hair balls, and lathe swarf.
Cats can be a pain in the butt, but the entertainment value is priceless, and endless.
Lloyd