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To: bd476
Watch your local news for any word of coyote, racoon or opossum sightings.

We live on the Big island of Hawaii. Wild pigs about the only danger, and no way they catch a cat. Mongoose too small. No rabies here either. Draconian laws about bringing pets in give you headache about that.

Cars and loose dogs, but our cats are not allowed even off the tile or pool deck in back. Hell to pay if they sneak off on the grass when we are not looking.

Hawaii is so cat friendly, there is a large feral cat problem. No predators, so they breed freely. And starve, get sick, etc. A lot of spay and neuter after trapping goes on.

We have two semi-feral boys that hang out on our property and earn their keep by killing rats.

47 posted on 06/07/2015 11:20:15 PM PDT by doorgunner69
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To: doorgunner69

Oh lucky you! One of my lifelong dreams is to visit Hawaii someday. Wonderful hearing that Hawaii has no rabies. It also sounds unlikely that humaniacs will be allowed to import any wildlife from the continental States.

Growing up I remember thinking how cool it would be to live close to wildlife. When I first moved to California, wildlife was found mostly in the mountains and there, if you were lucky enough to see a bear rummaging through a garbage can, you would have already heard the warning yells from other campers down the road a ways and you’d already be safely locked in your car by the time the bear was close.

Now in local off-ramp shrubbery of one of California’s busiest highways we have mountain lions giving birth, all sizes of coyotes loping through the local sports park, opossums challenging folks taking out their garbage, and racoons living in ornamental shrubbery along busy sidewalks and in storm drains.

I grew up loving the great outdoors, went camping with my family and sloshed through snake filled creeks, slept under the open stars with no tent, no cabin available in the middle of nowhere while at Church Camp.

Now I don’t even want to chance becoming some starved mountain lion’s next meal from hiking in any of our woodsier parks. A full grown California mountain lion carrying a 140 pound deer in his mouth can clear a 7 foot fence. They say carry a big stick, and try to look big if you encounter a mountain lion on any of the many hiking paths in local parks. However, according to a local park ranger, you’ll only get to see a mountain lion shortly before the first bite, when the mountain lion is upon you.

There have been a few rare sightings seen by large groups of hiking elementary school kids. The local park rangers said that those sightings were “probably a rabid lion or a fierce Momma lion guarding her nest.”

Oh yes, we also have lovely insect eating, rabies carrying swarms of bats nesting in the roofs of local city buildings.

Late one hot Summer evening I was watering our mini-garden on our balcony when I suddenly heard high-pitched screeching, felt a whoosh of air just as I noticed the huge black mass of bats zooming by.

Back to your lovely cat, I want one just like him, now. He looks like one of the older appleheads, maybe he has a bit of Russian Blue in his line. :D


48 posted on 06/08/2015 12:17:38 AM PDT by bd476
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