Posted on 04/06/2019 11:32:30 AM PDT by Innovative
No need to call the fire department this time. A cat hanging from the edge of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway (BQE) was rescued after quick action from a group of Brooklyn students on Friday.
School secretary, Jane Pieratti told Patch that students from Benjamin Banneker Academy noticed the cat hanging off the expressway near Clinton and Park avenues in the early afternoon and took action, getting the word out and even trying to catch it.
Most of the students who spotted the cat from school windows were in a lesson at the time, so Pieratti said they had to wait to rescue the cat when class got out.
n the meantime, Pieratti said her students told her to get the word out on Twitter, so she started posting photos and tagging them with the Department of Transportation and including the mile marker.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
Made me scared for the cat just reading and seeing the photos.
I’m glad there are caring people in the world still.
It’s good that your Saturn dealer was so decent and that the cat got saved.
http://www.flycatfly.com/parachuting-cats
Cat Parachuting
In 1950’s The World Health Organisation (WHO) financed and supported the first ever team of over 14,000 parachuting cats into Borneo.
It was early in the 1950’s, the Dayak people of Borneo tragically suffered an outbreak of malaria, spread by mosquitoes. The World Health Organisation (WHO), without thinking through all the consequences, liberally sprayed the area with DDT to kill the mosquitoes.
The mosquitoes died, malaria lessened and the people of Borneo were happy.
Then roofs started to collapse and the people of Borneo were sad. It appeared that a parasitic wasp had previously been keeping a thatch-eating caterpillar under control and the DDT killed the wasps, meaning the caterpillars were having a field day.
Tragically various poisoned insects were eaten by geckoes, which were eaten by cats and many cats died. The people of Borneo missed their cats greatly and asked WHO to help repair the damage it had done. WHO talked to some of their feline experts who proposed that 14,000 cats should sky dive into Borneo, in order to help the grieving residents, who longed to have their feline company once more. WHO also thought it might help with the massive outbreak of rats, which were spreading typhus and plague.
WHO initiated Operation Cat Drop and the cats started parachuting. The people of Borneo gained new feline friends, the rat population declined and the poeple of Borneo were happy once more.
As Rachel Wynberg and Christine Jardine, Biotechnology and Biodiversity: Key Policy Issues for South Africa, 2000 said:
“This is a graphic illustration of the interconnectedness of life, and of the fact that the root of problems often stems from their purported solutions.”
We’d like to say a special thank you to each and every brave cat who parachuted into Borneo on that eventful day.
Do you still have your Saturn? I have a 1995 SC2 And a 1999 SW2. Everybody and his brother tries to get me to sell them and buy a new car, but I like them sooooo much that I refuse to part with them. My husband has his pickup, so he doesn’t have to depend on elderly cars. I’m an elderly lady and I demand to keep these cars that perform so well and are so pretty. I know a fellow who traded in his Saturn for another vehicle and he’s been kicking himself ever since.
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