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[–] RebekahWSD@lemmy.world 5 points 4 days ago

Being a kitten. Since she's growing use to not being outdoors, her schedule had shifted from sleep at night to sleep during the day and get the zoomies at night. She will go to sleep at night, but only if we keep her out of the bedroom. Then she'll whine the tiniest bit then go to sleep.

She's also been letting me and my husband pick her up and snuggle her, so that's a delight. Soft baby. Good baby. She also likes watching video and streams of Stardew Valley which I find funny.

[–] Alice@beehaw.org 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

My cat is getting more adventurous on the leash, which is good news for her but bad news for me. She'll only go on walks at night, and she wants to lurk around outside everyone's windows and make me look like a total creep. I'm not trespassing, we never leave the apartment grounds, but it's dark, my clothes are black, and my cat is black, so I'm worried if I hover too close to the building someone's just gonna see a silhouette outside their window and get freaked out.

We also switched to a new antacid and she absolutely hates me for it, but she hasn't thrown up this week :)

[–] stelelor@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

To mitigate the creep factor you could try snap-on hi-viz strips on your clothing, and maybe an LED collar on kitty! At least no one could accuse you of hiding in the dark.

[–] Alice@beehaw.org 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Good idea, thanks! Especially about the collar, I bought hers back before I even considered leash training, so it's not the most visible. It'd be helpful to have something reflective if she ever got away from me

[–] stelelor@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 days ago

That would be an added benefit, yes! I live in a rural area with no sidewalks and no street lights. Whenever I walk my dog at night, both of us are lit up and reflective, just in case. I used to be the only one that went to such extremes but now I see a couple other people following suit. Yay for safety!

[–] southsamurai@sh.itjust.works 4 points 4 days ago

Strangely, very relaxed.

Rooster has been unusually friendly and eager for pets, but not batshit crazy.

Hen has been adorable as always, and responding nicely to irregular schedules due to weather.

The only minor occurrence has been with the volunteer hen.

And it is pretty minor. She's a bit of a pisser. See, because we can't keep her isolated or even in our yard since she's got a band on and can escape the yard easily, we can't let her stay in the chicken run.

You don't introduce a strange bird to your flock without an isolation period, and with her not being ours, and having started as someone's, we can't just crate her on the porch or anything like that. So she's free to go wherever she wants, which means she's a constant exposure threat. Which is bad enough through the wire of the run, but we're not risking more contact than that unless we can get her through a quarantine period where she doesn't leave the yard.

Not a big deal. Except... when one of us is out there, giving treats, checking the water, that kind of thing, she gets super jealous of our hen. She sees the treats in the run and wants them too. She gets treats, none of us are going to be mean enough to run her off, so she gets some too.

But she wants allllllll the treats. Which means she's fluffing up all tough and squawking through the mesh. Our hen is about twice the volunteer's size since the volunteer is a bantam, so she's nonplussed about it. Not that our hen is huge, she's a marans, and they're on the small side. So the marans is happily gobbling things up, trilling and purring and clucking while the rooster tuk-tuks around. The volunteer is stomping and acting badass while being essentially ignored.

It's utterly hilarious to see a bird that could comfortably nestle into my hand (I have big hands, she isn't tiny) with just fluff hanging off trying to act like a cartoon character doing the whole "put 'em up, put em' up" routine.

[–] deegeese@sopuli.xyz 2 points 3 days ago

While my wife and I slept in, my daughter got up early to play video games so the dog laid down next to her and started whining until she gave him breakfast.

When I got up he was curled up with his nose tucked under feet. I draped the blanket over him but he got up to follow me to the kitchen.

I’m going to drink some coffee in the backyard in a few and he’ll follow me out there to bark at squirrels.

Local dog park is closed for winter but I’ll probably take him to the bigger one around lunch time.

[–] neidu3@sh.itjust.works 2 points 3 days ago

I have two cats who are annoyed and waiting impatiently - The fish I'm cooking for them is too hot to serve.

[–] mastersamwise@lemm.ee 2 points 3 days ago

My bunny’s starting to warm up to us a little bit. Keep in mind we’ve had him for three years and he still hates us. But now he’s pissing on the dog’s bed to assert dominance. He’s so rude but so cute.

[–] stelelor@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 days ago

I took the dog out for a walk yesterday morning, and she's still resting from it. To be fair, it was -10C without the wind chill, we were out for 1.5 hours, and she's at least 10 years old. She also sniffed dozens of animal tracks and barked at a snowmobile. A very satisfying walk indeed.