Thanks, THIEF

30 September, 2008 at 9:42 am (Yatterbabble) (, , , , , , , , )

WARNING: THE DESCRIBED ITEM WAS STOLEN FROM ITS OFF-SITE DISPLAY. IT DISAPPEARED ON 27  SEPTEMBER 2008.

*******IF SEEN REPORT TO HARE’S, LTD. ********

Be prepared to provide its location and a description of anyone involved.

EBONY SNUFF/IVORY CHECKERED TOP EDGED WITH TORTOISESHELL $250.00

3.5″ length. Ebony Snuffbox. Ivory Checkered top with tortoiseshell stringing. Some warping of top evident, although a remarkably handsome snuff. Good rich color to the ivory, nice patina to the tortoiseshell checks and stringing. Barrel- and-pin hinge. The ebony body shows both good glow and raising of grain, as if a former owner had tried a good clean, to the detriment of the patina. Image is a top view of the box, and will appear a bit larger than actual size.

Ebony, Ivory and Tortoiseshell Snuff - top

*************************************************************************
Nice. As if I didn’t have enough to worry about, now people are stealing from me. I’ll bet the thief has no clue that this item belongs to my company, not the company from which it was stolen. I’ll also bet that the thief doesn’t care. Like so many local people, the thief assumes that people who own businesses are obscenely wealthy without having to work at it. Like so many local people, the thief has no clue just what this object is, or its history, or its value.

I’m wringing every drop of energy from my sorry old carcass just trying to stay afloat. I have expenses and work almost round the clock in effort to make ends meet. I have managed to force the company to support itself without taking on loans nor borrowing from personal funds. I do not keep a brick-and-mortar store, so can avoid the extremely high taxes, and other overhead costs associated with them. I don’t keep a brick-and-mortar because the chance of theft is too high-and nothing in the world will prevent it or make law enforcement pursue clues to a “little” theft like this.

The Husband opened up a brick-and-mortar shop. He was let to keep several of my company’s objects on display there, to lend a little credibility to his inventory. And that’s where the snuff box was the last time we saw it. The thief left the price tag.

The Husband plans to pay for the object, which is excellent. But why should he pay for the stolen object? We don’t dare report a theft. Firstly, local law enforcement can’t be bothered to look for a thief, so even calling them is a fat waste of time. Secondly, when a loss is reported, the insurance company pays the claim then immediately shucks the client off.

So. I’m guessing that the thief has assumed that money is effortlessly obtained by business owners and that a “little” thing like a one-of-a-kind, early 19th c. antique snuff box is no big deal.

Screw you, thief. Screw you.

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Lollypop Cat of the Week…PeeWee

25 September, 2008 at 4:04 pm (Cats)

PEEWEE

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Pee Wee is a 2-year-old female cat who is a Turkish Van mix. Her owner brought her to Lollypop Farm because she was moving and wasn’t able to bring Pee Wee. This petite kitty is special — she has a pretty white-and-gray coat and different colored eyes — one green and one blue! She has been spayed and is all ready to go to a new home. She hopes that you come and pay her a visit very soon!

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Lollypop Farm Cat of the Week, Jr. Kitty!!!

18 September, 2008 at 6:22 pm (Cats)

JR. KITTY

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Jr. Kitty is a 2-year-old female cat with beautiful green eyes. She was brought to Lollypop Farm because her family was moving and could not bring her with them. Jr. Kitty’s family included children and other cats and she got along well with them. This pretty kitty has been waiting for a new home for a while and she hopes she finds a new family soon!

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Lollypop Cat of the Week: Oh, Sweet Pea!

17 September, 2008 at 11:09 am (Cats)

SWEET PEA

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Sweet Pea is a 3-year-old female cat with a striking black-and-white coat.
She was found as a stray in Canandaigua and brought to Lollypop Farm. This
sweet girl is a staff favorite and likes being held and petted. Because
Sweet Pea was a stray before coming to the shelter, we don’t know too much
about her past, but she’s living in one of the catteries right now and
getting along well with the other cats there. But she can’t wait to meet
someone like you!

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One Year Ago Today

10 September, 2008 at 4:54 pm (Cats, Yatterbabble) (, , , )

Risky in Green

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One year ago.

In a period of time comprising about 36 hours.

9 September – from early Sunday morning.

It was grey and rainy-the rain came down hard. By this time I was sat in the very cold waiting room of the local emergency care pet hospital with Risky, the love of my life, who had managed to break into a cabinet and swipe a blister pack of decongestant tablets. She’d broken the pack and had ingested some of those tablets.

I remember my terror and trying to deal with the ASPCA, who a pet owner is REQUIRED to call in order to even get treatment for a pet who’s consumed a potential toxin. I remember having to give my credit card number so that ASPCA could charge a hefty sum BEFORE I was able to report the trouble or even receive permission to seek treatment.

It took a chunk of time-thankfully I was already driving to the hospital when calling, although I had not yet been permitted to do so. The call responder was unable to understand the situation. First she claimed that it was impossible for a cat to eat tablets. Um. How does that help? She had indeed eaten tablets, I saw where she’d vomited bits of one onto the carpet, I had watched her vomit those bits. Then she asked Risky’s weight-later claiming that I’d told her that that figure was the number of tablets I thought she’d eaten. Um, no. I had clearly stated the number of tablets I thought she had consumed. That figure was not at all similar to the number of pounds she weighed. Yes, pounds. I had to do some mental calculation to derive her pound weight, which turned out spot on when she was weighed at the hospital.

All the while a surly rainy morning. We got soaked after parking the van and walking into the hospital. My feet were sopping, as the rain came so hard that it couldn’t drain quickly enough from the pavement.

Risky was taken into triage then we sat in the shivery cold waiting room. Mind, this is early September. The weather could be hot or chill. That morning was a chill grey wet morning. The a/c was on full blast. We shivered as we waited. I pulled her out of the carrier and wrapped her like an infant in the big bath towel that had cushioned her ride. She soon stopped shivering and just snuggled in as tightly as possible. Frightened, sick, and quiet.

A very young doctor came in to assess and decide a treatment plan. She’d only just got her license to practice the previous June. She seemed quite keen on doing the best for my Risky. I had to leave Risky there, wasn’t let into the treatment area to comfort her. They even stole the towel I’d wrapped her in.

After a while I was approached with a credit application that needed approval before any treatment would be undertaken. At least the young doctor had taken the few minutes to explain what she thought best in Risky’s treatment. It seemed a good plan. I was still not let to visit my girl. After credit was approved Young Doctor suggested I leave with promises to ring me come any news at all-good or bad. I asked if they’d at least keep her snugged as much as possible in her towel with its nice home smell. She hated to be away from home and hated it more if I went out of view.

Young Doctor shrugged off my references to Risky’s psychological comfort but thought there might be a chance Risky would be able to come home later in the day.

So I left, stopping on the way to town to pick up some scones then to The Husband’s shop to fill him in on the situation. I wandered through the day in a sort of haze. I rang the hospital a few times to check on my precious girl. In the evening the Young doctor spoke with me, telling me that Risky was doing rather well, and although they’d like to keep her overnight, that I could pick her up. I was jubilant to see her. She was quiet and scared silly. One leg had been shaved for IV and had been bandaged. She was more comfortable in my arms but traumatized from the experience. Once home, she was happy to sit quietly with me. I made her a special nest of sorts in bed and we slept side by side part of the night. Then she got up to poke about, to use the litter pan, drink a bit of water, and to settle in on the floor at the foot of the bed. Of course I arose to make a nest there too, just so she’d have a soft spot to rest. I slept little, getting up often to check on her.

10 September – until late Monday night.

My Better SideI spent the day making sure my girl was comfortable. Her outpatient instructions warned that she’d be a bit sluggish but ought to perk up and start eating as the day passed. By luncheon she had shown no interest in food and was barely drinking. I rang her regular doctor who prescribed a tablet to boost her appetite. I gave her a dose and started providing tiny sips of water and the juice from extremely thinned turkey baby food. Drop by drop I put in her mouth, hoping it was enough to prevent dehydration. Hoping it was enough sustenance to help her start healing.

Risky flagged as the day passed. The Husband, of course, was fairly late coming home, and Risky was so quiet when he arrived that we could pick her up and she’d just sag in our arms, not one second struggling to get down. Completely outside the norm. I had called the emergency hospital whose receptionist refused to either get a doctor nor have one ring me back. I rang our own vet again. Soon the call was returned by one of our own wonderful doctors. By that time I was so panicked that I wasn’t thinking straight. She had to be seen, the doctor stressed, and he couldn’t see her if I took her to the emergency place again. Why, then, did I choose to take her back to emergency? Because a repeat visit would bear no charge (which later proved false). Sad that it had to come down to what we could afford.

I was so very distressed on the return trip! Risky had vomited in the carrier and I was so freaked out that I just kept apologizing to her the whole ride in, dreading that she’d die if I stopped long enough to get her out of the wet. I prayed aloud, over and over and over, whenever I wasn’t apologising.

She was dead within an hour of her return to the emergency hospital. The doctor-a different doctor this visit – decided that she had ingested Tylenol, which she’d not find in this house. I have an acetaminophen allergy that could be dangerous, so all OTC meds purchases had to pass my watchful eye on the way into the house. If they contained acetaminophen, they were sent back. Simple, and a good way to avoid accidental ingestion. I corrected him, but he didn’t listen. He knew what he was doing, I was merely a member of the non-elite and obviously too stupid to know what my cat had eaten. So he treated her for a different, yet known poisoning, and she died.

Winsome MissAnd my life went flat. I never did realize that everything I did for my cats was done with Risky in mind. Not until after she’d been cruelly ripped from my life. We had a precious sort of bond that only we could share. This bond I’ll never know again, for she came to me far too young to be away from her mum, so I became her mum. All my cats are special, magnificent creatures, each with a personality that holds me fast. But they were all adults when they took residence here. Risky was my last true baby.

So the grief, which still hurts, is still there. It’s not crazed grief. It’s just the never ending ache. I see things that make me think of her every day. Most times I’ll smile, though deep inside I resent her having been taken so young. And I start apologizing again. I resent myself for everything I did wrong in her too-short life, especially regretting my decisions in what became her final hours.

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Today, I engaged in a new sort of catharsis. I want to make this sorrow a completely liveable thing. I want to ease off on punishing myself for things I can’t go back to do over properly. I want the good memories to far outweigh the bad. I still want to grieve, for my sorrow honors the wonderful cat who was Risky. But it’s time to let go of the deep ripping pain. It’s time to let go of blaming myself. It’s time to memorialise the Risky cat as she deserves-with smiles.

So I buried MamaCat. If you remember back in April 2007 I wrote of a feral cat who was killed then tossed to the roadside next an empty beer can on my property. I had gone round the neighbourhood in search of someone who might recognize her. No one, nor did anyone claim her when I took her to the Humane Society. She was cremated about a week later. Her remains were put into a pretty tin. I had dug a grave for her whole uncremated body under the blue spruce tree where the feeding station has sat for two years. But never interred her remains. Until today. Neatly packed up the tin, put it and a note explaining the cat in a watertight jar then buried it in that spot where she’d so very cautiously bring her babies to feed in the cold winter nights. Mamacat is finally in her resting place and yes, it does help my sorrow fall into its own place in my soul. Poor little Mamacat was pretty much unwanted, unloved, and doing the best she could for her babies. Her babies stayed and continued eating here. One died on the highway in November. The other had befriended a black cat and they each bore one kitten. One of those kittens, still tiny, gave birth a month ago, I haven’t seen her babies and don’t know if any survived. Mamacat’s daughter is now known as Daphne and has three new kittens accompanying her to the supper dish at dusk. Sometimes they eat breakfast here too. Daphne’s older daughter is Phoebe, and a prettier grey tabby would be hard to find.
Daphne and Phoebe
I don’t know, but isn’t it possible that these ferals shared a little of the blood that Risky carried? It would surely be some generations removed, but what a lovely thought, helping to care for them.

Daphne’s friend is Marta, whose son is Sammy. Sammy is a really friendly little fellow who we hope to get neutered very soon. Our local TNR programs suffer a terrible backlog and are now closed to further inquiries. It’s hard to scrape together the money to care for the domestic cats and now we must find a veterinarian outside of the programs, which requires full cost surgery plus the costs of vaccinations and tests. And not all veterinarians perform the surgeries on ferals. So I have one more contact to try then will actively seek donations to help offset my costs. I have already started listing some objects on craigslist. If they sell I can put some of the cash to household bills and any left over will be put toward sterilizing my little colony. Right now we’ll focus on the (currently) only intact male so all the girls don’t keep littering. Then we’ll need to capture the queens and the kittens. It will be done, somehow.

St. Francis, pray for us. Pray for all the helpless, unwanted, unloved, and broken animals. They all have their place in this life. Pray for their caretakers, whose hearts soar with the good and fracture with the bad, who dare to love the creatures fully knowing that they’ll be taken, leaving those caretakers with the gentle ache of old grief.

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Sammy

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Sunday is Today

7 September, 2008 at 7:02 pm (Yatterbabble) (, , , )

Sunday is today. Sunday and the ONE day that I try to not work at all (outside of critter care, lawn and garden work, and a fine Sunday dinner, all requiring effort but a different effort than sitting at a desk editing images, writing, researching, ringing, bartering, keeping up with the government’s rules and regulations, etc.).

And naught to view on the tele but football. Sorry, folks, but I absolutely HATE football. Senseless wimpy nonsense, that. The game would be started, played and finished in 30 minutes, natch, if it weren’t for all the breaks the team and coaches take.

“ooh I broke a nail, we have to STOP THE GAME so the coaches can discuss it and those DORKS with the posts can measure how many INCHES I ran before I broke my nail.”

“OMG, I have a wedgie, we have to STOP THE GAME so I can pluck my knickers outta my butt.”

Pantywaists.

I want to instal land mines in the field. Well, maybe not dangerously explosive ones, but loud ones. The occasional geyser stuck in randomly ought to bring a bit of cheer to an otherwise grey game. I can’t knit nor spin when football airs. I just get too annoyed. The funny part of this whine is that The Husband has season tickets for the Buffalo Bills and I plan to attend a game. ONE game. Since I’m considered anti-American due to my distaste, maybe having ONE game under my belt will prevent a lynching. I hope they have sky junk like at Daytona. If there’s sky junk I’m all set. Otherwise I have to sit in the cold and watch the fans get drunk. Nothing like being surrounded by a giant beery belching herd of sports fans.

Ask me sometime what I’d do to liven up baseball, which is a game I rather enjoy as is. Went to a home team game last week which was tremendous fun. In the box, catered with pretty decent non-stadium food (therefore no ptomaine) and all the wine and beer a proper lush could want. ‘Course the home team lost, which they have done every single time I’ve gone to the game.

I have nothing against sports fans, really. Except that they, to a man, refuse to accept my stalwart non-fan position.

I don’t feel one whit compelled to cheer for a specific team. Nope. Whoever is ahead gets MY cheers. Doesn’t matter if it’s home team or THE ENEMY. I like to cheer and will do so at my whim.

Sports my way. Huh. Aincha glad I’m not all over politics?

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Lollypop Farm Cat of the Week, 4 September

4 September, 2008 at 4:33 pm (Cats)

GYPSY

Breed: Domestic Medium Hair/Mix
Color: Grey
Color Pattern: Tiger
Age: 1 year / 3 months
Sex: Female
ID: 5245757

Gypsy
is a 1-year-old female cat who was abandoned by her previous owner and is now waiting at Lollypop Farm for a new home. She’s been spayed since arriving at the shelter, so now she’s all ready to go home with someone like you. This little lady has a sweet and loving personality and is looking forward to curling up on the couch with you!

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