Chairman Meow

A ragdoll cat in a garden
On high alert on a trellis with Chilean Glory Vine (Eccremocarpus scaber)
A ragdoll cat in a garden
All that alertness makes a cat tired.

This week’s Sunday Stills challenge theme is ‘Love Your Pet.’ See more responses here. We don’t have pets currently, so here are some archive photos of Chairman Meow, our cat from our old home in Washington State.

He was a Ragdoll, a breed noted for its mellow temperament. Happily, he was not a hunter, though he would stare intently at birds, except for hummingbirds, which left him with a bewildered expression! He also shed boatloads of fine, soft hair. A thorough combing would produce a wad of hair, but when he walked away, more would fly off him.

In the mornings, he’d climb up on the bed and sit on us until he was let out. One house had a screen door and it was common to hear a thud against it in the morning, a sign he wanted to come in again. When I opened the door, looking down for him, he was nowhere to be seen. But when I looked up there he was, hanging halfway up, his claws gripping the screen. The old lady who lived across the street said it gave her a great deal of amusement to witness this daily ritual!

A ragdoll cat in a garden
Time for a rest with two paws out.

We were going to bring him with us to Hawaii, but he used to end up frothing at the mouth on the two mile car ride to the vet! So he stayed behind in a good situation until he passed away a few years back.

4 thoughts on “Chairman Meow

  1. Terri Webster Schrandt's avatarTerri Webster Schrandt

    My third attempt to leave a comment (now on my PC)…. Jetpack is acting up…

    Chairman Meow was a beautiful, charismatic cat, Graham. I’m glad you have so many pics and memories of him. Cats are easily adaptable. I’ve had three in my life, but wouldn’t have one now in our rural area filled with wild predators.

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