The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsEver wonder where your outdoor cat wanders?
The cat is within 50 yards, my companion, Vermont wildlife biologist Frosty Hammond, announced as he slowly swung what looked like a rooftop TV antenna in an arc, listening for a chirping sound. We were standing in a snowy driveway in Springfield, Vt. A few weeks earlier, Frosty had been tracking radio-collared black bears; I had been in India studying tigers. But the cat we were tracking together lived in the house at the end of the driveway: a 7-year-old, 14-pound black puffball named Darryl.
Though tigers and bears still keep many secrets, the enigma of the suburban housecat remains more mysterious yet. In the 1950s, one of the worlds top experts on felines, German ethologist Paul Leyhausen, had tried to study the outdoor travels of Felis catus. To follow just one housecat would have required three well-trained, physically fit, and inexhaustible observers, plus a lot more equipment than we could command at the time, he later admitted.
Frosty and I hoped for greater success. We had better equipment: We had obtained, from a company that normally supplied telemetry for studies of wolverines and cougars, a custom radio collar small enough for a housecat. We had a 400,000 candlepower searchlight. And we had Barbara Burns, a Vermont state forester, who had generously provided us with a detailed aerial map of the area we might cover, as well as our study subject. Darryl was one of her two cats, and by her account, spent most of his day asleep. But at night?
(snip)
But now, North Carolina researchers have launched the most ambitious effort yet to reveal the secrets of cats outdoor excursions. Using tiny satellite tracking harnesses, the Cat Tracker Project has enrolled more than 500 cats in a program that will outfit them with Global Positioning System devices and if yours is an indoor-outdoor cat, your pet may be part of the study.
Collaborating researchers at North Carolina State University, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Conn., are hoping to get five days of travel data on 1,000 cats. Theyre loaning equipment to cat owners in Fairfield, Conn., Long Island, N.Y., Westchester County, N.Y., and Raleigh/Durham, N.C. But they are also accepting DIY cat trackers. For instructions on how to participate, visit www.cats.yourwildlife.org.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyle/2015/03/22/petscolumn/OtuIDfLWdrxGCslLOU3xMP/story.html#comments
XemaSab
(60,212 posts)Hi, Loungians!
mnhtnbb
(31,410 posts)I know where they both live. One of them will actually take a walk...following its owner and dog...around
our 'circle'. I see it all over the neighborhood. The other one lives on the street down the hill from us,
and it is up here a lot.
After our fire, we rented a house not far away. One of our cats, Mousie (who liked to roam more than his brother, Simba)
would go over to the burned down house in the morning--I'd see him heading across the canyon--and return around
5 pm--when I'd see him coming back from the direction of the house. Once, he was just ahead of a deer coming our way, too.
Skittles
(153,254 posts)he's 10 and still goes on long excursions