world’s oldest cat

The average life expectancy of an indoor cat is between 9 to 15 years. The world’s oldest cat is currently Tiffany.
Previous Guinness World Records listed the oldest living cat as Pinky, a cat living in Hoyt, Kansas and owned by Linda Anno. Pinky was born on October 31, 1989, but she passed away in 2013 at the age of 24. The title was then handed over to Poppy, from the UK. Poppy, a tortoiseshell, was born in February 1990, the same month Nelson Mandela was released from prison. She lived through five British Prime Ministers and was officially recognized by Guinness but died – just weeks after clinching the title.

Poppy celebrates her 24th birthday.

Poppy celebrates her 24th birthday.

Poppy was officially recognised as the world’s oldest cat at the age of 24, by the Guinness World Record on May 19, 2014.

Worlds oldest cat

Tiffany is 26 years old

 

the current Oldest Cat:

Tiffany Two, a tortoiseshell feline from San Diego, was officially named the oldest living cat by Guinness World Records on Friday, February 6, 2015. She was born March 13, 1988, and will be 27 this year.

Go kitty, go!

 

thanks Bernard Karwick

ASPCA Cat of the Year 2013

20131123-181027.jpgStaff Sgt. Jesse Knott with Koshka in AfghanistanThe story of Cat of the Year Koshka began in southern Afghanistan. In 2010, the friendly stray caught the attention of Staff Sgt. Jesse Knott, who kept noticing troubling details: One day the kitten appeared to have been spray-painted, and another day some of his fur was shaved off and his skin was cut. Knott couldn’t take seeing the abuse, so he smuggled the furry friend onto his military base.
A few months later, Knott said, little Koshka (Russian for “cat”) helped save his own life. At an especially dark moment, after Knott’s close friends had been killed by a suicide bomber and he was thinking about hurting himself, Koshka kept meowing, head-butting him, touching his forehead with his paw and emitting a deep, loud purr.

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The experience deeply affected Knott and convinced him to seek help and also to get Koshka out of Afghanistan when his tour of duty ended. Coordinating Koshka’s travels presented serious challenges, though. To make it happen, an interpreter risked his life transporting the cat to Kabul, and Knott’s parents spent nearly $3,000 on Koshka’s plane ticket to Oregon.

Today, the cat lives happily with Knott’s parents, who help the feline maintain a hilarious Facebook page.

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