Save lions World Lion Day

All cat and animal lovers: Save lions World Lion Day is Monday August 10. World Lion Day is a day to promote preservation of our lions around the world. Click  Who To Support , it’s a page on the World Lion Day website. There are many organizations to support, including:
National Geographic’s lion conservation organization The Big Cat Initiatives. But do go to worldlionday.com to get more information.

Lion, Singapore zoo

Singapore Zoo
photo by shari smith dunaif 2014

All of us, hopefully recognizes the need to preserve the priceless wildlife around the world. Lions, and all wild cats, are particularly special to My Kitty Care. We love and respect these magnificent creatures.

Walter James Walker kills lion

A Minneapolis dentist, Walter James Walker kills lion and created an international outrage when it was discovered that he killed Cecil the lion, a tourist favorite at Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe.

Cecil the lion and dentist Walter James Walker

Cecil before being slaughtered by Walter James Walker

Johnny Rodrigues of the Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force told The Washington Post in a phone interview, “He was beautiful — one of the most beautiful animals you’d ever see. Nine times out of 10, doing the safari drive, you’d come across him walking with his family. He was one of the animals it was guaranteed you were going to see. Thousands have seen him.”
The Minnesota-based dentist said he had the correct permits to hunt and kill the animal earlier this month. But the two people he hired to lure the lion to its death have been charged with breaching hunting quotas and appeared in court Wednesday. The Associated Press reported they had been paid at least $50,000 by Palmer.
The conservation group alleges that Palmer and the guides lured Cecil from the national park to an unprotected area by strapping a “dead animal to their vehicle” during a night time hunt.
Once the lion was off national park land, Palmer allegedly shot Cecil with a bow and arrow, but did not kill him. The group then tracked the wounded animal for 40 hours, finally shooting and killing him, Rodrigues said. Cecil was skinned and beheaded.
Palmer and the guides discovered that Cecil had been fitted with a GPS collar and tried to destroy it, Rodrigues said. The tracking device was part of an Oxford University study of the impact of hunting in the area around Hwange National Park.
Mr. Rodrigues also stated that
“The saddest part of all is that now that Cecil is dead, the next lion in the hierarchy…will most likely kill all six of Cecil’s cubs in order to encourage the lionesses to mate with him.”

dentist Walker lion killer

Walker (on left) on a previous lion killing

A stateside official expressed anger, too. U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum, a Minnesota Democrat, in a statement late Tuesday called for an investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to see whether any U.S. laws were violated.
Palmer clams he’s sorry, and didn’t know it was illegal. Oh yeah? Well read this –
NBC news reports: Palmer has a felony record over the hunting of black bear in Wisconsin, court documents show.
In 2006, Palmer had a permit to hunt bears within a certain area near Phillips, in northern Wisonsin. But on September 1, 2006, he was part of a group who killed a black bear 40 miles outside the permitted zone, based on court documents from April 2008.
Palmer and the group realized what they had done, and agreed amongst themselves “if any authorities were to ask where the bear had been killed, they would say” it was hunted within the correct area, the documents added.
They transported the carcass to a registration station where they certified the animal had been killed legally, the documents said, adding that the body was later taken to Minnesota, where Palmer lives.
Palmer was charged with knowingly making false statements to an agent of the Department of the Interior, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, having “falsely stated that he thought the bear had been killed legally”. The 2008 court documents show Palmer was fined $3,000 and given a year’s probation after pleading guilty over the 2006 illegal killing of the black bear in Wisconsin.

I’d be afraid to have this guy work on my mouth: he’d pull out all my teeth just for the fun if it. Oh, and by the way –
According to the Minnesota Board of Dentistry, Palmer is properly licensed to practice in Minnesota,
However, citing the Minnesota Board of Dentistry, the dentist was also the subject of a sexual harassment complaint settled in 2006. He admitting no wrongdoing and agreed to pay a former receptionist more than $127,000, the Associated Press said.
And just to make sure we know HE is above the law:
He was also convicted in Minnesota court in 2003 for fishing without a licence.

Cecil the lion, Zimbabwe

Magnificent Cecil the lion

Back in Zimbabwe, police spokeswoman Charity Charamba said Palmer will face charges of poaching, the AP reported. Emmanuel Fundira, the president of the Safari Operators Association of Zimbabwe, said that Palmer’s whereabouts are currently unknown.

Internet Cat Video Festival

The Internet Cat Video Festival is scheduled for August 12 this year, at CHS Field in Lowertown St. Paul, Minnesota, presented by the Walker Art Center, St.Paul.

2015 is the fourth year of the festival. Thousands of cat videos were submitted, and after a difficult decision, the following five were selected for the competition: “Pavlov’s Kitty”, “Back Off!”, “Cat Behavior Finally Explained”, “Brain Freeze” and “Hover Cat.” The cat videos were curated by Will Braden, creator of Henri La Chat Noir the first recipient of the Golden Kitty trophy. Voting for the Golden Kitty trophy (People’s Choice Award) for the most-deserving cat video is open until July 31. Click here to view all five finalists.

cat video festival, St. Paul, MN

cat video festival, St. Paul, MN
photo credit Walker Art Center

Vote for your favorite by Tweeting #votegoldenkitty with the name of your favorite video.
In addition to cat videos, CHS Field will also have cat-related activities, including “Meow Moves Yoga” and “In the Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theater,” the Walker said.
Doors to the festival open at 6:30. The screening starts at 8:30.
Also, cat owners can email a photo of your cat(s), it’ll be included in a slideshow as part of the festival.

Initially, the festival was free. But in 2013 when it moved to the Grandstand at the Minnesota State Fair, festival-goers had to buy tickets. The 2015 ticket prices are: $10 for the general public; $8 for Walker members. Kids 6-12, $6 and children under five are free.

The Internet Cat Video Festival started in 2012 as something of a lark, but it became a global sensation as soon as it was announced. The events have each drawn thousands of people out to collectively to enjoy the internet videos that are usually savored individually, in the office or at home, on a small screen.

cat video festival crowd

Crowd at cat video festival
photo credit Walker Ar Center

What a great time to be in St. Paul!

The 2015 festival is touring the following cities:
January 17, Northbridge Piazza, Perth, AUSTRALIA
February 14-15, Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, TN
February 17, Northampton Arts Council, Northampton, MA
February 21-22, Glasgow Life/Glasgow Arts, Glasgow, Scotland
February 24, Michigan Theater, Ann Arbor, MI

March 1, Glasgow Film Theatre, Glasgow, Scotland
March 13, Cornell Cinema, Ithaca, NY
March 28, Nine Lives Greece, Athens, Greece
April 6, Duluth Art Institute, Duluth, MN
April 11, North Dakota Humanities Council, Bismarck, ND
April 18, Columbia Center for the Arts, Hood River, OR
May 16, SPCA Tampa Bay, St. Petersburg, FL
May 20, Japan Society, New York, NY
June 19-21, Hollywood Theatre, Portland, OR
June 26-27, Animal Humane NM, Albuquerque, NM
June 27, Art for Cats’ Sake, New Orleans, LA
July 9-10, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, St. Louis, MO
July 23, The Chief Theater, Steamboat Springs, CO
July 31 and August 1-2, Denver County Fair – Kitten Pavilion, Denver, CO
August 1, Myriad Gardens, Oklahoma City, OK
August 21, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA
August 22, Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, ME
August 25, Utah Film Center, Salt Lake City, UT
August 28-29, Carrie A Seaman Animal Shelter, Provincetown, MA
September 19, Chicago Cat Rescue & Tree House, Chicago, IL
September 25, Museum of Arts and Design, New York, NY
October 3, Organikat, Los Angeles, CA
October 24, Animal Welfare League of Charlotte County, Port Charlotte, FL
November 19-21, Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianapolis, IN
November 28, Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, VT

My Kitty Care is constantly entertained by cats!

Orvillecopter cat helicopter

Is this cat copter art?

What is an Orvillecopter? Dutch artist Bart Jansen describes his creation as “half-cat, half-machine” a cat helicopter.
It’s half creepy, and half funny. But is it art?

Bart Jansen is a normal-looking, 30-something artist. He has kids, and fits solar-panels for a living. But in 2012, when his cat Orville got hit by a car, everything changed.
Jansen decided it would be a shame to simply bury his beloved cat, so he drew inspiration from his pet’s namesake — Orville Wright, one of the Wright Brothers, the inventors of heavier-than-air flight.

Orvillecopter drawing

Orvillecopter drawin

Mr. Jansen said after a period of mourning he had Orville stuffed, and decided to pay tribute to Orville with an art project. He created the Orvillecopter.

Orville, the Orvillecopter
The Orvillecopter is exactly what it looks like: A taxidermied cat with a plastic propeller attached to each paw (no animals were harmed for this project).

Orvillecopter, on display at museum

Orvillecopter, on display at museum

        Arjen Beltman, a drone pilot, got involved.

Orvillecopter with Bart Jensen and Arjen Beltman

Orvillecopter with Bart Jansen and Arjen Beltman

In 2012, the Orvillecopter was at the Kunstrai art festival in Amsterdam, the Dutch capital.

The response was huge. It was covered everywhere from Mail Online to Forbes to the Los Angeles Times. The unconventional drone caused “global outrage” after footage of it went viral. Not sure if this is just too freaky, or just let Orville fly. What do you think?


Is this art?

Baby clouded leopard

Have you ever seen a clouded leopard? They are reclusive and endangered. So The Lowry Park Zoo was thrilled when a baby clouded leopard became their newest addition, this March, 2015.

Baby leopard in hand

photo Lowry Park Zoo

The zoo is in Tampa, Florida but the clouded leopard is native to the forests and rainforests of Southeast Asia, from the Himalayan foothills in Nepal and India to Myanmar, Bhutan, Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia, Indochina, and in China south of the Yangtze River. Some are found in the mixed-evergreen forests of the northeastern and southeastern parts of Bangladesh.

feeding baby leopard

photo Lowry Park Zoo

clouded leopard

photo Feline Conservation Center, Rosamond, CA

The young are blind and helpless, much like the young of many other cats, and weigh from 4.9 – 9.9 oz (140 to 280 g). Young baby clouded leopards can see within about 10 days of birth, are active within five weeks, and are fully weaned at around three months of age. The kittens’ have spots that are “solid” (completely dark) rather than the dark rings adults develop. They attain the adult coat pattern at around six months, and probably become independent after around 10 months. Females are able to bear one litter each year. The mother is believed to hide her kittens in dense vegetation while she goes to hunt, though little concrete evidence supports this theory, since their lifestyle is so secretive.

Clouded leopard  eyes

photo The Feline Conservation Center, Rosamond, CA

baby leopard spots

photo The Lowry Park Zoo

Their irises are usually either greyish-green or brownish-yellow in color. Their legs are short and stout, with broad paws. They have rather short limbs compared to the other big cats, but their hind limbs are longer than their front limbs to allow for increased jumping and leaping capabilities.
In captivity, they have an average lifespan of 11 years. One individual has lived to be almost 17 years.