It's a reasonable sacrifice
The cats are six months old today.
For their half-birthday, we gave them warm goat's milk with a little cinnamon and honey. (
movingfinger had seen it sold as a cat treat in pet stores. It's more or less what I drink at night, except I don't add cinnamon.) We knew they liked plain goat's milk, but we weren't sure how the fancier version would go over.
They liked it.
Happy half-birthday, wonderful cats. Long may you hunt through our hallways at night and sleep on my hands when I'm typing.
For their half-birthday, we gave them warm goat's milk with a little cinnamon and honey. (
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They liked it.
Happy half-birthday, wonderful cats. Long may you hunt through our hallways at night and sleep on my hands when I'm typing.
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Possibly your kittens do not know that cats don't eat cinnamon or honey. Or maybe they do not know they are cats?
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I believe they know they are cats, because we tell them frequently—and they behave in all ways like cats, including the pursuit of inconvenience—but I also believe they are open-minded toward food, as in, they can see no reason not to be eating anything except mysteriously we won't let them. We are trying to delay the onset of mooching, but it's a temporary solution at best.