From us to you, Merry Christmas! |
Merry Christmas!!
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Webster one month after she found us, her ear was notched to show she had been fixed and had a caretaker |
It all started when we heard faint meows in the dark as we got out of our car in our driveway. We spied a hungry frightened kitten that would not let us approach it, so we threw bits of left over salmon in its direction that it scoffed up. The next day it was back for breakfast and dinner and as the days passed my husband gave it the name Webster. Too scared to be handled we humanely trapped it and brought it to Stray Aid and Rescue for vet care and neutering. The verdict was that it was probably 14 weeks old - too old to be tamed and that she was a female. They suggested that in her post op drowsy drug induced mode, we could try to pet her gently a few times through the cage to help her get used to human touch. However, she didn't like the petting, was petrified of us in general and was deeply unhappy. I was sure she would never return when I released her the next day, but she did and every morning and every night she came back for a meal. Eventually she came closer, a week or two later she let us pet her while she ate at our porch steps and so the advancements continued until she came inside to eat and then would sit on our laps. She was never going to be an indoor cat no matter how hard we tried to acclimate her to the indoors, within an hour or two she would paw and cry at the front door to leave, tearing the insulation off of our front door with her claws in her haste to head out on a big adventure.
Webster quickly became a part of our family, following the girls to the neighbors houses for playdates, walking behind us and dodging through the hedges as we walked down to the mailboxes. In all of four months we had tamed a starving kitten who fiercely loved her new family.
But one day she didn't come for breakfast, and she didn't arrive for dinner, in fact she never came home. It is over two years since we lost our beloved cat and our exhaustive searches all came up empty.
Webster turned me into that cliche - "a cat person", from that day I noticed cats walking around at dusk, I became attuned to the noise of kitten meows and I started getting phone calls from friends and neighbors that found kittens and cats that needed help. In the past two years I have helped over 20 cats/kittens find forever homes or neutered and returned feral adult cats to a safe cat colony with a caretaker. I have met many kind people who do the very same thing and have helped me along the way teaching me the tricks of the trade. Today, I want to share some photos of my latest rescues that are being cared for by my very dear friend Sharon Chatlos at her barn - J's Landing.
Roughly ten days old when their mother was hit and killed by a car near our house, my husband and I climbed behind dumpsters and fencing and with a butterfly net got four starving and distressed kittens out to safety. I called Sharon for help and we devised a plan. A lactating mother cat at the barn whose litter was leaving for forever homes that same week seemed like the most viable option if the kittens were to survive. We just needed the momma cat to take over the newborns as her own. We could not have been more lucky, this mother cat of the year when introduced to the starving kitten immediately let them nurse her.
One evening a month after the kittens arrived at J's Landing we visited Sharon and held the thriving kittens. The big red barn is a little slice of heaven in Plantation, home to boarding horses, a beloved miniature horse that is a certified pet partner and a menagerie of animals since Sharon specializes in pet therapy for children. She also takes in kittens that need a little TLC and socializes them, working with a rescue organization that eventually adopts the kittens and finds them good homes. This lucky litter of kittens will soon move on to their forever homes, and I have no doubt another litter will take their place at the barn.
One of the kittens at J's Landing |
Kittens in a basket |
The runt of the litter |
Tommy a few days after we found him |
Webster is still dearly missed by us and will never be forgotten and we do that really bad thing of comparing her to Tommy when is he acting aloof. But our feral kitten left a tangible lasting legacy. Her short life made a profound positive impact in our family's life teaching us how to care for a cat, and it opened our eyes to the plight of felines around us that need a little bit of human help.
Labels:
lifestyle photography
Sunday, February 8, 2015
Occasionally I am asked for advice on cameras and lens, however since I use Canon and have no user experience with other brands, my advice is somewhat limited.
Have you ever purchased a car without a test drive?
When my needs changed and I realized my kit lens and DSLR camera wasn't cutting it anymore, I started to rent. Its not a new concept, but not that many people know its even possible. Now when I know I am going to make a significant investment in a new camera or lens, I try to rent the item twice before I make a purchase. It has saved me costly mistakes: I have rented 4 lens and only bought two, I have rented two camera's and only purchased one.
Renting a lens also allows you a little time to wait for rebates. If you need a different lens for a special event or a short vacation and are not in a terrible rush, rent instead. That extra time and some website watching will save you money. At certain times of the year the larger brands will offer some very nice rebates and sometimes the big stores offer additional discounts at the same time. So do a quick search and boomark a rebate blog.
I am not into collecting extra lens that will collect dust, and my renting has saved me from buying the "paparazzi" lens that was too heavy for me and the prime lens that I just did not love enough. Unless you want to display unused lens in your house, I recommend a test drive.
Labels:
PHOTOGRAPHY TIPS
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
"A fallow field is land that a farmer plows but does not cultivate for one or more seasons to allow the field to become more fertile again."
We went home to Ireland for Christmas and it was bliss. I didn't get to see everyone I wanted to visit, but I did get quality time with my family. On Christmas Day 19 of my family sat down at the dinner table at my sister's farm and we all stayed the night. For 36 hours, the family was together, eating, laughing, telling stories, playing and cherishing all the children. I can't remember the last time so many of us were under one roof for so long.
It was also on Christmas Day as I drove up the lane to the farm that I saw "the field". In March it was a glorious green carpet with goalie stakes in it, but now it was fallow. It was brown, with dry leggy straw like grass, and it was beautiful.
The afternoon before we left to return to America we arrived back 15 minutes before sunset. The hills were dangerously close to hiding the sun completely as it set at an ungodly early hour. I grabbed my eldest and asked her for a favor. I asked her if she would come down to the field so that I could snap some photos of her there. She agreed with a smile and walked through the field touching the dry stakes and looking up at the sunset, before running in to join her cousin. Not to be outdone, I ran inside and asked my youngest for the same favor, but her agreement came with a stipulation. Only an hour before she had picked out a pink dress for herself in the sales, and she would only let me take a photo if she was wearing it. Outtakes capture her holding her dress tightly and singing with her eyes closed about her beautiful dress as dusk descended.
When we left the next morning for the airport it was dark, and as I kissed my sister and hugged my family I heard the sound of that dry grass moving in the wind. I wonder what that field will look like on my next visit, I cannot wait.
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