Clean up your monitor. Again.
If you think the Pug can clean your monitor, wait until you see the cat clean your monitor.
The cat’s tongue…
When our cat scarfs his moist food placed on his chrome Wetnoz serving-plate, the surface looks like a mirror. There is nothing left, just a haze-free shine. You could not get the same results with sandpaper, yet that is what his tongue can feel like on your face in the middle of the night.
A Grooming Tool and More
A cat’s ability to groom itself is the result of numerous knobs called papillae on the surface of a cat’s tongue. Located at the tongue’s center, the papillae form backward-facing hooks containing large amounts of keratin, the same material found in human fingernails. These hooks provide the abrasiveness a cat needs for self-grooming.
The strength of these hooks also helps a cat hold food or struggle with prey.
Your Help is Needed
Although the abrasiveness of a cat’s tongue helps it to clean itself and untangle its hair, your help is needed through regular grooming. As you groom your cat, you are removing loose and dead hair. Otherwise a cat may ingest this hair and hair balls can form, which can cause vomiting and may cause impaction in the gastrointestinal tract. Long-haired cats need daily grooming; short-haired cats should be groomed at least once a week.
A Matter of Taste
Studies show that the cat’s sense of taste is keener than that of the dog. This acute sense of taste is the result of two sets of taste buds.
Mushroom-shaped papillae at the tip and sides of the tongue hold some of the largest taste buds. A set of cup-shaped papillae are located at the back of the tongue.
Palatability studies at the Purina Pet Care Center and other studies show that in addition to flavor, a cat’s tongue reacts to the texture or mouth-feel of a particular food. This is one of the reasons dry cat foods come in a variety of shapes.
The cat’s tongue also reacts to temperature and shows a preference for foods at room temperature.
When Cats Lap it Up
A cat’s tongue becomes spoon-shaped to enable it to lap liquids. Notice how its tongue laps under water in much the same manner as an elephant uses its trunk. It flicks its tongue quickly in and out of the water, swallowing after every third or fourth lap.
A cat’s water intake will vary depending on the season of the year, activity and type of diet being fed. Cats consuming canned cat food diets will not drink as much water as those fed dry food. If, for some reason, a cat does not appear to be drinking enough water, more water can be added to the food.
Always keep fresh drinking water in a clean bowl available to your cat. Water is an essential ingredient and is involved in virtually every function of a cat’s body.
Contributing To A Cat’s Sense of Taste
Cats also have a highly developed sense of smell and they notice changes in their food. Some researchers suggest that this sense may stimulate their appetite or cause them to refuse to eat.
A cat’s appetite may be affected by many factors including noise, strange people, changes in routine and even feeding dishes washed with a strong detergent and not carefully rinsed.
However, if a cat refuses to eat for a period of two to three days, a trip to the veterinarian is in order. This continued food refusal may be a sign of illness.
What a Pug do it!
via Yahoo!Pets note: this post among many others can be seen on friday ark














Maureen Adams















February 21st, 2008 at 3:49 pm
Wow, this is cute, lol. Thanks for sharing, Anna
February 23rd, 2008 at 3:10 am
Very cute. Thanks for making me smile today.
February 26th, 2008 at 11:14 pm
I always thought cats were more picky … this explains it!
February 29th, 2008 at 1:45 pm
Friday Ark #180
We’ll post links to sites that have Friday (plus or minus a few days) photos of their chosen animals (photoshops at our discretion and humans only in supporting roles). Watch the Exception category for rocks, beer, coffee cups, and….? Visit all the …