As someone who does have a fully blind cat (his eyes were removed), I’d have to say that Pichi must have some eyesight. She confidently jumps off of things. My cat will always tap and feel around in front of him before jumping. But otherwise he does play normally with toys.
As soon as I heard the phrase “He uses his abdominal muscles” I lost it . I had flashbacks to all my choir and band teachers telling us to engage our diaphragm for better air support because breathing with your chest is asking for trouble. They repeated it so much I will never forget it. I don’t know why Poki having better technique than most singers is funny to me. Nice job buddy..
My British Bombay, Tia (15) has been in perfect health her entire life until just recently. I was petting her one evening and felt a cartlidge-type growth on her upper hind leg near her tail. I could feel a tentacle like growth extending from it. My heart sank immediately and my blood ran cold. I knew it wasn’t good because of that tentacle, hat it was probably cancerous. It was. My vet told me that 90% of bumps on cats are never good unlike dogs where it’s 50/50. Tia had a fibroid sarcoma that was vaccine-related. She had had the Purevax rabies vaccine, considered the safest, every year without any problem.
They don’t know why it can suddenly develop years later, but she had her vaccine shot in February and I discovered the growth in early April. My vet is very proactive and believes in taking out tumors right away in cats – and taking a wide margin with it. He doesn’t wait for the results to come back from a lab to determine whether or not it’s cancerous. He says “We can find that out later. When I see a bump in a cat, I remove it asap. If it is benign, no harm done. If it’s malignant, then we got it as soon as we could.” He’s’ almost my age and I’m 70. His wife is a vet also. He is very warm and exudes kindness. I call him the Mister Rogers of Vets. Tia couldn’t have a better vet. Good luck with Poki.
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