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Conference misery::feline

Title:Meower Power - Where Differing Opinions are Respected
Notice:purrrrr...
Moderator:JULIET::CORDES_JA
Created:Wed Nov 13 1991
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1079
Total number of notes:28858

448.0. "Cats In Paradise" by DRUMS::FEHSKENS (len, EMA, LKG1-2/W10) Mon Nov 30 1992 13:52

    I recently returned from a long anticipated vacation in Hawaii.  We visited
    the "Big Island" (Hawaii) and Maui, and spent almost all of our time away
    from the major resort areas, literally circumnavigating Maui and driving
    almost all the way around the Big Island, except for an impassable stretch
    of the Hamakua coast on Hawaii's northernmost peninsula of North Kohala.

    An unforeseen feature of our vacation was the cats we met.

    We started our vacation in Volcano Village, on the edge of Hawaii Volcanos
    National Park.  We stayed at My Island Bed and Breakfast, a wonderful
    B&B run by Gordon and Joanne Moore.  My Island is notable for three things:
    its location and surroundings (rain forest and tropical flowers), the
    incredible breakfasts served each morning, and Maka.

    Maka is a Siamese/Birman crossbreed - he has a Birman's colors and coat
    pattern, but his coat is short like a Siamese's.  He lives a life of
    leisure in paradise.  He's the center of attention for a continuing stream
    of guests, whom he watches from his favorite perches on the copying machine
    or the stairs.  He's been immortalized in two stained glass windows (along
    with other Hawaiian icons like torch ginger or the Iwii) and the guest book
    is full of mentions of him.  Maka (which means "eye" or "beginning"; I
    don't know why he was named thus, or if my renderings from the Hawaiian are
    accurate) has a wonderful disposition, and at the end of a long day of
    touring it was nice to be able sit by and pet him for a few minutes.

    On the way to Waipio Valley (at the southern end of that inaccessible
    stretch of coast I mentioned earlier), one passes through the town of
    Honokaa.  At the Honokaa Trading Company (an "antique store") was a little
    black kitten who was all purrs and claws the moment I picked him up.  "You
    want him?  Take him home.", I was told by the store owner.  I hope he's
    well cared for.

    On Maui, along the famous (if not notorious) "Road to Hana" (highway 360),
    we stopped at the Pua'aka'a State Wayside.  Here we found at least two
    large families of not-quite-feral cats living off the leavings of
    picnickers.  There was one family of tabbies; Mom and Dad were brown, but
    the two youngest kittens were orange.  There were two brown adolescents,
    one whose stripes were broken into spots.  One of these was almost
    friendly, and had an interesting propensity for reaching out for things
    with his paws.  My guess is that the two age groupings reflected the
    survivors of two litters. The other family was solid black.  There was
    obviously some cross breeding between these two families, as there were a
    number of brindle/tortoiseshell youngsters around.  These cats were all
    quite adept at cautious begging, and we watched one jump up the side of a
    trashcan and dig through the trash with one paw while hanging on to the rim
    with the other.  When we returned to the car, one of the little orange
    kittens had climbed up into the wheel well to get out of the drizzle.
    All we had to offer was some coconut/banana bread (which the cats loved). 

    The "road past Hana" (highway 31) gets a bit rough past Oheo Gulch.  From
    Oheo Gulch on the east coast of Maui to the Tedeschi Winery on the
    western slopes of Haleakala is about 27 miles of lonely road.  This is
    ranch land; here we encountered a roadside sign warning "Cattle in road
    next 18.6 miles".  About the only sign of civilization (such as it is) one
    encounters out here is the Kaupo Store.  The store was open when we got
    there (it isn't always), but they were out of t-shirts in my size.  A Kaupo
    Store t-shirt is more of a prize than an "I survived the road to Hana"
    t-shirt from the Hasegawa General Store in Hana.  While the store owner
    took my home address so she could send me one when they restocked, I
    absentmindedly petted the little white kitten asleep on the counter.  The
    next thing I knew, he was climbing up my chest, his purr box going a mile
    a minute.  I picked him up and cradled him in my arms while continuing my
    conversation, and he went back to sleep, purring as loud as I've heard any
    cat.  He was all white, except for some light tan shading around his nose
    I asked the owner his name, and she said the kids called him "Store Kitty".
    I'm not sure I know why, but my few minutes with Store Kitty will always
    remain one of my most treasured memories of Maui, right up there with the
    pod of spinner dolphins that accompanied our boat out of Kealakekua Bay
    on the Big Island (where Captain Cook first landed on Hawaii and was later
    killed by the natives).

    Our last feline encounter was at Mama's Fish House, an exceptional
    restaurant along Highway 36 between Hookipa Beach (site of the heaviest
    surf on Maui, easily visible from the summit of Haleakala 10000 feet
    above and 15 miles to the east, and hence the focus of surfboarding and
    windsurfing on the island) and the little town of Paia.  The house cat at
    Mama's is a black angora, probably the least optimal breed for a tropical
    context.  This cat, who was sleeping on a bench outside the entrance,
    is utterly indifferent to all the attention he gets.  He'll let you pet
    him, but he doesn't respond.  At all.  As I sat next to and petted him
    while we waited for our table, I set a terrible example for a little girl
    who wanted desperately to pet him, but was told (repeatedly) by her mother
    "No, don't touch him, your hands are clean for lunch".  "But I can wash
    them again."  "Don't touch the cat!"

    The number of cats we met in Hawaii was a pleasant surprise, as on other
    islands in the Caribbean we had mostly encountered dogs.  The one
    exception was Barbados, where the resort we stay at (Sam Lord's Castle)
    hosts a large, multigenerational family of polydactyl black and white cats.

T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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448.1Not So Happy Ending to the StoryLJSRV2::FEHSKENSlen - reformed architectTue Jan 25 1994 11:4938
    Yesterday I got a self-addressed package in the mail.  It took me a
    few minutes to figure out what it was.

    After we got back from Maui and my tee-shirt arrived from the Kaupo
    General Store, I realized I had no pictures of the little white kitten
    "Store Kitty", despite the fact that he was one of my fondest
    recollections of an overall wonderful trip.  In a typically off the
    wall move, I bought one of those recyclable Kodak cameras and packed it
    up with a stamped, self-addressed mailing envelope and sent it to the
    Kaupo General Store with a note asking them if they would please take a
    few pictures of Store Kitty and the Store, and send the camera back in
    the enclosed mailer, and I'd get the film processed and send them back
    a set of prints.
    
    Months went by and I heard nothing.  I wondered if something had
    happened to Store Kitty, and hoped it was simply a matter of them
    writing me off as a crazy mainlander.

    Sure enough, the package I got last night contained the camera and a
    note from the Store's owner, Linda.  She said that they had indeed
    "lost" Store Kitty and that she had set the camera aside until a
    happier time.  Eventually they got two new kittens (which her kids
    named Sparkle and Sparklett), and she found the camera while cleaning
    the place out, and remembered me.  So, she took some pictures and
    returned the camera with a note explaining what had happened.
   
    Unfortunately, shortly after taking the pictures, they "lost" Sparklett
    (I assume that's a euphemism).

    I haven't seen the pictures yet (the film's just gone out for
    processing), but Store Kitty remains a treasured memory, so I'd like to
    add Store Kitty and Sparklett of the Kaupo General Store, Hana, Maui,
    to the Silver Lining Memorial.
   
    len.
       
  
448.2Return the favor?AKOCOA::LEINONENTue Jan 25 1994 13:068
    
    	Len,
    
    	What a sad story..... I'll bet that when the pictures come
    	back the owner would love to have you send her a picture
    	of Sparklett - it's probably the only pictures they'll have.
    
    	Heidi
448.3Done deal...STUDIO::COLAIANNII have PMS and a handgun ;-)Tue Jan 25 1994 13:285
    Len,
    
     Store Kitty and Sparklett will be added to the SLM list. 
    
    Yonee
448.4Maybe Just Adopted?LJSRV2::FEHSKENSlen - reformed architectTue Jan 25 1994 15:0018
    
    re. 2 - She asked for a picture, and I had planned to send them a whole
    set anyway, it was part of my original request.
    
    I wonder what happened to these cats, as there are no predatory animals
    in the area (just horses and cows), and there's no traffic to speak of
    on the road (maybe a few tens of cars per day), you can't drive very
    fast on the road, and you can see quite a ways in both directions.  I
    hope that they simply disappeared, and were in fact "borrowed" by envious
    neighbors (who might live 10 miles away; this is "Marlboro country").
    The General Store is literally the only place for provisions of any kind
    for maybe twenty miles in either direction, and they're very slow miles.
    
    I never met Sparklett, but Store Kitty made himself a permanent home in
    my heart.
    
    len.
    
448.5Big Brown CatsLJSRV2::FEHSKENSlen - reformed architectMon May 02 1994 17:4110
    
    BTW, the pictures of Sparkle and Sparklett were wonderful; they're big
    brown lovable tabbies who obviously don't mind being "cathandled" by
    Linda's kids.  I sent them a set of pictures a while ago.  We're
    planning to go back to the Islands next winter and look forward to
    visiting the Kaupo Store again, and hope that we will be able to meet
    Sparkle in person.
    
    len.
     
448.6Cats of BarbadosLJSRV2::FEHSKENSlen - reformed architectMon May 02 1994 18:0657
    
    There's another manifestation of Paradise about 10000 miles to the East
    of Hawaii, namely Barbados.  This was our third vacation on the island;
    we had encountered cats at the resort we stayed at previously (Marriott's 
    Sam Lord's Castle), but this time we stayed at a smaller resort closer
    to "civilization" and were surprised to find a pack of resort cats here
    as well.
    
    Our first encounter was with a small black and white ("jellicoe"?) cat
    (a tropical Socks?) who sauntered up to us at brunch the morning after
    we arrived, having correctly gauged us as more than willing to part with
    grilled flying fish in exchange for the company of a cat.
    
    Sandy had brought some packets of semi-moist catfood on the chance that
    we'd meet some cats, so that evening after dinner we went back looking
    for our jellicoe friend.  We found instead an incredibly beautiful
    brown tabby kitten.  We fed him (her?) and he was quite happy with this
    exotic imported meal.  He then ran off into the bushes, where he seemed
    to be playing with something.
    
    Well, what do you expect to find near beaches?  Right, crabs.  Except
    this was a big sand crab, like 5" across the carapace?  The kitten,
    either experienced with crabs or blissfully ignorant, was holding his
    own teasing the crab, who was up on his legs and waving his big front
    claws.  I ran off to get my camera, and was able to get some pictures
    of this confrontation.
    
    The next day, we met the rest of the family, and in daylight we
    discovered just how beautiful this kitten was.  He had the classic
    American tabby coat pattern, but bilaterally symmetric.  His sibling
    (also brown) had the tiger stripe coat pattern, and later when Mom
    showed up, she had an almost ocicat like spotted brown coat.  What
    a gorgeous trio.  We spent hours trying to figure out some way to
    smuggle them out of the country...  I got some cute pictures of the
    little ones climbing the palm trees, sticking their pretty little faces
    out from between the fronds.
    
    The Brown family was wary of people; they'd let us feed them, and maybe
    tolerate a little petting, and even let me pick the kittens up and hold
    them for a moment.  But they were no preparation for our little black
    friend with the bushy tail.  We met her in the parking lot, and she
    came when called.  We left some food for her, and when we came home
    from dinner the next night, though she was nowhere to be seen, when we
    called she appeared immediately and followed us into our room, where
    she made herself comfortable on a chair, purring up a storm and rolling
    over on her back so we could stroke her belly.
    
    All these cats (even the adults) were small by comparison to Stateside
    cats, but they seemed healthy and in good condition.  The natives view
    the notion of special pet foods as a sort of joke.  We did find some
    canned cat food in one of the local supermarkets, but at the equivalent
    of US $1.25/can, it's easy to see why they expect the cats to fend for
    themselves.  Apparently the resort cats do quite well off guest
    offerings and restaurant scraps.
    
    len.