Tuesday 15 January 2013

It was the day the cat exploded.

One of the best opening lines from any novel comes from The Crow Road written by Scottish author Iain Banks. " It was the day my grandmother exploded."  I'm having one of those.

Not a happy fellow.

 It all began yesterday* when a friend was visiting, I was thanking her for a Christmas gift, a tin of sardines for Magnus, when I happened to look over at the boy in question. He was looking a bit odd,  as if he had converted to vegetarianism and was storing carrots in one cheek hamster-style. Closer inspection found a large swelling and a nasty bite. Looked like an abscess to me.  I made a note to keep an eye on him and to make an appointment with the vet in the morning. The evening was spent fussing at the cat and worriedly examining the swollen part.  Normally this would be foolhardy behaviour because as we all know, the cheekbone is in his case, connected to the tooth bone. The lack of violence when being handled led me to believe that he was feeling rather ill and I decided to keep him inside overnight rather than offering the chilly delights of the back garden in December. I left the boy asleep, snorting gently on his favourite rocking chair.

Dyeing yarn to take to Rotterdam.  Rotterdam? More later.

7am, New Years Eve I was woken by some scratching at the door and the plaintive howling of a cat who wanted me to think he was starving.  I jumped out of bed to save the carpet from a shredding and accompanied Magnus to the kitchen. After wolfing down some catfood, the lad sat on his haunches, flicked a back leg towards his face, extended his claws and exploded the abscess. There is nothing in the world that can prepare you for the smell that exudes from a burst cat abscess. Think of the smelliest recesses of the compost bin mixed with something that has been dead for too long and you're still nowhere near. It went everywhere, on me, on the floor and all over Magnus. For the visually minded, I can tell you that it was the colour of a bad strawberry custard. Pustard.

I cleaned the floor, cleaned the cat, cleaned myself and removed my pajamas in preparation for a boil wash. By then it was 7.15.  New Year's Eve. I left a damp cat in the kitchen and retired to another, less pungent room. So there I was, waiting for the vet to open while the beast glared balefully at me through the frosted glass of the kitchen door. If this is a taste of things to come in 2013 then I'm doomed.

Happy New Year!

Socks. Thankfully pus free and smelling lovely
In other news, there has been some knitting. Made some socks of which I am rather proud. Thanks as usual to Mary Jane Mucklestone for her genius in charting Fair Isle Patterns and counting the number of stitches required so that I don't have to.


*You might have guessed that yesterday is not strictly accurate. After Magnus' recovery the whole household was struck down with colds and this is me catching up with things only two weeks late.

10 comments:

thistledowns wool & cotton said...

Goodness! what a start to the year.
Praying all have recovered! Gorgeous! socks!

Liz said...

Poor Magnus, I am sure that must have been quite uncomfortable for him. The socks however are lovely!

Melissa Graham said...

Poor kitty!! and you for having to deal with the yuck splatters. Hope he is all better now. May there be no more explosive cats in your future. I have a great giveaway going on over on my blog that might help protect your yarn from Mr. M.
http://melsdaisypatch.blogspot.com

julia said...

Sorry you've all had the lurgy and poor Magnus! Rotterdam?! Love those socks. I'm about to start my first MJM inspired jumper and it's also an adventure in circular knitting, just trying to work out how many stitches, then here goes!

Louisa said...

Yes, I've had an exploding cat before too - though possibly not quite so dramatic. It was only the edge of an ear and a long-ago, long-gone dear cat. Poor mog! Hope he's feeling better now. And you too. Here's to better times ahead!

Jules said...

I can sympathize! A while ago, my cat absolutely stank. I thought she must have rolled in something terrible and unmentionable. She was new to me and extremely unwilling to be picked up, so it wasn't until a couple of days later when she got very quiet and floppy that i realized she must have burst an abcess... poor love. But man did it stink. Hope Magnus is all better and you too.

xx

Lynn said...

Poor kitty-hope he's well on the way to total recovery and your socks - well they are a masterpiece!

Ellen Mason said...

oh Magnus. oh Jeni. This is sadly hilarious.

Galadriel said...

What a wonderfully awful story! I was in stitches :)

Annie Cholewa said...

Oh dear, poor Magnus, I do hope he has recovered.

I spent the last hours of Christmas Eve and the first hours of Christmas Day at the emergency vets with a dog who had eaten the mincepies ... perhaps we're both doomed!

Nice socks, and I'm intrigued by the dyeing :D