In which the cat is in the doghouse
Jul. 21st, 2008 06:33 pmI have just bought a new microphone and a new set of earplugs. Also I have booktape around part of my laptop powercord. To say nothing of the hearth tiles under the mantlepiece that are still cracked, but at the moment I'm more concerned about Boots electrocuting herself.
You see, there are two things she likes doing; yea, three things that entertain her vastly. She likes scratching the carpet; she likes biting tacks out of the noticeboard (and leaving them point up on the floor for me to walk on); and she likes chewing on anything that bears a passing resemblance to a mouse's tail. She used to do this latter only to get my attention and therefore I was in the room to dissuade her by whatever means necessary; but the microphone and the earphones were on successive nights after I'd gone to bed
Short of never leaving her alone with a powercord again (this might be feasible but it'd be a blasted nuisance and would, for reasons that don't need exploring at this juncture, increase my heating bill) how on earth do I dissuade her from biting through the rubber which is the only thing standing between her and 240 volts of alternating current?
You see, there are two things she likes doing; yea, three things that entertain her vastly. She likes scratching the carpet; she likes biting tacks out of the noticeboard (and leaving them point up on the floor for me to walk on); and she likes chewing on anything that bears a passing resemblance to a mouse's tail. She used to do this latter only to get my attention and therefore I was in the room to dissuade her by whatever means necessary; but the microphone and the earphones were on successive nights after I'd gone to bed
Short of never leaving her alone with a powercord again (this might be feasible but it'd be a blasted nuisance and would, for reasons that don't need exploring at this juncture, increase my heating bill) how on earth do I dissuade her from biting through the rubber which is the only thing standing between her and 240 volts of alternating current?
no subject
Date: 2008-07-21 07:20 pm (UTC)