Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I was taking my little dog for a walk on Peckham Rye Common and we walked across the little water bridge, i looked across and saw about 5 rats scurrying around in the undergrowth, 2 of them were huge! never seen them that size before, about the size of a small cat. Needless to say i ran across that bridge and did'nt look back!

I reported it to the Park Ranger and he said, rats that size are all over London and that their getting bigger, he said he saw one big rat get into a fight with a cat and the cat lost!

Has anyone else noticed huge rats recently?

Wondering if this is an attempt at a wind-up by an existing forumite? Not sure why you'd pick this subject though.


However ... taking it at face value, it's normal to find rats around water, whether they're water rats (like Ratty in TWITW) or the common brown kind happily living off the food litter people leave behind. And why are rats always 'as big as cats'? Growing up in the country I saw a few that were genuinely cat-size and you'd know if you saw one - pretty scary and very bold.

At the last count nine cats in my street, no rats. The problem for cats is, however, that there is a specific skill in killing a rat rather than a mouse, and this has to be taught them by their mothers (unless they are very big cats in which case they can carry off pretty much anything e.g. rabbits, stoats) as rats are otherwise quite dangerous for them. Farm cats know how - so if large rats are becoming a problem we need to invite some of our cats' country cousins down (they might welcome the break from the idiocy of rural brexit-infested life).

PrunellaGobsworth Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> he said he saw one big rat get

> into a fight with a cat and the cat lost!


I am undefeated :-D


In fairness, that one on the common had been de-clawed. Speaking of which, your pooch could do with a pedicure. All that trip-trapping over my bridge put me right get off the old trainer I was gnawing. Many thanks.

Son and I often sit by the pond in Peckham Rye and play spot the rat, we never have to wait

more than a few minutes before we see one, they aren't particularly timid!

Walking through Loughborough Junction today, I saw a cat with a genuinely massive rat in its jaws, the spectacle was literally stopping traffic. I'd say the rat was about a third of the size of the cat. Interesting point about cats needing to be taught how to hunt bigger prey, hadn't thought about that, just assumed they would all have a go.

What cats have to teach us:


autonomy (contrary to heteronomy)

grace (Lalique, not soviet realism)

semiotics (multiple use of signs, overdetermination of sense)

tragedy (the expiry of the ninth life)

alterity (they territorialise, we share with other humans - we are not 'natural')

in-itself (they are, paradigmatically. But we are for-itself paradigmatically (Sartre): we are not them).


I have pictures of Foucault with cat, Derrida with cat, Kandinsky with cat, etc: they all were learning.

You forgot Schroedinger.


I was thinking about simple things like relaxing and allowing yourself to do what you want and feel what you feel in that moment - things a lot of us forget as adults. Cats relax so completely they lose their shape.

well, Schroedinger's cat was neither existent nor inexistent - so not sure if it was inappropriate to forget, or was it to remember, I am not sure I can figure it out.


Yes, cats are of their moment, and we too with them if we lose ourselves in them. But is this the best we can hope for, ourselves with others of our kind?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hello, Is anyone selling an iPhone 14 please?  Thank you. 
    • I may be a scrooge but to pay over £100 plus for a meal is a bit much. I understand that staff costs would be a high factor in this price and that being no transport on Christmas Day - pubs may have to pay car hire fees. The café in Christ Church will be doing a 3 course meal in the run up to Christmas for around £30 per head (Booking essential) so to charge an additional £60 plus seems somewhat unreasonable. The past few years, there have only been the 2 of us on Christmas Day, so we lash out and buy a lot of M & S food - ready prepared or with minimal cooking at a cost of between £30 and £40. We host the family Boxing Day onwards (8 - 10 people) spending around £60 on food and drink. Rather spend £100 for food etc over a couple of days rather than £200 for one meal. We are fortunate that we have the finances  to do this as many people are not able to do this. One family member with young children would find it hard to spend even £10 on a Christmas meal. Our kids come armed with plastic boxes to all family meals to take home any leftovers - so we are left with minimal waste- any veg and meat  get made into soup.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...