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During the last week a cat has been climbing through our back window and coming into our flat. She's very affectionate and seems healthy- the eyes are bright, fur is clean and soft and she's not too skinny; so i'm assuming she's not a stray.


It seems like she wants food, sniffing round the bin a lot, and was trying to eat a dead plant leaf that had fallen on the floor. I don't want to encourage her as we're not allowed animals in the flat, and I guess she belongs to someone even though there's no collar. I can't imagine how she would be in such good condition otherwise.


I'm really after some advice on what we should do. We keep putting her out of the same window that she came in, but she keeps coming back. Last night, despite closing the window, she wouldn't leave (kept meowing for ages) until we turned the light off.


Is there someone local we could call? Or has anyone in Peckham Rye (on here) lost a lovely black and white cat.


I think putting a poster up might be overkill, as I know cats likee to wander, especially at night, but she seems a litte too needy, and obsessed with our flat (she's been back every night for the last week and we'd never seen her before) to just be going about her normal business....but i really don't know a great deal about cats, so I'm just guessing.


Any help/advice is greatly appreciated.

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https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/24489-im-after-some-cat-advice-please/
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    • Could be that it was for some sort of gas powered appliance, there were many types in the past. In my parents’ Victorian house, we had a gas powered fridge freezer until the late 1970s and they were still being sold new at that time. It plugged into a sort of bayonet socket on the wall with flick switch to turn the gas on and off. 
    • Thanks, all. I'm pretty sure it is all fine but I've got someone coming to change a radiator who is also a registered gas engineer so he's going to check it out while he's here. Better safe than sorry. Interesting that it's so near the skirting board - we've got one downstairs at head height which is clearly for a gas lamp but you'd think it would be too low if it's at shin level! Can't envisage how they've have used it in ye olden days. It's nowhere near the chimney breast so it would be an odd place to put a gas fire.
    • I had ones like that near the skirting board and also on the wall when I lived in a Victorian terrace. Gas guy said they were from when the house had gas lamps none were connected any longer.
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