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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 19th, 2023

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  • Keep them apart for a week or so if you can to let any incubating infections show up. I recently had an upsetting experience with a family of stray kittens and their mother that my wife and I rescued, only to find out that they had feline parvovirus and had to be euthanised (whilst the kittens seemed fine when we caught them, the prognosis for kittens with parvo is horrendous; even the mother only had a 50/50 chance of survival). We kept them separate from our cats (and they are vaccinated anyway), but we still had to bleach the bathroom almost to oblivion to kill any trace of parvo. It was just a horrible situation.




  • Please find enclosed your new Kat™. Your new Kat™ comes with multiple features, including:

    • Inbuilt vocalisations, which are randomly selected from a range including petite chirps to loud yowling.
    • A selection of self-maintenance modes, including licking and claw-sharpening. We recommend that you provide your Kat™ with our complimentary Kat-Scratcher™ for optimal sharpening.
    • Multiple behavioural modes, including our specialised SuperKute™ and LiquidKat™ poses.

    We recommend powering your Kat™ with our scientifically-proven Kat™ food range for best results.

    Disclaimer: Kat-in-a-Box™ cannot be held liable for damage to furniture, vehicles, clothing, bedding, utensils, whitegoods, etc. or any injuries sustained in the use of Kat™.



  • If you’re happy with OpenDNS logging your traffic, you could set the router to use them as the DNS server (assuming your network is DHCP and your father-in-law’s devices just use whatever DNS server your router says). As long as one of your devices keeps OpenDNS updated with your IP (the one provided by your ISP), then you can look through the traffic to see what is being accessed (and even enabling category content blocking if you wish). Of course, if your father-in-law is IT savvy, he’ll just manually set the DNS server on his devices.