‘Life-Threatening Damage’: Hurricane Melissa Makes Landfall in Cuba After Battering Jamaica
‘Life-Threatening Damage’: Hurricane Melissa Makes Landfall in Cuba After Battering Jamaica
‘Life-Threatening Damage’: Hurricane Melissa Makes Landfall in Cuba After Battering Jamaica
‘Life-Threatening Damage’: Hurricane Melissa Makes Landfall in Cuba After Battering Jamaica
“I hope this email found you well,” are the seven most dreaded words you can read at 9 am on Monday morning. No one likes to be bombarded by tasks, work, or tedious emails. For cats, they don’t have to worry about anything like that. They don’t pay rent, have a job, or have any responsibilities. They’re basically just freeloaders, but that’s a different story. When you’re overstimulated and stressed out, live vicariously through these cute kitties simply relaxing in nature, breathing fresh air, and not expected to do anything with their day. Watching a cat in nature feels like watching the universe briefly balance itself. Whether it’s a tabby blending perfectly with fallen leaves, or a black cat silhouetted against the golden haze of dusk, there’s an unspoken understanding between the animal and its surroundings. They move slowly, deliberately sniffing, observing, stretching. No anxiety about unread messages, no compulsion to refresh a screen. Just presence. Pure, elegant, feline presence.
It was a “burdensome journey” to reach Yellowstone National Park’s southwestern corner in the 1920s, making it an “almost inaccessible portion of the park,” according to W. A. Lansberry, editor of the nearby Ashton Herald newspaper in Idaho.
Cats and pumpkins just belong together once the air turns cool. In a pumpkin patch, a cat moves like it owns the place. Tail up, eyes sharp, weaving through the rows as if inspecting the harvest. The orange glow of the pumpkins makes their fur stand out, and every step sounds soft against the crunch of old leaves. They look completely at ease, part of the landscape without even trying. Pumpkin patches are full of things cats love. There are vines to paw at, stems to sniff, and low pumpkins to climb for a better view. A cat sitting proudly on a pumpkin looks like the season’s mascot, calm and a little smug about it. Every movement feels slow and deliberate, the way cats do everything when they know someone’s watching. Back home, the pumpkins come inside, and so does the cat. They circle around the new decorations, give them a few test sniffs, and finally settle down beside them like they planned it all along. It’s the perfect kind of fall scene. Quiet, warm, and just a little mischievous. Is your inbox feline too professional? Add some cats falling off counters. Subscribe here!.
India’s coastlines are dotted with lighthouses, and they make for unique stays apart from their navigational purpose.
A Spanish tourist was attacked by a bear while visiting Shirakawa-go, the UNESCO World Heritage village in Gifu Prefecture known for its traditional thatched-roof houses, on October 5th. The incident adds to a growing number of bear encounters reported across Japan in recent weeks.
A sea of clouds spread across Lake Kussharo in Teshikaga, eastern Hokkaido, on Wednesday morning, creating a striking early sign of the coming winter.