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Post by Don Cuevas on Jan 24, 2014 0:00:46 GMT
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Post by lagatta on Jan 24, 2014 0:43:05 GMT
I think old-school Renzo would be skeert of it. Though what he hates about my vacuum cleaner is the sound (I hate it too, and use it as little as possible). My mother has had cats who loved to be vacuumed; after all, they hate having loose scratchy hairs.
I was looking at the room in that article. I can't possibly imagine having somewhere as bare, clean and spacious.
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Post by bjd on Jan 24, 2014 9:19:43 GMT
Our cat doesn't mind the vaccuum cleaner, or the electric lawn mower. If she is outside when I start to vaccuum, she wants to come in and then sits and watches.
Like Lagatta, I think that room looks nice but it doesn't look anything like where I live. Where are the papers lying around?
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Post by tod2 on Jan 26, 2014 14:10:01 GMT
I don't need one of those robot vacuum cleaners but I'd love one anyway.
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Post by htmb on Jan 26, 2014 14:15:21 GMT
It's practically all I use, but works best on wood or tile floors, rather than rugs/carpet.
My cat always showed her disdain by leaving the room whenever I started mine up. My daughter's dog (big old thing) is afraid of it and would jump into my lap if I let her.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 26, 2014 17:28:53 GMT
I read somewhere that the best gauge of the IQ of a cat is how much it ignores what is going on around it. Cats that are scared of everything and who are constantly hiding apparently have low IQs. Cats that just give a bored look at what is going on and return to their nap are supposedly far more intelligent.
I do not have the slightest idea if this also holds true for dogs.
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