<div><font><font face="verdana,sans-serif">Many years ago when I had cats, I got a call at work from my nearly hysterical son who was home. A bird had gotten into the house and the cat was after it, with the imagined ferocity and prey drive which meant nothing was safe-- lamps toppled, curtains shredded, heads were used as launch pads, claws were out and so were the brains. (He got the bird.)</font></font></div>
<div><font><font face="verdana,sans-serif">This is exactly what happens when any flying insect gets into the house and Conley sees it. It can be a fly or, his favorite because they buzz-- "June bugs". The screen on my window might as well not be there, I have cut it so many times to break into the house when I have forgotten my keys, so now in the evening, as I sit with the desk lamp and TV on, the room is an entomologists delight. But Conley is not a cat. With just as much enthusiasm, he leaps and climbs and snaps and ahhroos and whirls and attempts to fly after the offending six-legger. His kill count is waaay low, but his exercise quotient is up. LOL.</font></font></div>
<p><font><font face="verdana,sans-serif"></font></font> </p><div><font><font face="verdana,sans-serif">MomPerson to Nigel, Llewis and Conley</font></font></div><font><font face="verdana,sans-serif"><div><br></div></font></font>