File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
Our outdoor cat, who weighs less than six pounds, tried to attack our neighbor's huge rooster today. Not any of the tiny hens, or the smaller males, but the one really big rooster. She got her ass kicked. Her nose is scraped up but it isn't bleeding. Do rooster talons carry any infection that regular shots won't cover?
>> Anonymous
ask the person who owns the rooster if they have like something fucked up like a disease but i'm pretty sure if you own an animal you're going to eat it won't be allowed to have any diseased or anything but i could be wrong.
>> tigerfeather !CrwtTbFNxQ
You should clean it anyway, because shots don't protect against regular bacterial infections, just certain cat diseases.
>> Anonymous
that rooster deserves a belt with "The Champ" on it.
>> Anonymous
Just make sure you clean the wounds and use disinfectant. Roosters don't carry anything specific, but animal scratches are always prone to infection. And be thankful your neighbor doesn't have turkeys or guinea fowl.
>> Anonymous
Tell your cat it needs to suck it up and get rid of that Napoleon complex.
>> Anonymous
>>211642
If "Napoleon Complex" is the name of that rooster, I agree
>> Wild Anonymous
If you had any decency, you'd take that cat, throw it in a bag, and then drown it. What the hell good is a shitty inbred show kitty that can't even take down domesticated fowl? I'd expect that level of fail from a beagle or American GSD. Your cat must be the rat of the cat kingdom.