- Location
- Next door to Mr Benn at No 54
Aperitif said:Get well soon Leo.Do cats have kneecaps?
I am assuming that the vet knows this.

Breakfast time here tomorrow will be fun


Aperitif said:Get well soon Leo.Do cats have kneecaps?
Speicher said:Breakfast time here tomorrow will be funpreventing Leo having breakfast will probably mean denying Tasha her breakfast.
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twentysix by twentyfive said:I'm afraid you will have to give up your breakfast too. Fair's fair
But pop in here and I'll brew some tea![]()
Speicher said:Can anyone on Tea offer some advice? How do I explain to my mother, that if she thinks she is not receiving e-mails over the weekend, that might be because she has not been sent any.
Also that she does not need to ring me to ask me to ring her when I have received her e-mail. Furthermore if some is going round to her house this afternoon to help her with her computer whatexpletives deleteddoes she expect me to do about it before then from fifty miles away?
and breathe .... and eat crumpets freshly delivered by very nice man from Tecso's, along with organic white chocoalate from Dominican Republic, and various other edible items. Any requests?
(Must now enjoy peace and quiet before The Impatient returns).
Speicher said:Arch will no doubt be along soon with the proper name of the joints in a cat's back legs. I am guessing they are not "knees" as such.
TheDoctor said:Fajitas
Arch said:Huh, it appears my years of animal skeleton study has been gazumped...
Yes, quadrupeds have kneecaps, and knees, and ankles and all that, they just aren't quite where many people think they are - as Waffles said, they walk on tip toe so the joint in the middle of their back leg is the ankle, and the knee is actually up at the top of the leg, and the hip sort of buried within the body, which is why quadrupeds look as if their 'knees' bend the other way to us - because it's their ankles... Same at the front, the 'front knee' is the wrist, and the elbow up at the top of the leg and the shoulder within the body.
Prey animals walk even more on tip toe than predators, and have the number of toes reduced to reduce the weight of the legs, since the key to really fast running is light limbs and long strides. Except in the case of the cheetah, when a certain amount of being able to dislocate your spine also comes into it. There's a theory that giraffes didn't evolve tall to browse the top of trees, they evolved long legs to run, and the neck had to follow in order for them to be able to drink...
Cows, of course, have kneecaps, and for some reason, I've always found them amusing when I find one in an assemblage. I don't know why.
Any tea going? I don't like to jinx myself, but my back has felt way better today. Just need to try and make myself take it easy for the next fortnight, then I have a week off...