iodicoche:deducecanoe:secondgenerationimmigrant:twistedsardonic:postmodernmulticoloredcloak:photodox
iodicoche:deducecanoe:secondgenerationimmigrant:twistedsardonic:postmodernmulticoloredcloak:photodox:Ephesus // cats + ancient sitesI like to think the souls of the past lived on in the stray cats inhabiting the remains.Fun fact: stray cats in Rome are not considered “strays” but “free cats” and they have legal citizenship of the city. They mostly live in the Roman ruins in the city and have legal rights and protection and are taken care of by thousands of specialized volunteers who make sure they’re healthy and fed. A lot of them also get sterilized and there are initiatives to get them adopted.I guess cats everywhere have a kinship with ancient ruins :)this does indeed make me feel so much betterI went to the Palace of Malia in Crete in December 2013. We were the only visitors in the whole archeologic site and the only other living beings around were the ticket lady and a super-affectionate cat.She followed us around for the whole visit, well actually, she was walking in front of us as if she was guiding the tour and at the end of the visit she stopped by the offering table left in situ and took a drink.Convince me she was not some sort of genius loci, if you can.You had the best most magical tour guide.I confirm the Roman cats thing, I volunteered in a cat sanctuary where we fed stray cats and put the ones more socialized up for adoption. Yes the sanctuary was in the middle of some archeological ruins in the city centre. -- source link