
Via rusk.mii.
Your #1 source for FLUFFY ANIMALS.
When Cersei the cat arrived at the International Bottle Cap Collector’s Association’s annual conference in Jupiter, FL this week, she was sure she had a killer collection. According to friends she’s been saving caps under the refrigerator since she was a kitten. But other collectors weren’t impressed.
“It’s not volume that matters. It’s quality,” explained Toby Northfork, president of the Cayuhoga County chapter of the IBCCA in Cleveland, OH. “Cersei had a fair number of caps, sure, but most of them were from standard plastic soda bottles. Not the sort of thing collector’s get excited about.”
According to Northfork some of what the cat brought to the conference can’t even be classified as bottle caps. “There were gum wrappers, some candies, even a pen,” he said.
Northfork said that as a beginner, Cersei was on mostly on the right track. He encouraged her to keep collecting, but focus on rarer caps.
“To get very far with this hobby, she’ll need to learn the difference between a plastic Coca Cola cap, and a vintage one from the 1930s,” he said. “Also, she needs to stop mixing twist ties and crumpled up papers into the collection.”
For her part, friends say Cersei was initially upset, but recovered quickly when she started chasing her bottle caps across the room.
Via jasonripp.
Local dog Buster was told he was going to the park for a few hours of frisbee, but 15 minutes into the car ride he grew suspicious.
“He knows the way to the park,” said friend Caite Ianetta, “so once the car made a left on Mulberry Street, he knew something was up.”
As the car continued in the opposite direction of the park, and Buster grew increasingly skeptical of their destination and witnesses say the dog began throwing considerable side-eye.
“Once we reached the strip mall where the vet’s office is located, he’d pretty much had it with us,” said Ianetta.
A spokesperson for the pup said that Buster plans to take public transportation to the park in the future.
Via BessDilley.