I had a cat fall off a third floor balcony. Althought she did not come back on her own, someone found her about a month later and took her to the humane sociiety. after a month she remebered me and acted the same towards me.
It could also be that some of the amazing pet storys could have actually been a completely different cat who happened to look like the lost one and was hanging around the neighbourhood.
Yep, balancing out those accounts of dogs making it home home by journeying hundreds and thousands of miles, are the lost-and-found sections of the newspaper, demonstrating that many dogs apparently can’t find their way back from the next block. :rolleyes:
This is a WAG, but could the cat be using scents to find the known house? Cats have an incredibly sensitive sense of smell, so perhaps when the distance is within a few miles, it can actually smell the direction to the house it knows.
Doesn’t this just support the idea that it was randomly wandering and happend to come across something it recognized? Several months to travel a mile is the opposite of impressive.
Those are ust unverified and unverifiable tales.
No cat or dog could ever find its way home 3000 miles away. Not even a human. Move a Yanomami to Patagonia, even if not blinded, and he will never be able to find its way to Amazonia.
Simply because we fail to understand phenomena is not reason to gainsay it’s validity. Given the proven ability of canine olfactory sense, I can’t say that dog couldn’t find it’s way home using it’s nose, even over a great distance. Science is less certain about cats-one experiment discussed possible ‘compass’ activity in the cat brain, as subject cats with external magnets attached to their heads exhibited diminished directional recall skills.