The Star Malaysia

Hemingway cats survive im-paw-sible odds

-

MIAMI: Hurricane Irma may have wrought devastatio­n to the Florida Keys islands, but, much to everyone’s relief, a colony of six-toed cats descended from a pet owned by Ernest Hemingway have survived without a scratch.

Stern orders to evacuate, dire warnings of the doom that inevitably awaited and the desperate pleas of the legendary writer’s granddaugh­ter weren’t enough to budge the caretakers of the historic house – who decided to place their faith in the building’s thick limestone walls and ride out the monster storm with their 54 feline friends.

“We took them inside that fortress with us and we had 10 employees stay here on site,” Dave Gonzales, curator of the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum on the island of Key West, told broadcaste­r NBC.

“We’re comfortabl­e with them; they’re comfortabl­e with us. We love them. They love us. We all hung out last night together,” he added.

As the hurricane approached, packing gusts of 200kph, many grew worried and urged the staff to reconsider their decision.

“Ultimately it’s just a house. Save the cats. Get all the cats in the car and take off!” actress Mariel Hemingway, Ernest’s granddaugh­ter, urged in a video posted to the website TMZ on Friday.

Jacque Sands, the site’s general manager, did not.

Instead, she and the others reinforced the windows of the colonial-style home, which Hemingway bought in 1931 and where he wrote A Farewell to Arms, and waited it out.

“The cats seemed to be aware sooner of the storm coming, and in fact when we started to round up the cats, some of them actually ran inside, knowing it was time to take shelter,” said Gonzales.

“Sometimes I think they’re smarter than the human beings.”

The animals are descendant­s of a six-toed cat named “Snow White” that was given to Hemingway by a ship’s captain, according to the museum. — AFP

 ??  ?? Staying in: A van remains in a sinkhole that opened up at the Astor Park apartment complex in Winter Springs during Hurricane Irma’s passing through central Florida. — AP
Staying in: A van remains in a sinkhole that opened up at the Astor Park apartment complex in Winter Springs during Hurricane Irma’s passing through central Florida. — AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia