If your cat eats blue tack, monitor them closely for any signs of distress, such as vomiting, lethargy, or difficulty breathing. Contact your veterinarian for advice, as they may recommend bringing your cat in for an examination. Do not attempt to induce vomiting unless instructed by a professional. Keep any remaining blue tack out of reach to prevent future incidents.
yes the Victorians did use blue tack from there bumhole
blue tack or just tack
No symptoms, I eat them all the time, raw. they are not poisonous.
my cat eats chicken yes it is a good name for a cat that eat chicken
it used to be white but its cheaper to make it blue
If you roll up a ball of blue tack and rub it against the blue tack on the wall it comes off easily. Or, if like me you don't have any fresh blue tack available, I used blue painters tape. I got as much off the wall as I could by hand, and then placed the blue painters tape over the spots and pressed it into the orange-peel texture as much as possible, then peeled off the tape with the remaining blue-tack stuck to the tape. Do this a couple of times over each spot until clean.
Put it in the freezer
IT doesn't eat pooh. No cat eats pooh it eats cat food.
No.
The word "tack" has a short vowel sound. In this case, the 'a' in "tack" is pronounced as a short vowel sound like in the words "cat" or "cap."
Yes. The A has the short A sound as in tap and back.
No a cat eats meat