Cats can typically survive falls from heights of up to 5 stories (around 50 feet) due to their "righting reflex," which allows them to twist their bodies mid-air to land on their feet. However, falls from greater heights can result in more severe injuries.
No her feet are not smelly
An extremely aggravated one.
Cats really only have ONE life. The saying refers to a cats agility and luck in avoiding dangerous situations. When you see a cat fall out of a tree and land on its feet and walk away or dodge a car on the street, the saying is "well, that cat has nine lives".
Cats can't fall seven stories but can fall eight. The cause of this is that the do not have enough time to move and turn around their body to land on their feet. But eight stories they can.
A cat can fall from the top of a building without dieing
Cats have tails for balance. That is why they can walk on such thin objects and don't fall on their heads or side. It's also what helps cats land on their feet. Also geese can sense you coming from 50 feet away! This makes scubba diving dangerous!
Yes - the maximum segment length is usually 100 meters, or 330 feet.
100 Meters or 328 feet.
No. At some point, a cat will fall and hurt itself if it is high enough up.
A patsy The fall guy Tool
to balance their fall when dropping from great hights. those feet help it survive they say cats have 9 lives cause the could survive falls.
Yes, cats have a natural ability to survive falls from heights of up to 20 feet due to their flexible bodies and instinctive righting reflex.
Cats can typically survive falls from heights of up to 5 stories (around 50 feet) due to their "righting reflex," which allows them to twist their bodies mid-air to land on their feet. However, falls from greater heights can result in more severe injuries.
During a fall, cats automatically reposition themselves to land on their feet.
you answer it in inches not feet because feet is a lot and inches is enough for a long cat and small cat don't you think
"Feet" is the plural noun in "The cat hurt its front feet."