Y

Yian Chang
Review of Hemingway House

4 years ago

Lots of 6 toe cats!

Lots of 6 toe cats!

The American writer Hemingway is actually a cat slave.

He has a mansion in Key West, the southernmost part of Florida. This mansion is famous - except that most of his work is done in this mansion - that is, he had a cat "snowball" in his life. Only six-toed male cats.

Hemingway thinks that the six-toed cat will attract good luck, so he has been letting (?) snowballs breed strongly, and has always distributed the son and daughter of Xueqi to relatives and friends as a concept of sharing luck.

Today, Hemingway s former residence has become a famous sightseeing spot in Key West. I am not interested in the guide s introduction to the writer s love history. I only pay attention to what happened to the cats: D

There are now 55 cats in the former residence, and more than 80% of them are descendants of snowballs, so almost all the cats I met in it have this lucky little inheritance - the six-toed cat! !

The food and medical care of these cats are maintained by the ticket sales of Hemingway s former residence. They have veterinarians stationed to take care of these cats, control the total number of cats, and maintain good genes (?)

Cats can move anywhere in and out of the former residence, so the little fun of visiting this celebrity's house is that you might bump into a sleeping bed on Hemingway's bed, desk, under the sofa, on the toilet floor, or in any casual corner. Cat: D

The outdoor resurfacing of the concrete floor, there are also many cat footprints, full of six-toed prints, attracting a large number of cat slaves from around the world (such as me).

After the cats die, the staff will carefully bury them in the backyard. Over the next few decades, they will also accumulate a small tombstone of nearly a hundred cats. They will carefully write the name of the cat and the year of existence (eg 1997). -2006) to commemorate.



Well, after the story is over, if you have the opportunity to come to Florida to play, don't forget to visit the Hemingway Museum, the pilgrimage site of this cat slave.

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