I was eating sushi outside on my lunch break, and ofc a local wasp was buzzing around so I moved a chunk of tuna a bit away from me so it would feel safe to land. It landed, cut out an almost perfect square of tuna, hugged it with it's legs and flew off. It was a bit like watching a cargo helicopter lifting up a container.
I suppose the best thing would be to start with the backyard then slowly work your way up at their pace (maybe just an open front door if you don't have a yard). Cat's are liquid and one of the best examples of that is how hard it is to keep them in any sort of harness. I took my cat out for a walk once with my dogs and he managed to slip out of his harness; I had to chase him for about a block before I managed to corner him in someones driveway. I'm lucky I'm pretty fit else he would've been gone.
... I do recall there was someone in ...Texas I think? ...that made harness' specifically for cats. Something about avoiding a nerve centre on their back that basically makes them go limp if something pushes against it.
I upgraded the CPU and memory in my old computer. I'm now on a faster, 12 year old processor instead of slow, 13 year old one and my memory is doubled from 16gb to 32. I'm grateful that the CPU wasn't DOA since I bought it used on ebay and it shipped from China.
Despite >100 years of entomological surveys, the bone collector species has only been found in a 15-km2 area of mesic forest in the Waiʻanae mountain range on the island of Oʻahu. Typically, an endemic Hawaiian lineage will contain multiple species with similar habits distributed across at least part of the archipelago [e.g., (11, 12)], but no other member of the bone collector lineage has been found. Phylogenomic analysis shows that the bone collector lineage is at least 6 million years old, >3 million years older than the island of Oʻahu (Fig. 3) (13).
The forest is being increasingly occupied by invasive species.
Someones gunna break it too.