enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bonsai Kitten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonsai_Kitten

    Bonsai Kitten was a hoax website that claimed to instruct readers how to raise a kitten in a jar, so as to mold the bones of the kitten into the shape of the jar as the cat grows in the same way as a bonsai plant. It was made by an MIT student going by the alias of Dr. Michael Wong Chang. [1]

  3. Neko chigura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neko_Chigura

    Neko chigura (nekochigura) or Neko tsugura (nekotsugura) is a kind of cat house made of straw in Japan. [2] [3] It is a folk craft of Sekikawa-mura, Niigata-ken, or Akiyamago (the area of Tsunan-machi, Niigata-ken and Sakae-mura, Nagano-ken). It is called "Nekochigura" in Sekikawa, and "Nekotsugura" in Akiyamago .

  4. Maneki-neko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maneki-neko

    The Japanese beckoning gesture is made by holding up the hand, palm down, and repeatedly folding the fingers down and back, thus the cat's appearance. Some maneki-neko made specifically for some Western markets will have the cat's paw facing upwards, in a beckoning gesture that is more familiar to most Westerners.

  5. 350+ Japanese Cat Names Full of Inspiration and Meaning - AOL

    www.aol.com/350-japanese-cat-names-full...

    Some of the newer popular Japanese cat names highlighted in a 2024 survey from Anicom Pet Insurance included Mugi (barley), Beru (Belle), Latte, and Kohaku (amber). Japanese Girl Cat Names.

  6. In the ruins of a historic market, a Japanese artisan looks ...

    www.aol.com/news/ruins-historic-market-japanese...

    Kohei Kirimoto, an 8th-generation lacquerware artisan, walked through the ruins of his century-old workshop in the Japanese coastal town of Wajima on Thursday, concerned only for his missing cats.

  7. Pet culture in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_culture_in_Japan

    The Japanese “pet boom” can be traced back to 2003 where it was estimated that the combined number of cats and dogs in Japan have outnumbered the number of children. [19] The estimated number of pets and children under 16 in Japan was 19.2 and 17.9 million respectively in 2003, and 23.2 million to 17 million in 2009.

  8. Nemuri-neko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemuri-neko

    The Nemuri-neko at Tōshō-gū The close-up image of the cat. Nemuri-neko (眠り猫 or 眠猫, "sleeping cat", from nemuri, "sleeping/peaceful" and neko, "cat") is a famous wood carving by Hidari Jingorō (左甚五郎の作) located in the East corridor at Tōshō-gū Shrine (日光東照宮) in Nikkō, Japan.

  9. Shrine honors cats at a Japanese island where they ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/shrine-honors-cats-japanese...

    On a small island off Japan’s northeastern coast, visitors make offerings at a shrine for unlikely local guardians: cats. The “Neko Jinja,” or Cat Shrine, mythologizes cats as guardian ...