I do not own a cat, but after defrosting my freezer and noticing this, I suspect someone who lived here before did...
I do not own a cat, but after defrosting my freezer and noticing this, I suspect someone who lived here before did...
I would guess that your predecessor stabbed at the ice layer with pointy knife instead of defrosting it properly.
Why would any pet ever claw inside your freezer?!.
67ReplyYeah, I'm guessing they used a honing steel to smash ice buildup.
Source: I've used a honing steel and plastic mallet to break up ice in freezers before.
12ReplyI agree, these can't be cat toothmarks because they'd be in pairs. And I'm extremely glad no cats were frozen in the creation of this post.
11ReplyThis wasn't where the ice buildup was - I guessed maybe they left the door open at some point and an animal had a nibble
4ReplyThis wasn't where the ice buildup was NOW, because they'd chipped it all away. Generally, marks from cat teeth come in pairs.
13Reply
Those are pretty big for cat claws. I would guess dog.
16ReplyYeah not a cat. Their claws are too sharp for these marks.
10ReplyTheir claws are too sharp for these marks.
Randomly got Obi Wan vibes off your reply, lmao.
11Reply
They're really small, just a close up picture - holes about 1mm - I assumed teeth? It's the bottom drawer so about cat-face-height
2Reply
Doesn't look like claw or teeth marks. Maybe those people b3fore you tried to speed up the defrosting by punching it with a sharp object like a knife that left tese marks?
15ReplyOr an ice pick.
6Reply
I was sure this would be a picture of the dead cat you found in the freezer
6Reply 4ReplySoooo many horror movie ideas
4ReplyHow are the marks made in the freezer
1Reply