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?!.
68 0 ReplyYeah, 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.
12 0 ReplyI 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.
11 0 ReplyThis wasn't where the ice buildup was - I guessed maybe they left the door open at some point and an animal had a nibble
5 0 ReplyThis wasn't where the ice buildup was NOW, because they'd chipped it all away. Generally, marks from cat teeth come in pairs.
13 0 Reply
Those are pretty big for cat claws. I would guess dog.
17 0 ReplyYeah not a cat. Their claws are too sharp for these marks.
11 0 ReplyTheir claws are too sharp for these marks.
Randomly got Obi Wan vibes off your reply, lmao.
11 0 Reply
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
3 0 Reply
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?
15 0 ReplyOr an ice pick.
6 0 Reply
I was sure this would be a picture of the dead cat you found in the freezer
7 0 Reply5 0 ReplySoooo many horror movie ideas
4 0 ReplyHow are the marks made in the freezer
2 0 Reply