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Home / Cafe Culture / My Cat Kato vs. The Kona Coffee PlantNext week many boxing fans will tune into see Evander Holyfield fight Lennox Lewis. Not me, I'll be watching a continuing battle in my own home. The two warriors are my 6 month old kitten and my Hawaiian Kona plant. The plant is doing it's best to stay alive outside of Hawaiian soil and the kitten is doing her best to rip every leaf off. As much as we try to keep our kitten, Kato, away from the Hawaiian Kona plant, she still manages to sneak over and rough it up every now and then. Will the plant survive Kato's wrath? Will Kato show mercy? Or will the plant survive regardless of whatever Kato dishes out? Which contender has more stamina and strength? In this corner: Kona Coffee PlantThe Kona plant by most accounts should have been dead along time ago. How does a delicate Kona coffee plant survive in Alexandria, Virginia? The DC Metro area is hardly an ideal region for a coffee plant. Not only has the plant survived, it has grown to height of almost five feet tall. Granted it won't produce coffee, but it is a cool plant regardless.
In this corner: Kato The KittenKato is a feisty kitten full of energy with a devastating right jab. Her reach is extensive and her vertical leap is also impressive. She can easily grab the leaves of the lower half of the Kona plant and she has on more than one occasion.
Tale of the Tape
Who will win?In our household we hope that Kato will throw in the towel and announce her retirement. We do our best to keep Kato away from Kona, but we aren't always successful. Maybe we can get Don King to convince Kato to move on to a new challenge, like attacking the cat in the mirror. Meanwhile, the Kona continues it's rope-a-dope* strategy. Is the Kona conserving energy or will Kato deliver the knockout punch? Ding! Rope-A-Dope: In 1974, Muhammed Ali fought heavily-favored George Foreman in Zaire in a fight known as "The Rumble in the Jungle". Foreman was considered the hardest puncher in heavyweight history, but Ali won. Ali backed himself up against the ropes and let Foreman punch until tiring himself out. Later Ali came off the ropes to win the fight. Muhammed Ali called this his "rope-a-dope" technique. Update (6/2000)The winner of the the Kato vs Kona battle, turned out to be the Kona plant. The Kona plant hung in through several beatings, until eventually Kato got bored and started picking on the leather couch. Prior to moving from Alexandria to San Diego, the plant was donated to our neighborhood coffee shop. Today that plant sits proudly in the front window of the Starbucks at 1464 N. Beauregard Street in Alexandria, VA. Kato also moved to San Diego. There are no plans for a rematch. |