
25 Unrestricted Understanding Your Cat PLR Articles
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#Cats #CatBehavior #UnderstandingYourCat #CatBreeds #BasicCatsNutrition
25 Unrestricted Understanding Your Cat PLR Articles
In this PLR Content Pack You’ll get 25 Unrestricted Understanding Your Cat PLR Articles with Private Label Rights to help you dominate the Summer Cats market which is a highly profitable and in-demand niche.
These Understanding Your Cat PLR articles are available in Text file format and can be downloaded instantly after purchase.
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Introducing The…
25 Unrestricted Understanding Your Cat PLR Articles Pack
Who Can Use This PLR Article Pack?
- Internet Marketers
- Coaches
- Affiliate Marketers
- Digital Product Resellers
- List Builders
- Bloggers
What Can You Do This Understanding Your Cat PLR?
- Resell it as an E-course.
- Use it as blog posts.
- Create an autoresponder series.
- Create an ebook, video or report to resell or use it to build your email list.
- Create any kind of info product which you can resell with a personal use license.
- And MANY other ways!
Here are the titles of the 25 Unrestricted Understanding Your Cat Articles:
- A Short History Of Cats
- Basic Nutrition For Cats
- Cat Behavior
- Cat Behavior More Oddities
- Cat Breeds American Shorthair
- Cat Breeds Maine Coon Cat
- Cat Breeds Persian
- Cat Breeds Siamese
- Cat Breeds Turkish Angora
- Cat Breeds Turkish Van
- Cat Mythology Cats as Deity
- Cat Mythology Cats as Familiars
- Deworming Multiple Cats
- How Kittens Learn to Hunt
- Let’s Go For A Walk!
- Naming Your Cat
- ocializing Kittens
- Raising Kittens
- Selecting Your Cat
- Spotted Cat Breeds
- The Importance of Understanding Your Cat
- Tips for Understanding Your Cat
- Understanding Your Cat’s 5 Senses
- Understanding Your Cat’s Aggressive Behavior
- Unusual Cat Breeds
Here’s a Sample Article So That You Know What To Expect From These PLR Article Pack:
A Short History Of Cats
It seems strange that there was ever a time when cats were not a part of our lives. It’s been less that 10,000 years since cats swaggered into our lives. Hardly an eye blink in the grand sweep of life on this planet. Why were cats so late to join our team? The simple answer is they didn’t need us to survive. Cats were surviving just fine on their own. Then, people invented agriculture. Agriculture resulted in large scale storage of grains which attracted the usual and well know group of freeloaders, mice and rats. Grain attracted rodents. Rodents attracted cats who consider them tasty meals. The result was that cats set up housekeeping close to human settlements. Eventually, cats being cats, moved right on in.
Who were these first cats? The first clue lies in where agriculture was first practiced. Agriculture first took root (no pun intended) in the Middle East in a great sweep from modern day Turkey to Egypt. Within this area ranges the African wild cat, Felis libyca. African wild cats are slightly larger that our modern house cats and are yellow in color with muted stripes. These cats have a docile, almost laid back nature. Interestingly, these cats still tend to live and hunt near human dwellings today. Locals still like to catch and rear young wild cats as pets. When mature, wild cats raised by humans tend to behave very much like our familiar housecats. A very good case can (and has) been advanced designating Felis libyca as the principal founding population for domestic cats. At least two other varieties of wild cat are speculated to have contributed to the genetic make up of domestic cats. One is Felis silvestris, The European wildcat who appears to have contributed darker markings and a peppery spirit to the African wild
cat base. Also, from Asia, comes the Pallas or Steppe cat (Felis manul) that appears to have contributed long-haired coats to the mix.
The early period of domestication of cats is vague with only patches of evidence. However, by 6,000 B.C. statues found in Anatolia (modern Turkey) show women playing with domestic cats. Cats had clearly become common and affectionate pets by that time. The earliest written records about cats appear by approximately 4,000 B.C. in Egypt
where they were frequently kept to hunt mice and rats from stored grains. It was a good time to be a cat in ancient Egypt. Domestic cats were thought to be the embodiment of the goddess Bast (or Bastet). There was a necropolis at her principal temple at Bubastis that contained mummified cats.
Romans spread the domestic cat northward into central Europe and westward to Britain during the expansion of their empire. Cats were quickly adopted and admired as great hunters. And they continued to move north and east in Europe. The Vikings used cats as both rodent hunters and pets. The Viking goddess of love and war, Freyja, was
associated with cats. Huge winged cats drew her chariot. It also became the custom to give new brides a kitten in her name.
The Middle Ages it were a very bad time to be a cat. Cats were said to be witches familiars, in league with the devil. Because of this superstition, cats were routinely killed during festivals. Sometimes they were even burned alive or thrown off tall buildings. The Europeans paid heavily for their cruelty to cats. The deaths of so many cats allowed the rodent population to rise out of control, bringing in the Black Death which killed so much of the European population. Eventually, the cats’ cleanly ways and hunting prowess redeemed them in the eyes of the people of Europe. By the 1600s, people in France began putting little holes near the bottom of their doors to allow their cats to enter and leave as they please.
In Asia cats continued to be familiar hunters and cherished pets. Cats were often subjects for drawing and painting in China. In Japan, cats in the form of Maneki Neko, usually portrayed as a sitting cat with one paw raised and bent, are considered good fortune. They are often found in businesses to draw in money.
Please Note: The above content is only a sample preview of one of the articles in this PLR Article Pack so that you can see the quality of the content.
How to Purchase This Understanding Your Cat PLR Pack?
Simply add it to cart, and checkout using with our secure 2Checkout Payment Gateway which supports PayPal and all major Credit Cards.
We will only be selling 50 copies on this Understanding Your Cat PLR content pack, so don’t waste any time and grab your PLR license while it’s still available for sale.
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Package Details:
Download File Size – 204 KB
License Details:
[YES] You get all the articles with private label rights
[YES] You can brand the articles with your name
[YES] You can edit the articles
[YES] You can use the articles to create an autoresponder email series
[YES] You can use articles as web content
[YES] You can use articles as content for your ebooks
[YES] You can use articles as content for your reports
[YES] You can use articles as content for your off-line publications
[YES] You can use translate all articles to any language you want
[YES] You can sell the articles
[YES] You can sell them with resale rights
[YES] You can sell them with master resale rights
[YES] You can sell them with private label rights
[YES] You can add them to your membership sites
[YES] You can sell them in auction sites
[YES] You can use them to build your list
[YES] You can give them as a bonus
[YES] You can package them and sell the packages in any way you want
[YES] You can start a membership site and deliver articles to your members
[NO] You cannot give them away for free under any circumstances
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