As the person who started off this thread I wish to thank everyone for their input, even if it did go off track a few times. At least we have a few hotels named for us to avoid. I think the old excuse that cats kill the other vermin is a bit of a red herring and lame excuse for lazy hotel owners who cant be bothered to spend money on professional pest busters
if they have a problem. If the tourists feed the cats thats even better as far as the hoteliers are concerned.
Must admit to being a bit worried now as it seems that in Cyprus where there are aren't any cats the whole place is swarming with dangerous creatures that swallow tourists alive? Having survived five trips to India I guess we will be OK as long as the snakes aren't bigger than the Indian Python.
Anyway I think we might risk it at the Athena Royal Beach unless anyone tells me different.
Incidentally a cousin of ours contracted viral encephalitis about 12 months ago. A very nasty, disabling disease that has left her with a type of premature Alzheimers at age 58. She was very much a cat lover, member of CPL and she took in feral and stray cats, up to 6 or 7 at a time. Probably just a coincidence.
"What causes encephalitis?The cause of encephalitis varies depending on the season, the area of the country, and the type of exposure. Viruses are the leading cause of encephalitis. Although vaccines for many viruses, including measles, mumps, rubella, and chickenpox have greatly lowered the rate of encephalitis from these diseases, other viruses can cause encephalitis. These include herpes simplex virus and rabies.Encephalitis can also occur following infection by disease-carrying agents including ticks (Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever), mosquitoes (West Nile virus, St. Louis encephalitis), and cats (toxoplasmosis and cat-scratch disease)."
Cheers everyone