A good meal can push even the best of us to licking a plate clean.
But this cat got a little too enthusiastic about its tuna dinner and got the tin stuck around its neck.
Now, the RSPCA has launched a search for the grey striped cat after it was last seen wandering around Saltash, in Cornwall.
The top and the bottom of the tin have come off, leaving the animal to walk around with its neck trapped through the middle – which could also have dangerously sharp edges.
Someone already reported seeing the cat and the RSPCA delivered a trap to them, but the animal is apparently ‘very flighty and runs off when approached’.
The charity said: ‘If anyone is local to the area and see the poor cat, then please try and usher it safely into somewhere it can be caught, [such as a] shed, garage, etc.’
It also asked that if anyone does manage to get hold of the cat, to ‘please not attempt to take the can off yourself, you could hurt yourself and the cat further’.
This tuna enthusiast is not the only feline causing trouble this week.
Residents in Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, had their power cut just two days ago so rescuers could save a kitten that had climbed up a live electricity pole.
Little Gryffyndor, who is just one year old, spent between eight and 10 hours at the top of the 10-metre pole.
Another cat dedicated to living up to the animals’ reputation for mischief got itself stuck between a wall and a conservatory.
Ollie was so tightly in there, firefighters had to cut a hole in the Kent home to get him out.
Cats often get themselves in these sticky situations because they underestimate their size and look to get into small spaces for warmth and comfort.
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