2319 lines
107 KiB
Plaintext
2319 lines
107 KiB
Plaintext
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PUREBRED CATS
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R. Roger Breton
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Nancy J Creek
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Longhairs, Shorthairs, and Nohairs
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There are several reasons for obtaining a cat of breeding. With a
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purebred cat it is possible to predict what a kitten will be like as
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an adult (assuming a loving environment). An Abyssinian, for example,
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can be counted upon to become a loving, affectionate cat, one who will
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not be afraid of strangers and who will be easily trainable to car
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travel, etc.
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A cat of breeding is required if you wish to show. Showing your cat
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can be a joyous and rewarding experience for both you and your cat
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(especially if you win), but should not become a business.
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Selecting a cat of breeding is much like selecting any cat, save that
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the number of dollars changing hands is often quite high ($300 and up
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is typical, and the "up" can become "'way up").
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There is one reason for not getting a cat of breeding, and that is
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vanity. If your only reason for getting a Chinchilla Persian is to
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have a Chinchilla Persian when your friends all have American Shor-
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thairs, then both you and your Chinchilla Persian will be unhappy in
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the long run. A living cat is not an object d'art, to be purchased
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and admired. He is a living, breathing creature, who should be ob-
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tained solely as an object d'amour. It is love and devotion he will
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require and it is love and devotion he will return, and he won't care
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a whit if you are white, black, or chartreuse, or if you are descended
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from Mary Queen of Scots or Attila the Hun.
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In the following breed descriptions there are several things to ob-
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serve: Each description has a group of tabulated parameters followed
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by a thumbnail description. The tabulated parameters are:
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Coat: The character of the coat: shorthair, longhair, or extra-care
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longhair.
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"Shorthair" means a short- or medium-haired breed requiring no
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special care.
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"Longhair" means a long-haired breed requiring frequent brushing
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and grooming, but with (so-called) non-matting hair: no disaster
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if the cat gets a tangle or snag, as it can usually be brushed or
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combed out.
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"Extra-care longhair" means a long-haired breed that must be cared
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for daily, else its fur will quickly become one large mat. In
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general, short-haired breeds require less care and attention than
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long-haired.
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Purebred Cats Page 1
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Environment: The living arrangements for which the breed is best
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suited: apartment, home, or rural.
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"Apartment" means an indoor-only environment and a breed suitable
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for city living.
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"Home" means an indoor-outdoor environment and a breed with small
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territorial requirements, one that would do well in the typical
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suburban home-and-yard.
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"Rural" means an indoor-outdoor or outdoor-only environment and a
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breed with large territorial requirements, such a cat may well
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pine if kept indoors all the time. Most cats are adaptable, and
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do well in differing environments.
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Disposition: The normal personality of the breed: affectionate or
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reserved, active or tranquil, and quiet or vocal.
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"Affectionate" means a breed that is very demonstrative in its
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affection.
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"Reserved" means a less demonstrative breed (but just as loving).
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"Active" means an animal always on the go, the typical overgrown
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kitten.
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"Tranquil" means asedate and dignified animal.
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"Quiet" means a non-talking breed.
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"Vocal," means a breed that won't shut up.
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These criteria, like all such opposing definitions, are only
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somewhat accurate: some breeds are very active, some moderately
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active, some slightly active, some slightly tranquil, some moder-
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ately tranquil, and some very tranquil, with all shadings in
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between: these variations have been arbitrarily distilled into
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"active" and "tranquil," and are only guides. Also please remem-
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ber that individuals may vary widely from the norm for their
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breed, depending upon how they are raised (we once met a mean
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Abyssinian, and the term "mean Abyssinian" is practically an
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oxymoron).
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Best With: The people with whom the breed does best: one-person,
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family, family with children.
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"One-person" indicates the breed does not do well with groups of
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people, but prefers the companionship and love of a single human
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being.
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"Family" indicates a breed that does well with groups of people,
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such as an entire family, but does not do well with small children
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(especially toddlers).
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Purebred Cats Page 2
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"Family with children" indicates a breed that also does well with
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small children.
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Colors: The coat colors normally permitted for the breed. There are
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twelve color groups: standard solid (solid colors), standard
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(patched solid, tortie, calico, tabby, patched tabby, torbie, and
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torbico colors), shaded (smoked, shaded, chinchilla, chinchilla
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tortie, golden, golden tortie, and silver tabby colors), spotted
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(spotted tabby and silver spotted tabby colors), Abyssinian
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(Abyssinian and silver Abyssinian colors), oriental (oriental
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solid colors), Burmese (Burmese colors), Tonkinese (Tonkinese
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colors), Siamese (Siamese solid-point colors), colorpoint (Siamese
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tortie-, lynx-, and torbie-point colors), Van (Van colors), and
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white (dominant white).
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We wish to emphasize that the terms Abyssinian, Burmese, Tonki-
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nese, and Siamese when used under this heading, refer to colors,
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not breeds. For example, both the Himalayan and Siamese breeds
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come in Siamese colors: other than that, they are completely
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different.
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Breeds that have specific colors only will have those specific
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colors listed.
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Abyssinian
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Home
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Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
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Best With: Family with Children
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Colors: Abyssinian
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The Abyssinian, an ancient breed, is a medium-sized cat with a sleek
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intermediate body, long legs and tail, and a wedge head with a tapered
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muzzle and large pointed often-tufted ears.
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Often called the bunny cat because of its rabbit-like coloration, its
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all-agouti coat is short, close lying and soft. It has striking
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facial markings, reminiscent of some of the monocolor wild species,
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such as the Puma, which it strongly resembles (sort of a micro-puma).
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Active, intelligent and affectionate, it adapts well to family life
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and is easily trained.
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In competition with the Egyptian Mau for oldest breed, the Abyssinian
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also traces back to the Egyptian middle period, but via Abyssinia (now
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Ethiopia) and with less hard evidence. Be that as it may, it is
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definitely an older breed, with the same kind of primitive hair
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structure as the Egyptian Mau (less prone to cause allergic reactions
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in people).
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Regardless of the longevity of the breeds, the Abyssinian is
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Purebred Cats Page 3
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definitely more domesticated than the Egyptian Mau, being an outgoing
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and demonstrably loving breed. It is also exceptionally intelligent
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and is easily trained.
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The Abyssinian became popular in Britain in the Early 1900's, being
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descended from Zula, a queen actually imported from Abyssinia (hence
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the name of the breed) in the 1860's. The Breed virtually vanished
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during the First World War, only to make an amazing comeback during
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the inter-war period. In the 1930's several prize Abyssinians were
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imported from Britain into the U.S., forming the basis of the breed in
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this country. During the Second World War the breed did completely
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vanish in Britain (see the wartime comments under British Shorthair).
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During the post-war reconstruction period, the Abyssinian was re-
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introduced into Britain from the U.S., only to be decimated again in
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the late 60's and early 70's by a massive feline leukemia epidemic.
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Abyssinians were again re-introduced, from the U.S. and from the
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European continent, and are currently flourishing in Britain.
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A long-haired Abyssinian also exists as the Somali.
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American Curl
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
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Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
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Best With: Family with Children
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Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
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The American Curl, a large cat with a muscular cobby body, medium legs
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and tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and a unique ear
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structure, there being a kink along the inside edges of the ear,
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causing them to bend inward and giving the face a comical and
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inquisitive appearance, has a short, thick, and smooth coat with a
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heavy undercoat.
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The American Curl is essentially an American Shorthair with mutated
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ears, retaining all that is good in the parent breed while adding a
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quizzical appearance. Playful, inquisitive and an excellent hunter,
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it adapts well to almost any environment. Its tolerance of the ways
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of children make it an excellent family cat.
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American Shorthair
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
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Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
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Best With: Family with Children
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Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
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The American Shorthair, a large cat with a muscular cobby body, medium
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legs and tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and blunt ears,
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has a short, thick, and smooth coat with a heavy undercoat.
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Purebred Cats Page 4
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The basic cat in the U.S., it is playful, inquisitive and an excellent
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hunter, adapting well to almost any environment.
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A composite of those cats brought on the Mayflower and by other early
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British and French settlers in New England and eastern Canada, the
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American short-hair has evolved into a hardy breed ideally suited to
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the New World. Slightly more lithe than its European cousins, the
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American short-hair is perfectly adapted to the slightly faster
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rodents found in the American countryside.
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A British Shorthair named Belle (though it was a tom) was imported
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into the U.S. in 1901 and, through cross-breeding with native American
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stock, formed the basis for the American Shorthair as a show breed.
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The first true American Shorthair show cat was Buster Brown, bred in
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1904.
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Originally called simply Shorthairs by contrast with the then only
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other American breed, the Maine Coon, they were later called Domestic
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Shorthairs, a name that still clings to the unregistered Heinz~
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variety.
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With its extraordinarily keen hunting instincts, its neat and tidy
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ways, and its ready adaptability to new environments, this is the
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quintessential work cat. Many American (or Domestic) Shorthairs may
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be found earning their keep in all walks of life across the country.
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Besides the obvious farm cat and ship's cat, working cats are to be
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found in such diverse places as firehouses, police stations, hardware
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stores, and libraries: anywhere the mouse or rat might decide to make
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his home. Such working cats are not really cats in the sense of this
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book, but are beloved and contributing members of their firms.
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With its short-but-thick coat, the American Shorthair can cope with
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all but the most extreme of weather, and is often found happily
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roaming outside in conditions that would frighten a brass monkey.
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Being a naturally peaceful and loving breed, tolerant of abuse at the
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hands of small children, it makes the ideal all-around cat.
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American Wirehair
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
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Disposition: Reserved, Active, Quiet
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Best With: Family with Children
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Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
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The American Wirehair, a large cat with a muscular cobby body, medium
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legs and tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and blunt ears,
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has a short, course, wiry coat with a thick undercoat, similar in
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texture to that of the Wirehair Terrier dog.
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The American Wirehair is essentially an American Shorthair with a
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Purebred Cats Page 5
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mutated coat, and retains all the hardiness, skills, and devotion of
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the parent breed, being playful, inquisitive, an excellent hunter,
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adapting well to almost any environment. Being tolerant of the ways of
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small children, it makes an excellent cat.
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Balinese
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Coat: Longhair
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Environment: Home
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Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
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Best With: One-Person
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Colors: Siamese
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The Balinese, a medium-sized cat with a long oriental body, long legs
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and tail, and a triangular head with a pointed muzzle, bright blue
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eyes and large pointed ears, has a medium-long, fine, thick, and silky
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solid-pointed fawn-to-ivory coat without a ruff.
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Originally bred in the late 1940's from Siamese stock carrying a
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recessive longhair gene, the Balinese is like the Siamese in every way
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save its long coat.
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Being, like the Siamese, active, loving, playful, intelligent,
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curious, and sensitive, the Balinese does best with an owner who will
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understand its capricious ways.
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Bengal
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Apartment or Home
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Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
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Best With: Family with Children
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Colors: Spotted
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The Bengal is a large cat with a muscular cobby-to-intermediate body,
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short legs and tail, and a large round head with a square muzzle and
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small round ears.
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Its spotted coat is thick and silky.
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Tranquil and loving, it adapts well to family life.
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The Bengal is a new breed, still in the experimental stage. It is a
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true hybrid, in that it's immediate ancestors are the domestic Ocicat
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and American Shorthair and the wild Leopard Cat (felis bengalensis).
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The breeding program, executed by Jean Mill of Millwood Cattery in
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Covina, California, involved several generations of crossbreeding
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until the proper coloration and temperament was achieved.
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With the basic body structure of the Ocicat, the loving disposition of
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the American Shorthair, and the beautiful coat of the Leopard Cat, the
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Bengal is indeed a striking and unique cat. Primarily bred for the
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Purebred Cats Page 6
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home, it is wild in appearance only, being somewhat less of a roamer
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and hunter than either its Ocicat or American Shorthair forebears: it
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is in essence a lover, not a fighter. It does well with children,
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even small children, and spreads its devotion among the whole family.
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Birman
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Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
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Environment: Apartment or Home
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Disposition: Reserved, Tranquil, Vocal
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Best With: One-Person
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Colors: Siamese with Birman Spotting
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The Birman, the Sacred Cat of Burma, is a medium-sized cat with a
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massive oriental body, medium legs and tail, and a broad round head
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with a short muzzle and rounded ears. Its Birman-spotted Siamese coat
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is fairly long and silky, thick on the neck and tail.
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Developed in France in the early 1900's the Birman superficially
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resembles the Himalayan at first glance. Close examination, however,
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reveals many differences, the most obvious of which is the white boots
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of the Birman-spotting gene. It also sports an oriental rather than
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cobby body, and its coat has more the texture of the Turkish Angora
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than the Persian.
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Burmese legend has it that, before the time of Buddah, in the
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beautiful Khymer temple of Lao-Tsun high in the Himalayan mountains,
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there was a sapphire-eyed golden statue of the goddess Tsun-Kyan-Kse.
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The statue was watched over by an old priest, Mun-Ha, who's beard was
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as golden as the statue, and was said to have been braided by the god
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Song-Hyo himself. Mun-ha had 100 pure-white cats, one of which was
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Sihn, his especial companion.
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One night raiders attacked, killing Mun-Ha as he knelt in prayer
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before the figure of the goddess. Immediately Sihn jumped upon the
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body of his beloved master and faced the statue, and the soul of Mun-
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Ha passed into his cat. Sihn's fur suddenly became as golden as the
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old priest's beard, while his eyes became as the sapphire eyes of the
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goddess. His face, ears, tail, and legs were burned brown by the
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passage of the soul, except for his feet, which rested directly upon
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his master's body: they remained the purest white. This sudden
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transformation so inspired the other priests that they were able to
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drive off the raiders.
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Seven days later, Sihn died and carried the soul of his master to
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paradise. On the following morning all the remaining 99 cats had also
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undergone the same transformation. Since that time, the priests of
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Lao-Tsun have cared for their sacred cats, believing them to be the
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guardians of their souls.
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The original Birman, a pregnant queen, was a gift to France from the
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priests of a new Tibetian temple of Lao-Tsun.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Purebred Cats Page 7
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There are those with no romance in their souls who say the Birman was
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developed by crossing Siamese with various black and white longhairs.
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Whatever their origins, the Birman virtually disappeared from France
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during the Second World War (see the wartime comments under British
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Shorthair), and had to be rebred from a pair of surviving kittens.
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In the 1960's, a pair of "Temple Kittens" was given to an American
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while working in Tibet. They were accompanied by the same legend,
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down to the 100 cats. These kittens formed the basis of the breed in
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this country, and their offspring have been sent to Britain and
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France, where they have been used to strengthen the existing Birman
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line.
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Tranquil, sociable, and intelligent, the Birman does best with quiet
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people and may mope if left alone.
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Bombay
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Apartment
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Disposition: Reserved, Tranquil, Vocal
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Best With: Family
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Colors: Ebony
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The Bombay, a medium-sized cat with an intermediate body, long legs
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and tail, and a round head with a short muzzle, large round eyes, and
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round ears, has a satiny and close-lying deep ebony coat. Its coat is
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so satiny as to give the appearance of patent leather.
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Bred by crossing the Burmese with the American Shorthair, the Bombay
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is often referred to as a mini-panther or "plastic cat" because of its
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unique coat. The reason behind the unique coat texture is still being
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argued, but is believed to be caused by a spontaneous mutation to the
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texture of the hair itself. These cats are "black to the bone,"
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sporting a black-on-black coat. When this coat is coupled with
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exceptionally large bright-copper-penny eyes, a truly beautiful cat is
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formed.
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Quiet, sensitive, reserved and intelligent, the Bombay does best in a
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quiet home, where it is affectionate to the whole family.
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British Blue
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
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Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
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Best With: Family with Children
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Colors: Blue
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The British Blue is a blue British Shorthair, making it a large cat
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with a muscular cobby body, short legs and tail, and a round head with
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Purebred Cats Page 8
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a square muzzle and small wide-spaced round ears. Its blue-gray coat
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is short and dense with a heavy undercoat.
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Like other British Shorthairs, it was decimated during the Second
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World War, but has been recreated by careful breeding.
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Playful, inquisitive, and an excellent hunter, it adapts well to
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almost any environment, and makes an excellent cat.
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British Shorthair
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Coat: Shorthair
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Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
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||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
|
||
|
||
The British Shorthair, a large cat with a muscular cobby body, short
|
||
legs and tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and small wide-
|
||
spaced round ears, has a short, dense coat with a heavy undercoat.
|
||
|
||
Bred over almost 2000 years from cats originally brought by the Romans
|
||
(Julius Caesar came, saw, conquered, and brought cats), the British
|
||
Shorthair is more a native of Britain than any Anglo-Saxon and has
|
||
evolved into a strong cat with a dense coat capable of withstanding
|
||
the worst of British weather. Quick and alert, this is the basic cat
|
||
in all of Great Britain and Ireland.
|
||
|
||
During the First and Second World Wars all breeds of cats suffered
|
||
drastically in Britain and, to a lesser degree, on the European
|
||
continent. Because of the drastic food shortages during the Blitz,
|
||
"cat" became known as "roof-rabbit," and filled many a stewpot. This
|
||
is perhaps best considered as merely another way in which the
|
||
beautiful cat contributed to the betterment of mankind.
|
||
|
||
Of all the breeds of cats decimated by the wars, the beautiful British
|
||
Shorthair suffered perhaps worst of all. As a result this breed,
|
||
native to the isles, all but vanished. After the war, efforts were
|
||
made to restore the breed by crossing those few survivors with
|
||
American and European Shorthairs. This produced a somewhat less cobby
|
||
cat. Attempts were made to correct this by breeding in the
|
||
exceptionally cobby Persian. The result is the current British
|
||
Shorthair, about the same body type and disposition of its pre-war
|
||
forebears, but with a slightly flatter face and thicker, more
|
||
luxuriant coat from the Persian influence. This latter is the result
|
||
not of the longhair genes, but of the polygene influence carefully
|
||
bred for in Persians to make the coat thick and silky as well as long.
|
||
|
||
There are some purist breeders now rebreeding the original British
|
||
Shorthair from cats recently discovered in Scotland and Ireland. Time
|
||
will tell whether the original breed will be restored, or whether
|
||
there will eventually be two breeds of British Shorthair.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 9
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Regardless of the details of the breed, the disposition is the same:
|
||
playful, inquisitive, and an excellent hunter, the British Shorthair
|
||
is fond of children and an excellent cat. It adapts well to almost
|
||
any environment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Burmese
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Sable
|
||
|
||
The Burmese, a medium-sized cat with a solid muscular oriental body,
|
||
long slender legs and tail, and a round head with a tapered muzzle and
|
||
blunt ears, has a fine, thick, shiny, and very silky coat of a rich
|
||
sable-brown color. If an identical cat has a coat of any color other
|
||
than sable (the British standard also allows chocolate) it is classed
|
||
as a Malayan.
|
||
|
||
With a body style similar to the turn-of-the-century Siamese, the
|
||
Burmese is a gorgeous cat, with an acrobats body: well muscled but
|
||
not cobby.
|
||
|
||
All modern Burmese are descended from Wong Mau, a walnut-brown female
|
||
imported from Rangoon in the 1930's. Wong Mau's owner, U.S. Navy
|
||
doctor Joseph Thompson, was attracted to her by her unique coloring,
|
||
but most other breeders were unimpressed, considering her to be a
|
||
poorly colored Siamese. Cross breeding of Wong Mau and her kittens
|
||
with Siamese and back to Wong Mau herself established a definite
|
||
pattern of three phenotypes: normal Siamese, darker "Siamese" (now
|
||
called Tonkinese), and solid-color cats like Wong Mau herself. Her
|
||
unique genetic coding, caused by the Burmese allele of the albanism
|
||
gene was discovered and a new breed was born.
|
||
|
||
Affectionate and intelligent, the Burmese does best with one person
|
||
who will return its affection and talk to it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chartreux
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Blue
|
||
|
||
The Chartreux, derived from the European Shorthair, is a large cat
|
||
with a muscular cobby body, medium legs, short tail, and a slightly
|
||
squarish head with a square muzzle and wide-spaced large, blunt ears.
|
||
Its thick blue coat is short and fine, with a heavy undercoat.
|
||
|
||
As the Romanov's had their Russian Blues, so the Bourbons had their
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 10
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chartreux. Bred from original European Blue stock, the Chartreux now
|
||
has an entirely different coat texture, soft and silky, while keeping
|
||
its thick undercoat. The slate-blue of the European Blue has become
|
||
an almost iridescent silver-blue, producing a striking animal. This
|
||
cat even looks French.
|
||
|
||
Playful, inquisitive, reserved, and an excellent hunter, it adapts
|
||
well to almost any environment. It loves children and is an ideal
|
||
cat.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Colorpoint Longhair
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Colorpoint
|
||
|
||
The Colorpoint Longhair, a large cat with a short cobby body, short
|
||
legs, medium tail, and a round head with a very short muzzle and small
|
||
round ears, has an exceptionally long, thick, and silky colorpoint
|
||
coat with a definite ruff. It is essentially a Himalayan pointed in
|
||
other than solid colors.
|
||
|
||
Like the Persian, the Colorpoint Longhair is a quiet, tranquil, and
|
||
very reserved cat that does best in a quiet home free of noise,
|
||
children, and other pets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Colorpoint Shorthair
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Colorpoint
|
||
|
||
The Colorpoint Shorthair, a medium-sized cat with a long oriental
|
||
body, long legs and tail, and a triangular head with a pointed muzzle,
|
||
bright blue eyes and large pointed ears, has a fine, thick, glossy,
|
||
and close lying colorpointed fawn-to-ivory coat.
|
||
|
||
Identical with the Siamese in every way except the patterns present in
|
||
the points, the Colorpoint Shorthair is an outgrowth of the basic
|
||
Siamese breeding program.
|
||
|
||
Being, like the Siamese, active, loving, playful, intelligent,
|
||
curious, and sensitive, the Colorpoint Shorthair does best with an
|
||
owner who will understand its capricious ways.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 11
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Cornish Rex
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard
|
||
|
||
The Cornish Rex is a small cat with a slender oriental body, long legs
|
||
and tail, and a triangular head with a pointed muzzle, a long straight
|
||
nose, large eyes, and large blunt ears. Its has an unusual face,
|
||
giving it a mischievous and pixieish appearance. Its coat is very
|
||
curly and wavy, composed only of down hairs, making it unusually
|
||
short, fine, soft and silky.
|
||
|
||
The original rex cat was the German Rex, observed in a semi-feral
|
||
hospital cat in East Berlin in 1946. What with the post-war chaos and
|
||
reconstruction, this mutation was not actively followed up until the
|
||
late 1950's.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, a curly kitten named Kallibunker was born on a farm in
|
||
Cornwall, England, in 1951. Kallibunker's owner contacted a
|
||
professional breeder with an interest in genetics and the rest, as
|
||
they say, is history: the Cornish Rex was born, and is perhaps one of
|
||
the strangest-looking of cats, with its pixieish face and curly coat.
|
||
Two of Kallibunker's descendants were sent to the U.S. in 1957, and
|
||
formed the basis of the breed in this country.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, a curly-coated feral cat was observed to be living near a
|
||
tin mine in Buckfastleigh, Devonshire, England. A calico semi-feral
|
||
female cared for by a nearby resident mated with the curly-coated
|
||
feral (the two cats were probably related) and produced a curly
|
||
kitten, which was adopted and named Kirlee. Attempts to breed Kirlee
|
||
into the Cornish Rex line proved futile, no curly kittens resulted.
|
||
It was then realized that Kirlee was a distinctly different mutation,
|
||
and she was placed in her own breeding program to produce the Devon
|
||
Rex breed.
|
||
|
||
In 1960, three German Rexes were sent to the U.S., where crossbreeding
|
||
quickly determined that the German Rex and Cornish Rex were the same
|
||
mutation, distinct from the Devon Rex.
|
||
|
||
Agile, affectionate, intelligent and tranquil, the Cornish Rex adapts
|
||
well to family life and becomes an ideal lap cat for a quiet owner. A
|
||
delicate and quiet cat, it cannot tolerate rough handling, hence
|
||
children.
|
||
|
||
Lacking guard and awn hairs (running around in its underwear, as it
|
||
were), it sunburns easily and must be an indoor-only cat. It is a
|
||
non-shedding cat (no outer coat), making it ideal for people with cat
|
||
allergies.
|
||
|
||
In Siamese colors, the Cornish Rex is known as the Si-Rex.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 12
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Cymric
|
||
|
||
Coat: Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
|
||
|
||
The Cymric, a medium-sized cat with a very short cobby body, medium
|
||
forelegs and long hindlegs, no tail, and a round head with a square
|
||
muzzle and small wide-spaced round ears, has a medium-long, thick
|
||
coat, with a distinct ruff and a heavy undercoat.
|
||
|
||
First bred in the U.S. in the early 1960's, it is simply a long-haired
|
||
Manx, with the unique taillessness (and attendant problems) of that
|
||
breed. In recognition of the fact that the people of the Isle of Man
|
||
are Celts, as are the Welsh, it was decided to name the new breed
|
||
Cymric (pronounced "kumrik") after Cymru, the Welsh name for Wales.
|
||
|
||
Playful, inquisitive, and an excellent hunter, the Cymric adapts well
|
||
to almost any environment.
|
||
|
||
See the special notes under the Manx.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Devon Rex
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard
|
||
|
||
The Devon Rex is a small cat with a slender oriental body, long legs
|
||
and tail, and a moderately triangular head with a pointed muzzle, a
|
||
long stopped nose, large eyes, and exceptionally large blunt ears.
|
||
Its has an unusual face, giving it a mischievous and pixieish
|
||
appearance. Its coat is very curly and wavy, composed only of down
|
||
hairs and a very light outercoat of awn hairs, making it short, fine,
|
||
soft and silky.
|
||
|
||
Not related to the Cornish Rex, its history is nonetheless linked and
|
||
is described under that breed.
|
||
|
||
Agile, affectionate, intelligent, and tranquil, the Devon Rex adapts
|
||
well to family life and becomes an ideal lap cat for a quiet owner. A
|
||
delicate and quiet cat, it cannot tolerate rough handling, hence
|
||
children.
|
||
|
||
Lacking awn hairs it sunburns easily and must be an indoor-only cat.
|
||
It is a non-shedding cat (no outer coat), making it ideal for people
|
||
with cat allergies.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 13
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Egyptian Mau
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Reserved, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Spotted
|
||
|
||
The Egyptian Mau, a medium-sized cat with a sleek intermediate body,
|
||
long legs and tail, and a wedge head with a tapered muzzle, large
|
||
pointed ears, large distinctive eyes and exceptionally long vibrissae,
|
||
has a short, close lying, moderately soft spotted coat. This is the
|
||
only naturally spotted breed.
|
||
|
||
Active, very fast, a good hunter, affectionate and reserved, it adapts
|
||
well to apartment living, especially when neutered, and gets along
|
||
with everyone, though it will establish a favorite person.
|
||
|
||
Introduced into the U.S. from Egypt in the 1950's, this breed should
|
||
not be confused with the "Egyptian Cats" or "Maus" formerly bred in
|
||
Great Britain. This pseudo-Mau is now known as the spotted Oriental
|
||
Shorthair, and has been bred from Siamese stock.
|
||
|
||
The first pair of Egyptian Maus, Gepa and Ludol, were brought to the
|
||
U.S. in 1953, but it was some years before the cat clubs came to
|
||
recognize the breed. It is now recognized throughout the U.S., but
|
||
not in Britain. It might be pointed out that the first true Egyptian
|
||
Maus were imported to Britain from Egypt in 1978, so recognition
|
||
should be forthcoming.
|
||
|
||
This is perhaps the oldest of all breeds of domestic cats, with the
|
||
possible exception of the Abyssinian, traceable back to the Egyptian
|
||
Middle Period (about the time of the Israelite Exodus). Its body
|
||
structure and fur are less sophisticated than the more-recently bred
|
||
varieties, and it is pound-for-pound the fastest of all the domestic
|
||
cats: individuals have been clocked at 36 mph, as contrasted to 31
|
||
mph for the fastest American Shorthairs.
|
||
|
||
There is an interesting trait to this cat: when pursued by a larger
|
||
animal, such as a dog, it will sometimes decide to turn and fight even
|
||
when it is easily escaping. When it makes such a decision, it pivots
|
||
and charges in one clean springing movement, causing much surprise to
|
||
the pursuing dog. It usually wins such fights against other domestic
|
||
animals, but is really no match for a truly wild animal (like a
|
||
coyote), since it is domesticated and has lost the fine edge to its
|
||
fighting and hunting abilities. A few generations of feral life,
|
||
though, and it'll defeat anything twice its weight or better.
|
||
|
||
The Egyptian Mau ("mau" is old Egyptian for "cat") is a good cat for
|
||
people who are allergic to cats. Its older, less sophisticated fur
|
||
seems to not cause as many allergy problems (the original hypo-
|
||
allergenic kitty?).
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 14
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
European Blue
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Blue
|
||
|
||
The European Blue is essentially a blue European shorthair, being
|
||
identical in every way except color. It is a large cat with a
|
||
muscular cobby body, medium legs, short tail, and a round head with a
|
||
square muzzle and wide-spaced blunt ears. Selective breeding has
|
||
produced a luxurious slate-blue coat, short, thick and fine, with a
|
||
heavy undercoat and an outercoat that may be somewhat bristly.
|
||
|
||
Playful, inquisitive, reserved, and an excellent hunter, it adapts
|
||
well to almost any environment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
European Shorthair
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
|
||
|
||
The European Shorthair, a large cat with a muscular cobby body, medium
|
||
legs, short tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and wide-
|
||
spaced blunt ears, has a short, thick, and fine coat, with a heavy
|
||
undercoat and an outercoat that may be somewhat bristly. This thick
|
||
and somewhat shaggy coat allows it to survive the rugged European
|
||
winters. It is possible (perhaps probable) that there is some
|
||
European Wildcat, felis sylvestris, in the bloodline, producing the
|
||
slightly rough outercoat and extra-thick undercoat.
|
||
|
||
Derived from basic stock brought to Europe from Egypt by the Romans,
|
||
the European Shorthair is the basic domestic cat on the European
|
||
continent. With many individuals becoming feral throughout history,
|
||
this cat is practically another wild species alongside the European
|
||
Wildcat. Indeed, in some areas it or breeds derived from it (such as
|
||
the Norwegian Forest Cat) outrange their wild cousins.
|
||
|
||
Throughout Europe and Britain, the tabby pattern-of-choice is the
|
||
classic or blotched rather than the mackerel. This is probably the
|
||
result of confusion between large brown mackerel-tabby toms and
|
||
European Wildcats. The former would usually snuggle and purr when
|
||
caressed, while the latter would remove a finger or two! The European
|
||
Wildcat also has difficulty distinguishing between, say, a wild
|
||
pheasant and a domestic chicken. As a result, many farmers and
|
||
villagers started driving away or even killing mackerel-tabbies on
|
||
sight: the result, a tendency for classic-tabbies to flourish despite
|
||
the recessiveness of their genes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 15
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
While affectionate, the European Shorthair is slightly more reserved
|
||
than its British and American brothers, possibly the result of
|
||
generations of persecution by the peasantry under the auspices of the
|
||
Church. Once deceived, it is virtually impossible to regain its
|
||
trust. For those who will love and cherish it, however, it is an
|
||
excellent cat, being playful and inquisitive.
|
||
|
||
Being an excellent hunter and adapting well to almost any environment,
|
||
and makes an excellent work cat and is the quintessential ship's cat.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Exotic Shorthair
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded, Siamese,
|
||
Colorpoint
|
||
|
||
The Exotic Shorthair, a large cat with a short cobby body, short legs,
|
||
medium tail, and a round head with a very short muzzle and small round
|
||
ears, dense, soft, silky, and very plush coat, slightly longer than
|
||
that of other short-hairs, not lying too close to the body but rather
|
||
springy and alive.
|
||
|
||
Bred by crossing the Persian with the American Shorthair, the Exotic
|
||
Shorthair is essentially a shorthaired Persian. Its extremely plush
|
||
coat is a result not of the longhair gene but of various polygenes
|
||
emphasized in the Persian to produce the thick, plush undercoat.
|
||
|
||
Like the Persian, the Exotic Shorthair is a quiet, tranquil cat, and
|
||
does best in a quiet home free of noise, children, and other pets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Havana Brown
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Reserved, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Brown
|
||
|
||
The Havana Brown, a medium-sized cat with an intermediate body, long
|
||
legs and tail, and a wedge head with a long tapered muzzle and large
|
||
pointed ears, has a soft, silky, close-lying coat of a rich tobacco-
|
||
brown color.
|
||
|
||
This cat has a unique coat, so much so that in this breed only the
|
||
coat is called "brown," instead of the usual "chestnut" or
|
||
"chocolate." It is, of course, still caused by dense and dark-brown
|
||
alleles, b*D*.
|
||
|
||
In the early 1950's, two breeders in Britain set about to create a
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 16
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Siamese-type cat with a brown coat, distinct from the Burmese sable.
|
||
This was achieved in 1952 by crossing a seal point Siamese with a
|
||
black British Shorthair, then crossing the result, an all-black
|
||
"Siamese," with a seal point Siamese known to be carrying the
|
||
recessive chocolate (dark-brown) gene. The resultant cat was called
|
||
the Havana after its tobacco-brown coat (cigars come from Havana).
|
||
|
||
By 1956 the breed was ready for recognition, but controversy arose
|
||
over the body type and the similarity of the color to the Burmese.
|
||
The result was that the breed was bred to be like the Siamese in body
|
||
conformation, and now belongs to the Oriental Shorthair class of cats,
|
||
though it is still called the Havana in most circles.
|
||
|
||
In the mid 1950's a pair of Havanas were imported to the U.S., where
|
||
they were crossed with American Shorthairs to lessen the extremity of
|
||
body shape, and renamed the Havana Brown. The Havana Brown of the
|
||
U.S. is by now a totally different cat than the Havana of Britain.
|
||
|
||
Active, playful, affectionate and lordly, the Havana Brown does best
|
||
in a one-person home. It is a very attentive parent and, while not
|
||
especially vocal, talks constantly to its kittens.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Himalayan
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Siamese
|
||
|
||
The Himalayan, a large cat with a short cobby body, short legs, medium
|
||
tail, and a round head with a very short muzzle and small round ears,
|
||
has an exceptionally long, thick and silky Siamese-pointed coat with a
|
||
definite ruff. It is exactly like the Persian except for the color
|
||
and pattern of the coat.
|
||
|
||
Like the Persian, the Himalayan is a quiet, tranquil cat, and does
|
||
best in a quiet home free of noise, children, and other pets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Honeybear
|
||
|
||
Coat: Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard
|
||
|
||
The Honeybear is a large cat with a short cobby body, short legs,
|
||
medium tail, and a flattish head with a square muzzle and small round
|
||
ears located on the sides of the head.
|
||
|
||
Its coat is exceptionally thick and silky, with a definite ruff, but
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 17
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
is non-matting. It may be found in any of the standard patterns
|
||
except solid, the pattern of choice being black with a white teardrop
|
||
on the forehead and white spotting on the top of the tail, sometimes
|
||
becoming a skunk-like stripe.
|
||
|
||
Extremely tranquil and seemingly immune to pain, it does best in a
|
||
quiet home.
|
||
|
||
Closely related to the Ragdoll, this is a slowly-maturing breed,
|
||
taking a full two years to reach maturity. It is somewhat ungainly in
|
||
appearance between kittenhood and maturity. It should not be bred
|
||
until at least 18 months old.
|
||
|
||
The original breeder claims the Honeybears were created by genetic
|
||
manipulation of the genes of a skunk, which were then "infused by
|
||
injection" into the bloodstream of the parent Honeybear. We find this
|
||
incredulous at the least, since genes simply don't work that way (we
|
||
would sooner believe that Nessie is a 65-million-year old plesiosaur,
|
||
it is far more likely).
|
||
|
||
As proof the technique works, the original breeder cites the famous
|
||
(or infamous) cabbit, which appeared to be the front half of a cat and
|
||
the back half of a rabbit, and "ate like a cat and gave pellets like a
|
||
rabbit." However, a rabbit leaves the kind of pellets it does because
|
||
it eats grass and other high-cellulose plants, it would be impossible
|
||
for an animal that "eats like a cat" to "leave pellets like a rabbit."
|
||
The cabbit has long since been placed into the same category as the
|
||
circus "unicorn," which was proven to be a surgically-altered goat.
|
||
|
||
We believe the Honeybear to be simply a mutated Ragdoll. See the
|
||
special notes under Ragdolls.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Japanese Bobtail
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard
|
||
|
||
The Japanese Bobtail, a medium-sized cat with a slender intermediate
|
||
body, short legs, a 2-3" tail, and a high-cheekboned triangular face
|
||
with a tapered muzzle and small wide spaced pointed ears, has a short,
|
||
close-lying, very silky coat, with the tail hair often flaring to
|
||
produce a rabbit-like tail. The preferred color is Mi-Ke (pronounced
|
||
"Mee-Kay," and meaning "three-fur"), which corresponds to the calico
|
||
in other breeds, though the black and red patches are almost as
|
||
popular. The Mi-Ke has been a Japanese symbol of good fortune for
|
||
centuries.
|
||
|
||
A truly unique breed originally brought from China or Korea, the
|
||
Japanese Bobtail has been bred in Japan since at least the eleventh
|
||
century, and is now thoroughly identified with the Japanese culture.
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 18
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
There are three unique characteristics to this cat: the first and
|
||
most obvious being its short tail, which is somewhat curled. This
|
||
tail is typically 4-5 inches in length if fully extended (which the
|
||
cat cannot do), but is about half that in a normal curled, relaxed
|
||
position. This shortness, coupled with the hair on the tail tending
|
||
to grow strait out in all directions, produces a very rabbit-like
|
||
fluffball or pom-pom.
|
||
|
||
The second unique characteristic is the extremely high cheekbones.
|
||
This causes a distinct tilting of the large oval eyes and a turning-up
|
||
of the corners of the mouth, producing a distinctly oriental or
|
||
"Japanese" appearance with an exaggerated smile when in repose. In
|
||
the west the cat would probably have been labeled "smug" (or
|
||
"inscrutable," a favorite western term for the little-understood
|
||
Chinese and Japanese) and then persecuted. In Japan it was believed
|
||
the cat was content because it was surrounded by good fortune, hence a
|
||
blessing to have around. This attitude, far superior to the western
|
||
persecutions of the same period, is best understood if it is
|
||
remembered that Japan is a land of many earthquakes. Since cats can
|
||
predict earthquakes (yes, really!), a peacefully resting cat means all
|
||
is well.
|
||
|
||
The third unique characteristic is the unusual habit of "forgetting"
|
||
to put its paw down after cleaning. It may actually sit perfectly
|
||
still for five to ten minutes with one paw raised, as though in
|
||
blessing. This habit has been merged into Japanese folklore as a sign
|
||
of good luck: there are countless statues and pictures of short-
|
||
tailed calico cats with one raised paw and a smile on their face.
|
||
|
||
Curiously, even with its close connection to Japanese culture, the
|
||
Japanese showed little interest in the Japanese Bobtail as a breed
|
||
until relatively recently. Little was known about the Japanese
|
||
Bobtail until the occupation of Japan after World War Two. An
|
||
American cat lover was among the occupying forces and she took an
|
||
immediate interest in the breed, taking in large numbers of cats,
|
||
especially Mi-Kes.
|
||
|
||
Even though the Japanese were establishing their own cat clubs and
|
||
were extraordinarily interested in the various American breeds, they
|
||
initially showed little interest in their own cats. In 1963 several
|
||
American judges were invited to participate in a cat show in Japan.
|
||
These judges were struck with the uniqueness and beauty of the few
|
||
Japanese Bobtails exhibited (by the American cat lover). This sparked
|
||
the interest of Japanese breeders, and the breed is now flourishing in
|
||
Japan as a pedigreed line.
|
||
|
||
The American cat lover and breeder sent three Japanese Bobtails (two
|
||
Mi-Kes and one black and white male) to the U.S. in 1968, only to
|
||
return home herself a year later bringing 38 more cats with her. From
|
||
these 41 cats, an exceptionally large gene pool, the breed has been
|
||
established in this country.
|
||
|
||
Outgoing and affectionate, the Japanese Bobtail adapts well to family
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 19
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
life.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Javanese
|
||
|
||
Coat: Longhair
|
||
Environment: Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Colorpoint
|
||
|
||
The Javanese, a medium-sized cat with a long oriental body, long legs
|
||
and tail, and a triangular head with a pointed muzzle, bright blue
|
||
eyes and large pointed ears, has a fine, thick, and silky colorpointed
|
||
medium-long fawn-to-ivory coat without a ruff.
|
||
|
||
The Javanese is identical to the Balinese in every way except the
|
||
color and pattern of its points.
|
||
|
||
Being, like the Siamese, active, loving, playful, intelligent,
|
||
curious, and sensitive, the Javanese does best with an owner who will
|
||
understand its capricious ways.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Kashmir
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Chocolate or Lavender
|
||
|
||
The Kashmir, a large cat with a short cobby body, short legs, medium
|
||
tail, and a round head with a very short muzzle and small round ears,
|
||
has an exceptionally long, thick, and silky chocolate or lavender coat
|
||
with a definite ruff. It is exactly like a Persian except for color.
|
||
|
||
Like the Persian, the Kashmir is a quiet, tranquil cat, and does best
|
||
in a quiet home free of noise, children, and other pets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Korat
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Reserved, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Blue
|
||
|
||
The Korat, a medium-sized cat with a roundish intermediate body, long
|
||
legs and tail, and a unique heart-shaped face with a tapered muzzle,
|
||
large eyes, and large blunt ears, has a short, soft, close lying
|
||
silvery-blue coat.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 20
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Known in its native Siam (now Thailand) as the Si-Sawat or Royal Cat,
|
||
the Korat (from the province in which it is believed to have
|
||
originated) dates back to before the mid-fourteenth century, when it
|
||
was described as having a coat with "roots like clouds and tips like
|
||
silver." It is but one of three native Siamese breeds: a brown cat,
|
||
the Burmese; a pointed cat, the Siamese; and a blue cat, the Korat.
|
||
Unlike the Burmese and Siamese, the Korat has been carefully bred to
|
||
maintain the original characteristics. Comparisons with various
|
||
ancient manuscripts shows that, indeed, the modern Korat is identical
|
||
to its medieval counterpart.
|
||
|
||
First shown in Britain in 1896, the Korat was disqualified as "blue
|
||
instead of biscuit-coloured," despite the owners claims that it was
|
||
indeed a "Siamese," imported directly from Siam, where there were many
|
||
other blue cats just like it. Although there were constant references
|
||
in the cat club literature to the blue cats of Siam, there was no
|
||
official recognition until 1959, when Nara and Darra were imported
|
||
into the U.S. from a Bangkok breeder. They were later joined by
|
||
others, and by 1965 the Korat was a recognized breed in this country.
|
||
Britain finally recognized them in 1975.
|
||
|
||
Alert and affectionate, the Korat stays active well into old age and
|
||
is an ideal apartment cat. While vocal, it has a quiet, rather pretty
|
||
voice, unlike the howling voice of the Siamese, and loves to carry on
|
||
"conversations": if talked to it will answer back. It is somewhat
|
||
prone to upper-respiratory viral infections, so adequate vaccinations
|
||
are a must.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Maine Coon
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard
|
||
|
||
The Maine Coon, a large cat with a strong well-developed moderately-
|
||
cobby body, long and powerful legs, a long tail, and a wide head with
|
||
a wedged muzzle and wide-spaced blunt ears, has a long, silky coat
|
||
with a pronounced ruff and a heavy undercoat. The largest domestic
|
||
cat, the Maine Coon often runs over 25 pounds, with some individuals
|
||
reaching well over 30 pounds: one exceptional individual was slightly
|
||
over 35 pounds of solid muscle (we're talking big here, not fat).
|
||
|
||
According to legend, Marie Antoinette had three long-haired cats,
|
||
which she dispatched to America when the throne fell, so they would
|
||
not be put to death along with her. Upon arrival in Maine, the cats
|
||
escaped and mated with raccoons, resulting in the Maine Coon. In
|
||
actuality, it is a cross between 18th-century Persians (not much like
|
||
today's Persians except in being large and having a long coat) and the
|
||
rugged short-haired New England farm cats. The resultant breed is a
|
||
massive, strong, rugged, cat with a thick coat easily capable of
|
||
withstanding the most severe Maine winters. This is a prime example
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 21
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
of natural selection among domesticated animals, as man's only part in
|
||
the evolution of this breed was the importation of the parent stock.
|
||
|
||
First recognized as a specific breed in 1861 with a 22 pound male
|
||
called Captain Jenks of the Horse Marines (no more ridiculous a name
|
||
than Jonathan's Pasha Sulemon of Ranjipoor, III, a Persian exhibited a
|
||
few years back), the Maine Coon has become a popular contestant in New
|
||
England and New York cat shows, often taking top honors.
|
||
|
||
All coat colors and patterns are permitted except the Siamese pointed
|
||
coat (in Britain chocolate and lavender are also disallowed), but the
|
||
preferred coloration is the patched brown classic tabby, B*ooD*
|
||
A*C*tbtb iiS*ww, which strongly suggests the legendary raccoon/cat
|
||
mix.
|
||
|
||
The Maine Coon is active and affectionate, firmly attaching itself to
|
||
one member of the home. It loves to roam, but adapts easily to
|
||
apartment life, especially when neutered. It does require lots of
|
||
exercise, being so large, and if kept indoors must be engaged in
|
||
active play on a regular basis.
|
||
|
||
The Norwegian Forest Cat is similar to the Maine Coon in size and
|
||
appearance and often mistaken for it, but is a different animal
|
||
altogether.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Malayan
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Burmese
|
||
|
||
The Malayan, a medium-sized cat with a solid muscular oriental body,
|
||
long slender legs and tail, and a round head with a tapered muzzle and
|
||
blunt ears, has a fine, thick, shiny, and very silky coat available in
|
||
all the Burmese solid colors except sable (and chocolate in Britain).
|
||
The Malayan is simply a Burmese in other colors.
|
||
|
||
Like the Burmese, it is affectionate and intelligent, and does best
|
||
with one person who will return its affection and talk to it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Manx
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
|
||
|
||
The Manx, an old breed related to the British Shorthair and similar in
|
||
coat and temperament, is a medium-sized cat with a very short cobby
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 22
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
body, medium forelegs and long hindlegs, no tail, and a round head
|
||
with a square muzzle and small wide-spaced round ears. It has a
|
||
short, dense coat with a heavy undercoat.
|
||
|
||
These cats were bred for centuries on the Isle of Man, from whence
|
||
they get their name, from ships' cats that swam ashore during the
|
||
sinking of the Spanish Armada in 1588.
|
||
|
||
Legend has it that the Manx was the last animal to board Noah's Ark,
|
||
and got its tail caught in the door (the unicorns, alas, missed the
|
||
boat altogether). While such is a beautiful tale [no pun intended],
|
||
in reality the Manx' attributes are caused by a firmly identified
|
||
genetic mutation, with the associated problems caused by polygene
|
||
interaction.
|
||
|
||
These cats are grouped as the rumpies (no tail at all), bumpies or
|
||
rumpy-risers (less than one vertebra), and stumpies (one or more
|
||
vertebrae). The gene causing this taillessness is non-beneficial,
|
||
causing also a shortened, distorted spine and a tilted, deformed
|
||
pelvis. Fatal if homozygous, and often causing spinal bifida,
|
||
imperforate anus or poor anal sphincter control even when
|
||
heterozygous, this mutation would be disallowed today.
|
||
|
||
Playful, inquisitive, and an excellent hunter, it adapts well to
|
||
almost any environment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Norwegian Forest Cat
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment, Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Reserved, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard
|
||
|
||
The Norwegian Forest Cat, a large cat with a strong well-developed
|
||
moderately-cobby body, long and powerful legs, a long tail, and a
|
||
round head with a wedged muzzle and wide-spaced blunt ears, has a
|
||
long, silky coat with a pronounced ruff and a heavy undercoat.
|
||
|
||
Almost identical to the Maine Coon in appearance and size (the
|
||
Norwegian Forest Cat is slightly smaller, running a maximum of 25
|
||
pounds or so, and has slightly longer hind legs, relative to the
|
||
forelegs), the Norwegian Forest Cat, or Norsk Skaukatt, is not related
|
||
to it, and may be considered an example of parallel evolution. It
|
||
evolved its long, thick coat through a spontaneous mutation centuries
|
||
back: definitely a beneficial mutation in light of those "brisk"
|
||
Scandinavian winters.
|
||
|
||
Many Norwegian Forest cats have become feral over time, and this cat
|
||
can literally be found in Norwegian Forests, as well as Swedish and
|
||
Finnish forests, surviving quite nicely far above the Arctic Circle.
|
||
Feral Norwegian Forest Cats are the most northerly ranging of all
|
||
"wild" cats. Being a large breed, it can hold its own against the
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 23
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
equal-sized European Wildcat, felis sylvestris. Interbreeding
|
||
centuries back may be responsible for the woolly undercoat, almost
|
||
identical to that of the Wildcat, but the two species no longer
|
||
interbreed even when sharing the same territory.
|
||
|
||
A very old breed, the Norwegian Forest Cat is mentioned in Norse
|
||
mythology as living in Asgard (the home of the gods), and was often
|
||
used as ships' cats by the Vikings (around 1000). It was later
|
||
mentioned in various Norwegian fairy tales put down in 1837 and again
|
||
in 1852, where it was called the "Fairy Cat." Recognized as a
|
||
distinct breed in the early 1930's, it was first exhibited in Oslo
|
||
before World War Two. There are many Norwegian Forest Cat
|
||
associations all over Scandinavia and Finland, but the breed is just
|
||
now becoming popular elsewhere.
|
||
|
||
The Norwegian Forest Cat is active but reserved, firmly attaching
|
||
itself to one member of the home. It is definitely a one-person cat,
|
||
and will often go into mourning if left alone. It loves to roam, but
|
||
adapts itself easily to apartment life, especially when neutered.
|
||
Like the Maine Coon, it requires lots of exercise.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ocicat
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Spotted
|
||
|
||
The Ocicat, a large cat with a muscular cobby body, medium legs and
|
||
tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and blunt ears, has a
|
||
short, thick, and smooth spotted coat with a heavy undercoat. The
|
||
coats of some championship Ocicats are truly spectacular.
|
||
|
||
Playful, inquisitive, and an excellent hunter, it adapts well to
|
||
almost any environment.
|
||
|
||
The original Ocicat, Tonga, was a hybrid formed by the mating of a
|
||
chocolate point Siamese and a hybrid queen, herself derived from an
|
||
Abyssinian and Siamese breeding program. The breeder thought Tonga
|
||
resembled a little Ocelot, hence the breed name.
|
||
|
||
Since the days of Tonga, the Ocicat has been crossbred many times in
|
||
order to strengthen the breed and created a unique spotted breed. The
|
||
result is that today's Ocicat is genetically essentially a spotted
|
||
American Shorthair, and is indeed a unique and special breed, its
|
||
early frailty completely gone.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 24
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Oregon Rex
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard
|
||
|
||
The Oregon Rex, a large cat with a muscular cobby body, medium legs
|
||
and tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and large blunt ears,
|
||
has a soft and close-lying curly coat lacking guard or awn hairs.
|
||
|
||
The Oregon Rex is essentially a curly American Shorthair, the curly
|
||
gene having spontaneously occurred in a litter of Domestic Shorthair
|
||
(Heinz~) kittens in the mid 1960's. Careful breeding with "clean"
|
||
American Shorthairs has produced the current breed.
|
||
|
||
As the Oregon Rex gene, distinct and separate from the Cornish
|
||
(German) and Devon Rex genes, is recessive to almost everything and is
|
||
easily masked by polygene influence, this breed is all but gone.
|
||
There is some current effort being made to revive and strengthen the
|
||
line: only time will tell.
|
||
|
||
Like the American Shorthair, the Oregon Rex is playful and
|
||
inquisitive, adapting well to home and family life. Since it has only
|
||
an undercoat, the guard and awn hairs being absent, it must be
|
||
protected from cold or wet weather. This uniqueness makes it non-
|
||
shedding, and ideal for people with cat allergies.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Oriental Shorthair
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Oriental, Standard, Spotted
|
||
|
||
The Oriental Shorthair, a medium-sized cat with a long oriental body,
|
||
long legs and tail, and a triangular head with a pointed muzzle and
|
||
large pointed ears, has a fine, thick, glossy, and close lying coat.
|
||
|
||
Identical to the Siamese in every way except its solid-color coat, the
|
||
Oriental Shorthair is an outgrowth of the Siamese breeding program.
|
||
Many other breeds that are crossed to "Siamese" are actually crossed
|
||
to Oriental Shorthairs.
|
||
|
||
There are two Oriental Shorthair standards, the American and the
|
||
British/European. The American standard allows the solid Oriental
|
||
colors, while the British/European standard also allows Standard and
|
||
Spotted coloration (color names are as in the Oriental colors: ebony
|
||
and white, rather than black and white). Several American cat clubs
|
||
are in the process of shifting to the British standard (after all, we
|
||
need some name for a spotted tabby "Siamese"), and eventually the
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 25
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
standards will merge completely.
|
||
|
||
The chestnut Oriental Shorthair is also known as the Havana in
|
||
Britain, but is a distinctly different cat than the Havana Brown,
|
||
which is peculiar to the U.S.
|
||
|
||
Similarly, the spotted tabby Oriental Shorthair was formerly called
|
||
the Egyptian Cat or Mau, and should not be confused with the true
|
||
Egyptian Mau, which is an entirely different breed.
|
||
|
||
Being, like the Siamese, active, loving, playful, intelligent,
|
||
curious, and sensitive, the Oriental Shorthair does best with an owner
|
||
who will understand its capricious ways.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Peke-Faced Persian
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
|
||
|
||
The Peke-Faced Persian, a large cat with a short cobby body, short
|
||
legs, medium tail, and a round head with almost no muzzle and small
|
||
round ears, has an exceptionally long, thick, and silky coat with a
|
||
definite ruff.
|
||
|
||
The Peke-Faced Persian is essentially a Persian with virtually no
|
||
muzzle, giving it a flat Pekingese-type face, complete with bulging
|
||
eyes and constant snuffle. These cats are prone to problems with the
|
||
sinuses and tear ducts and tend to weep. In our opinion, breeding or
|
||
overbreeding cats to this extent is not good for the cat and should be
|
||
disallowed: it creates problems for the poor cat and large vet bills
|
||
for the owner. We are, however, a minority voice, and the breed will
|
||
not go away.
|
||
|
||
Most clubs do not recognize the Peke-Faced Persian as a separate breed
|
||
and class them as Persians. Others recognize only solid red and red
|
||
tabby varieties. This will change with time.
|
||
|
||
Like the Persian, the Peke-Faced Persian is a quiet, tranquil cat, and
|
||
does best in a quiet home free of noise, children, and other pets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Persian
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
|
||
|
||
The Persian, a large cat with a short cobby body, short legs, medium
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 26
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
tail, and a round head with a very short muzzle and small round ears,
|
||
has an exceptionally long, thick, and silky coat with a definite ruff.
|
||
|
||
Originally referred to as Asiatic cats as recently as 1876, the
|
||
Persian-type cat was introduced to Europe from Asia Minor about 400
|
||
years ago. By the early 1900's, the Asiatic cat had commenced to be
|
||
bred away from the lithe, graceful body of the Turkish Angora (the
|
||
original long-haired cat) and towards the more massive and cobby body
|
||
of the British Shorthair. Early cat clubs referred to the new breed
|
||
as simply Longhairs.
|
||
|
||
Eventually the breed has achieved a body style far more cobby than the
|
||
British Shorthair and come unto its own as the Persian of today,
|
||
bearing little resemblance to the Persians of a century ago. It has
|
||
become one of the largest breeds, running typically 20-25 pounds for
|
||
an adult male, with some individuals even larger: only the Maine Coon
|
||
and Norwegian Forest Cat are larger.
|
||
|
||
The current Persian is somewhat aloof, as though it knows it's the
|
||
showiest of show cats (perhaps it does). It is strictly a one-person
|
||
cat, requiring lots of love and care, especially in the maintenance of
|
||
its long, silky coat: daily brushings are definitely required.
|
||
|
||
Curiously, though the Persian has been bred in a wide range of colors
|
||
and patterns, those with Siamese coloring have been classed as
|
||
separate breeds, the Himalayans and the Colorpoint Longhairs. Even
|
||
more curiously, solid chocolate and lavender (lilac) Persians have
|
||
also been classed separately as the Kashmirs, sometimes called Solid-
|
||
Color Himalayans. There are no real differences in the breeds other
|
||
than coloring. A short-haired version, the Exotic Shorthair, is also
|
||
found.
|
||
|
||
When overbred (which happens all too often), the Persian can become
|
||
nervous and temperamental. This usually shows in erratic behavior and
|
||
misplaced toilet activities (like the middle of your bed). In this
|
||
event, all that can be done is to love the cat, but neuter it to
|
||
terminate the overbreeding.
|
||
|
||
It is a common practice for the uneducated to claim that their long-
|
||
haired cat is part Persian. Most long-haired Heinz~ are just that,
|
||
long-haired Heinz~ and nothing else. When a persian undergoes a
|
||
random mating, the kittens are far more likely to be shorthaired than
|
||
long-haired. Such is the way of genetics.
|
||
|
||
The Persian is a quiet, tranquil cat and does best in a quiet home
|
||
free of noise, children, and other pets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 27
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ragdoll
|
||
|
||
Coat: Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Siamese, (Standard Solid, Standard)
|
||
|
||
The Ragdoll, a large cat with a short cobby body, short legs, medium
|
||
tail, and flattish head with a very short muzzle and small round ears,
|
||
has an exceptionally thick, silky, non-matting coat with a definite
|
||
ruff. The original Ragdoll and Genuine Ragdoll may be found in the
|
||
standard Siamese, Siamese with particolor spotting, or Siamese with
|
||
Birman spotting patterns, while the Miracle Ragdoll may be found in
|
||
these same colors and patterns plus any of the standard solid and
|
||
standard colors.
|
||
|
||
Extremely tranquil and seemingly immune to pain, this cat does best in
|
||
a quiet home. It does not do well with small children, as its
|
||
insensitivity to pain makes it easy for it to be hurt, even quite
|
||
seriously, without crying out.
|
||
|
||
The primary physiological difference between the original Ragdoll and
|
||
its relative, the Honeybear, versus other breeds is the length of time
|
||
for maturity. The original Ragdoll and the Honeybear mature slowly,
|
||
taking a full two years to reach maturity, being somewhat ungainly in
|
||
appearance between kittenhood and maturity, and should not be bred
|
||
until at least 18 months of age. The Miracle Ragdoll and the Genuine
|
||
Ragdoll mature at a normal rate.
|
||
|
||
The original breeder and creator of the Ragdoll claims that the cat is
|
||
a phenomenon created by an automobile accident to an alleycat, that
|
||
her kittens were subsequently "a different animal in a cat's body,"
|
||
and that the original Ragdolls, and her subsequent breeds, Honeybears
|
||
and Miracle Ragdolls, are not of the species felis cattus, but what
|
||
she calls "Cherubim Cats" [felis cherubinus?]. She cites various
|
||
skeletal differences and their unique dispositions as grounds for her
|
||
claim.
|
||
|
||
Our personal and careful investigation has shown that the parent cat
|
||
was herself most likely a mutation and that the accident, if it
|
||
occurred, had nothing whatsoever to do with the behavior of the
|
||
kittens. The radical behavior pattern evidenced in the kittens and
|
||
subsequent cats probably did not show up in the mother because of
|
||
recessive polygene masking inherent in the original mutation, which
|
||
was "washed out" by mating with normal toms.
|
||
|
||
We have been led to the conclusion that the original mutation probably
|
||
involved a change in the response of those nerve cells concerned with
|
||
esthesia (the sensations of feeling and pain), probably a simple
|
||
thickening or extension of the myelin sheaths that surround the nerve
|
||
cells, thus producing a cat that is effectively mildly anesthetized:
|
||
if it can't feel it, it won't object to it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 28
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
In addition to the apparent absence of a sensation of pain, kittens
|
||
tend to be a little "twitchy," as though they were experiencing
|
||
paresthesia (false sensations of feeling, such as the sensation of a
|
||
bug crawling on your arm when there is none there). This would follow
|
||
logically if the neurological mutation theory is correct.
|
||
|
||
As for the skeletal differences of the breeds, especially the
|
||
Honeybears, we found them to be well within standard norms and
|
||
considerably less extreme than those of the Manx, for example.
|
||
|
||
As an aside, when asked why she called her cats "Cherubim Cats," she
|
||
replied it was because they were non-fighting. We find this curious
|
||
in light of the fact that, theologically and scripturally, the
|
||
Cherubim are God's guards and warriors (see Genesis 3:24 and Ezekiel 1
|
||
and 10): her choice of the name was probably influenced by the
|
||
cherubs found on Valentine's Day cards. While the singular of both
|
||
"cherubim" and "cherubs" is "cherub," there is no other similarity
|
||
between them. Besides which, all cats fight as part of the mating
|
||
ritual, for territorial dominance, and for clowder status: Ragdolls
|
||
are no exception.
|
||
|
||
The rapid mutation of the original Ragdoll into the Honeybear and
|
||
Miracle Ragdoll, in spite of (or perhaps because of) the unique
|
||
breeding program, indicates to us that the breed may be genetically
|
||
unstable, and the complex polygene interaction might be causing rapid
|
||
radial evolution (evolution into several distinct and differing breeds
|
||
at the same time). It is a shame that the breeding program, or a
|
||
parallel program, is not in the hands of competent geneticists, as
|
||
much valuable knowledge about the workings of genetics and evolution
|
||
could be gained.
|
||
|
||
Any Ragdoll not bred under the auspices of the original breeder's
|
||
somewhat unique program is called a Genuine Ragdoll for legal reasons,
|
||
and is recognized (usually as a simple Ragdoll) by most of the various
|
||
cat clubs in the U.S., while the original Ragdoll, Honeybear, and
|
||
Miracle Ragdoll are recognized only by the IRCA (International Ragdoll
|
||
Cat Association), a private association of which the original Ragdoll
|
||
breeder is president and founder.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Russian Blue
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Blue
|
||
|
||
The Russian Blue, a large cat with a muscular body midway between
|
||
cobby and intermediate, medium legs, short tail, and a squarish head
|
||
with a square muzzle and wide-spaced blunt ears, has a thick, short,
|
||
fine, silvery-blue double coat.
|
||
|
||
Like its cousin the European Shorthair, the Russian Blue has the
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 29
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
exceptionally thick undercoat, reminiscent of the European Wildcat,
|
||
required to withstand the harsh Russian winters. The outer coat,
|
||
however, is smooth and silky, possibly as a result of the breeding
|
||
program carried out under the Romanov czars.
|
||
|
||
The breed first showed up in Archangel, on the White Sea (off the
|
||
Actic Ocean near the Finnish-Russian border), in the mid-1800's. By
|
||
the 1900's the breed was already competing in Britain and elsewhere,
|
||
and had been made more streamlined by crossbreeding with Siamese. The
|
||
breed effectively stabilized by the time of the Russian Revolution
|
||
into a European Blue phenotype with a leaner body and smoother coat.
|
||
It has changed little since, resisting the attempts of some breeders
|
||
to exaggerate the body conformation.
|
||
|
||
The Russian Blue was imported to the United States as the Maltese in
|
||
1900, but has since established its identity and was formally
|
||
recognized in 1947.
|
||
|
||
As an aside, the Australians recognize an identical cat in dominant
|
||
white, calling it the Russian White.
|
||
|
||
Playful, inquisitive, reserved, and an excellent hunter, the Russian
|
||
Blue adapts well to almost any environment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Scottish Fold
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Shaded
|
||
|
||
The Scottish Fold, a medium-sized cat with a muscular cobby body,
|
||
short legs and tail, and a round head with a square muzzle and a
|
||
unique folding of its small ears, causing them to lay close to the
|
||
head like a pair of small caps, has a short, dense coat with a heavy
|
||
undercoat.
|
||
|
||
In 1961 one William Ross, a Scottish shepherd, noticed a lop-eared
|
||
British Shorthair mix kitten, Susie, belonging to his employer. Her
|
||
ears were small and folded forward, like a puppy's. Being an alert
|
||
individual, William realized that this was unique. Thus when Susie
|
||
had a litter two years later in which two of her kittens were also
|
||
lop-eared, he obtained one of them. He named his kitten Snooks,
|
||
registered it as an experimental, and undertook a breeding program in
|
||
collaboration with professional breeders and geneticists. Thus the
|
||
Scottish fold came to be.
|
||
|
||
Breeding and testing has shown that the folded ears is controlled by a
|
||
single dominant gene (Fd), so the kittens need only be heterozygous to
|
||
have folded ears. The degree of fold is controlled by polygene
|
||
influence, and is independent of the folded-ear gene itself. When the
|
||
gene is homozygous, there is sometimes a thickening and rounding of
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 30
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
the tail. At first this was bred for as part of the uniqueness of the
|
||
breed, but it developed that there is also a thickening of the limbs
|
||
as well, inhibiting the cat's movements. Cats are now disallowed if
|
||
they have this thickening, thus homozygosity is discouraged.
|
||
|
||
The British cat clubs, led by the Governing Council of the Cat Fancy,
|
||
decided in the early 1970's to disallow Scottish Folds. The reasons
|
||
given were a fear of ear mites and reported deafness. Both these
|
||
reasons are false: normal hygiene is sufficient to prevent ear mites,
|
||
while several of the early Scottish Folds were dominant white, and
|
||
dominant white cats are often deaf regardless of breed. The real
|
||
reasons are believed to be that the Scottish Folds were winning awards
|
||
and drawing attention away from the British Shorthairs, a breed that
|
||
has always been the favorite of the GCCF.
|
||
|
||
Whatever the reasons, the result of this blackballing has been a shift
|
||
in Scottish Fold breeding from its homeland to the U.S., where its
|
||
uniqueness is appreciated.
|
||
|
||
Being basically a British Shorthair, the Scottish Fold has a playful
|
||
and inquisitive nature. It is not overly fond of small children, and
|
||
tends to attach itself to one member of the household. It is
|
||
demonstrative in its affection and loves to snuggle, making it an
|
||
ideal cat for an invalid.
|
||
|
||
Since its folded ears do partially cover the auditory canal, it cannot
|
||
hear quite as well as a cat with pricked ears: it sort of wears
|
||
earmuffs, there's nothing wrong with its hearing per se. Because of
|
||
the reduced hearing, it is not as good a hunter as other cats. It
|
||
adapts well to almost any environment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Siamese
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Home or Rural
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Siamese
|
||
|
||
The Siamese, a medium-sized cat with a long oriental body, long legs
|
||
and tail, and a triangular head with a pointed muzzle, bright blue
|
||
eyes and large pointed ears, has a fine, thick, glossy, and close
|
||
lying solid-pointed, fawn-to-ivory coat .
|
||
|
||
There are some differences between the American and British/European
|
||
standards for the Siamese and related breeds: Balinese, Colorpoint
|
||
Shorthair, Javanese, and Oriental Shorthair. The American standard is
|
||
considerably more exaggerated than the British/European, which is
|
||
closer to the original Siamese in build.
|
||
|
||
This is a ancient breed, with records at least as far back as 1350,
|
||
and is truly a Siamese cat, having been bred in the temples of Siam
|
||
(now Thailand).
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 31
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
There are many legends about the Siamese, especially concerning its
|
||
crossed eyes and kinked tail. One story goes that the cats were given
|
||
the task of guarding an especially sacred urn, which they did by
|
||
watching it so closely that they became cross-eyed. Another legend
|
||
says that the royal princess assigned the cats the task of protecting
|
||
her rings. She placed the rings on their tails, and the cats then
|
||
bent the tips over so they couldn't fall off. In these ways, the cats
|
||
became cross-eyed and kink-tailed.
|
||
|
||
The Siamese was imported to Europe sometimes in the mid 1800's, and
|
||
was already popular in the cat shows of the 1870's. The initial
|
||
reaction to the Siamese was that it was unnatural and nightmarish,
|
||
defying all that was then thought to be the norm for the domestic cat,
|
||
but its beauty and personality soon overcame this bad press.
|
||
|
||
The Siamese is, perhaps, the most popular of all breeds. It is
|
||
extraordinarily curious, investigating absolutely everything in its
|
||
domain. Extremely intelligent, the Siamese and its cousins train well
|
||
to the leash and to car travel, and can be taught to do tricks.
|
||
|
||
The modern Siamese has an exaggerated oriental body and a long
|
||
triangular face, created by breeders from the original stock of basic
|
||
Siamese brought to England and the U.S. in the past century. This
|
||
exaggerated body structure bears little resemblance to the original
|
||
Siamese body, which was more like that of the modern-day Burmese.
|
||
This breeding program has attempted to alleviate the crossed eyes and
|
||
kinked tail, but has only been partially successful: there still
|
||
being a lot of crossed eyes and the occasional kinked tail. Legends
|
||
aside, the crossed eyes are due to the partial albinism of the Siamese
|
||
gene causing irregular nerve connections between the eyes and their
|
||
controlling muscles, producing crossed eyes and double vision: the
|
||
cat squints to compensate for this.
|
||
|
||
This cat is extremely vocal, loudly proclaiming its displeasure at the
|
||
slightest provocation. It loves to "converse," and will answer back
|
||
when spoken to. Active, loving, playful, intelligent, curious, and
|
||
sensitive, it does best with an owner who will understand its
|
||
capricious ways.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Singapura
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Brown-Ticked Ivory, Tabby-Ticked with White
|
||
|
||
The Singapura is a small cat with a muscular intermediate body,
|
||
medium-long legs and tail, and a round head with a short tapered
|
||
muzzle, a distinctive stopped nose, strong chin, large eyes, and large
|
||
pointed ears. Its coat is soft and silky, somewhat springy to the
|
||
touch, and is only allowed in two unique colors: brown-ticked ivory
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 32
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
and tabby-ticked with white, which are very similar. This is the
|
||
smallest of the domestic cats, with full-grown males barely making six
|
||
pounds.
|
||
|
||
The basic street cat in its native Singapore, the origins of this
|
||
breed are obscure. Some say there has been a recent influx of some
|
||
wild species. While this is certainly possible, it doesn't show in
|
||
the temperament. Many colors are found in the Singapuran street cats,
|
||
but as yet only two special colors are recognized in the breed.
|
||
|
||
The people of Singapore are generally not cat lovers (except as food)
|
||
and the Singapura has learned through countless generations to be wary
|
||
of people. This has resulted in an exceptionally quiet and shy cat:
|
||
Singapuras often won't meow even when injured, lest they attract
|
||
attention and wind up in the stewpot.
|
||
|
||
For quiet, reserved people in a quiet and peaceful lifestyle, this is
|
||
an ideal cat, giving all of its love and affection unreservedly to
|
||
someone who has gained its trust.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Si-Rex
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Siamese, Colorpoint
|
||
|
||
The Si-Rex is a small cat with a slender oriental body, long legs and
|
||
tail, and a triangular head with a pointed muzzle, a long straight
|
||
nose, large eyes, and large blunt ears. Its has an unusual face,
|
||
giving it a mischievous and pixieish appearance. Its coat is very
|
||
curly and wavy, composed only of down hairs, making it unusually
|
||
short, fine, soft and silky. The Si-Rex is simply a Cornish Rex with
|
||
Siamese coloration.
|
||
|
||
Like the Cornish Rex, the Si-Rex is agile, affectionate, intelligent,
|
||
and tranquil, and adapts well to family life, becoming an ideal lap
|
||
cat for a quiet owner.
|
||
|
||
Lacking awn hairs (running around in its underwear, as it were), it
|
||
sunburns easily and must be an indoor-only cat. It is a non-shedding
|
||
cat (no outer coat), making it ideal for people with cat allergies.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 33
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Snowshoe
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Reserved, Tranquil, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Siamese with Birman Spotting
|
||
|
||
The Snowshoe, a medium-sized cat with a massive oriental body, medium
|
||
legs and tail, and a broad round head with a short muzzle and rounded
|
||
ears, has a short and glossy, but not too fine, Birman-spotted Siamese
|
||
coat.
|
||
|
||
Created by crossing Birmans with Siamese and American Shorthairs, the
|
||
Snowshoe is essentially a short-haired Birman.
|
||
|
||
Like the Birman, it is tranquil, sociable, and intelligent, and does
|
||
best with quiet people and may mope if left alone.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Somali
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family with Children
|
||
Colors: Abyssinian
|
||
|
||
A medium-sized cat with a sleek intermediate body, long legs and tail,
|
||
and a wedge head with a tapered muzzle and large, pointed, often-
|
||
tufted ears, the Somali has several bands of ticking, sometimes as
|
||
many as a dozen, on its extremely soft, long, and ruff-less all-agouti
|
||
coat. It has distinctive puma-like facial markings.
|
||
|
||
The Abyssinian sometimes carries a recessive longhair (l) gene, which
|
||
was to be found in some of the original stock imported from Britain
|
||
during the 1930's. For many generations, breeders quietly neutered or
|
||
destroyed long-haired kittens, but in the 1960's a group of breeders
|
||
set about to create and perfect the long-haired Abyssinian. The
|
||
beautiful Somali is the result: a very striking cat, and certainly
|
||
one of the most beautiful.
|
||
|
||
Like its brother the Abyssinian, the Somali is active, intelligent and
|
||
affectionate. It adapts well to family life, and is easily trained.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 34
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sphinx
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair (Hairless)
|
||
Environment: Apartment
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Quiet
|
||
Best With: Family
|
||
Colors: Standard Solid, Standard, Siamese, Colorpoint
|
||
|
||
The Sphynx, a small cat with an intermediate body, long legs and tail,
|
||
and a wedge head with a short square muzzle, stopped nose and large
|
||
wide-spaced ears, is a hairless cat, with a slight fuzz of down hairs
|
||
present on some individuals. Color is carried in the skin itself.
|
||
|
||
Bred from a hairless Oriental Shorthair kitten born in Ontario,
|
||
Canada, in 1966, the Sphynx is not recognized by all cat clubs. Some
|
||
people feel that its hairlessness removes all that is beautiful about
|
||
a cat. Such people only see beauty on the outside, but the Sphinx,
|
||
like all cats, is beautiful all the way through.
|
||
|
||
For a person with severe allergies, the Sphinx provides the ideal
|
||
solution: there is no cat hair or dander to be allergic to. The
|
||
Sphinx loves to receive and show affection, but is not especially wild
|
||
about being cuddled. It loves cat beds, pillows, etc. made of soft
|
||
fabrics like cotton flannelette (used to make baby sleepers).
|
||
|
||
A sociable and affectionate cat, the Sphynx must, because of its
|
||
hairlessness, be kept indoors at all times and protected from drafts,
|
||
as it catches cold very easily. It adapts well to family life. While
|
||
we don't normally recommend Kitty Koats and other such wearing apparel
|
||
(why hide a beautiful cat?), they are perhaps a good idea in the case
|
||
of the Sphinx.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Tiffany
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Sable
|
||
|
||
The Tiffany, a medium-sized cat with a solid muscular oriental body,
|
||
long slender legs and tail, and a round head with a tapered muzzle and
|
||
blunt ears, has a medium-long, very silky coat of a rich sable-brown
|
||
color with a lighter brown ruff.
|
||
|
||
Bred by cross breeding the Burmese with various long-haired cats, the
|
||
Tiffany is essentially a long-haired Burmese. Kittens are born short-
|
||
haired with an interesting cafe-au-lait color. Both long-hairedness
|
||
and the sable color develop slowly. The color is seldom as rich as
|
||
the short-haired Burmese itself, probably due to some polygene
|
||
interaction. Nonetheless, the Tiffany is essentially a long-haired
|
||
Burmese.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 35
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Like the Burmese, the Tiffany is affectionate and intelligent, and
|
||
does best with one person who will return its affection and talk to
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Tonkinese
|
||
|
||
Coat: Shorthair
|
||
Environment: Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Active, Vocal
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Tonkinese
|
||
|
||
The Tonkinese, a medium-sized cat with an oriental body, long legs and
|
||
tail, and a moderately triangular head with a tapered muzzle and
|
||
rounded ears, has a soft, shiny, and close-lying medium-dark, Siamese-
|
||
pointed coat.
|
||
|
||
Genetically both a Burmese and a Siamese, it is by definition
|
||
heterozygous and cannot breed true. If a homozygous Burmese (cbcb) is
|
||
mated with a homozygous Siamese (cscs), all kittens will be Tonkinese
|
||
(cbcs). If one Tonkinese is mated with another, the Mendelian pattern
|
||
of four kittens will be one Burmese (or Malayan) (cbcb), two Tonkinese
|
||
(cbcs), and one Siamese (cscs). The Burmese and Siamese will be as
|
||
purebred as if they had Burmese or Siamese parents.
|
||
|
||
The originators of this breed got carried away with naming the colors,
|
||
calling them "minks": natural mink, blue mink, honey mink, champagne
|
||
mink, cinnamon mink, fawn mink, red mink, and cream mink.
|
||
|
||
Curious, active, and fond of company, the Tonkinese does best with an
|
||
owner who will provide lots of affection.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Turkish Angora
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: White
|
||
|
||
The Turkish Angora, the original long-haired breed, is a medium-sized
|
||
cat with a slim intermediate body, long legs and tail, and a wedge
|
||
head with a tapered muzzle and pointed ears. Its pure white coat is
|
||
long, silky and very soft, thinning and shortening in warm weather
|
||
almost to the point of become a shorthair, but with the tail remaining
|
||
full. This is perhaps the most elegant of all breeds, being very
|
||
clean-lined and graceful. When in its "short" phase, it is
|
||
exceptionally beautiful. Eye color is always golden orange, pale
|
||
blue, or odd (one of each). Blue-eyed cats are often deaf, but can
|
||
still make excellent indoor-only cats.
|
||
|
||
There is some discussion that the Turkish Angora descends from Pallas'
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 36
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Cat, felis manul, rather than the African Wildcat, felis lybica, but
|
||
most zoologists agree that there are significant objections to this
|
||
theory. It is most likely that the longhair gene is the result of a
|
||
spontaneous mutation sometime before 1000, and that the cats being in
|
||
a restricted area, central Asia Minor, allowed the mutant recessive
|
||
gene to become firmly entrenched. The result was that over time the
|
||
longhair gene spread both northward and southward, into Russia and
|
||
Persia (now Iran).
|
||
|
||
In the 16th century, Angora cats (Angora is the former name of Ankara,
|
||
the capital of Turkey) were brought from Turkey to France, where they
|
||
were an immediate hit.
|
||
|
||
In the late 19th century, however, the Angora cats had to compete with
|
||
the relative newcomers, the long-haired Russians and Persians, and the
|
||
Persians won out. The Russians and Angoras disappeared from Europe,
|
||
the Russians never to rise again.
|
||
|
||
In its native Turkey the Angora not only didn't disappear, it
|
||
proliferated. The Ankara Zoo, in recognition of the Angora being a
|
||
native Turkish animal, undertook a long-term breeding program which
|
||
was very successful. The Angora can be found throughout Turkey, in
|
||
many colors and patterns.
|
||
|
||
In the 1960's the beautiful dominant white Turkish Angora was imported
|
||
into the U.S. from its native Turkey, and became an immediate hit. It
|
||
received full recognition in 1970, and has been the aristocrat of cats
|
||
ever since.
|
||
|
||
A black variety is also being bred, but has not yet gained
|
||
recognition, while a chocolate variety is recognized in Britain.
|
||
|
||
Tranquil and affectionate, the Turkish Angora (simply Angora in
|
||
Britain) is ideally suited for a one-person apartment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Turkish Van
|
||
|
||
Coat: Extra-Care Longhair
|
||
Environment: Apartment or Home
|
||
Disposition: Affectionate, Tranquil, Quiet
|
||
Best With: One-Person
|
||
Colors: Van
|
||
|
||
The Turkish Van, a modified Turkish Angora from way back during the
|
||
Crusades, is a medium-sized cat with a moderate intermediate body,
|
||
long legs and tail, and a wedge head with a tapered muzzle and pointed
|
||
ears. Its white van coat is long, silky and very soft, thinning and
|
||
shortening in warm weather almost to the point of becoming a
|
||
shorthair, but with the tail remaining full. The van markings may be
|
||
any color, but the preferred color is red, called auburn in this breed
|
||
only.
|
||
|
||
This cat has one very interesting and unique characteristic: it loves
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 37
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
water! It loves water so much that many owners report that they
|
||
turned on the water to draw a bath, left the bathroom for a few
|
||
minutes, and returned to find a tub full of cat!
|
||
|
||
Tranquil and affectionate, the Turkish Van is ideally suited for a
|
||
one-person apartment with a bathtub.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Purebred Cats Page 38
|
||
|
||
|
||
|