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how many
breeds?
This great number makes rather
impressive the fact which follows. This is that, despite the vast
number, there are basically only two categories of cat: long-haired
and short-haired. Within them there are perhaps six recognized breeds and several
varieties about whose classification as breeds cat experts and
fanciers have earnest, inconclusive discussions. Beyond this,
however, there is nothing more to choose from until you get to
ocelots and jaguars. As a type, the cat has been remarkably
consistent for a very long time.
In the cat world, as elsewhere, the common people
far outnumber the aristocrats. It is a safe guess that 99 out of any
100 cats encountered will be plain, ordinary citizens belonging in
the boundless company of Domestic Short-hairs. This is the proper
name for the group carelessly called "alley cats," and while it does
contain a number of woebegone and misbegotten creatures, it is not
to be sneered at. It is a breed, and prime cats have emerged from it
to win top prizes at cat shows.
The de luxe breeds in the remaining one per cent
include the longhaired Persians (and/or Angoras), and the
short-haired Siamese, Burmese, Abyssinian and Manx. There are also
several in-between groupings, such as the Blues and Tortoise-shells,
which may be long- or short-haired and are classified primarily by
color. The Blues, for instance, include the Maltese, Russian Blue,
British Blue, and so on.
Persians
The long-hairs originally were called Angoras, after
the Turkish city (now Ankara) in which Europeans apparently first
encountered them. Actually, they seem to have been known in and
imported from India a nd
central Asia as well. For a long time people tried to distinguish
between the "true" Angora and the Persians generally, but the
differences, small to begin with, were further confused by
interbreeding.
The long-hair is enormously fluffy
and can look haughtier than a Main Line dowager. But under the silky
coat is a sturdy body and a warm heart. While long-hairs may seem
languorous, they are cats first of all and entirely capable of the
fun and games cats traditionally enjoy. Since they are expensive,
however -- anywhere from fifty to several hundred dollars for a
superior one -- their owners aren't often inclined to expose them to
the many perils and pleasures of the out-of-doors.
The long-hair is blockier in all dimensions than the
short-hair- Its body, legs and tail are shorter, its chest and rump
wider. The front legs should be shorter than the hind pair, and
stand straight and firm.
The head should be broader than the short-hair's, and the breadth
accentuated by a short, pushed-in nose. The ears should sit on the
side of the head and have a little tuft of fur at the point. The
larger and rounder the eyes, the better.
The fur should be long and glossy, with a luxurious
ruff around the neck and on the chest, between the forelegs. The
tail should have a tuft at the tip.
Long-hairs come in a wonderful array of colors:
white, black, orange, cream, blue, smoke, silver, tortoise-shell and
tabby. AU the solid colors must be pure; the black mustn't have so
much as a single white hair anywhere; the blue must be all blue --
the whiskers and exposed skin, such as lips and pads of feet, as
well as the fur.
Perhaps most sensational, and in high fashion now,
is the silver, or chinchilla, Persian. The basic coat is pure snow
white, with each hair tipped in black.
The tortoise-shell is black, red and
yellow.
The tabby, which may be long or short-haired, comes
in a variety of types, each with rigidly specified markings.
Whatever the color com-bination, the tabby should have a light
ground color against which her stripes, spots and bars may be
distinctly seen. The tabby, incidentally, may be male or female.
Tabby is not short for Tabitha, the traditional name for females (as
Tom is for males), but comes from Atab, a street in Baghdad famous
for watered silks, which suggest the rich and intricate markings of
the tabby cat.
Along with perfect color and markings, the de luxe
cat must have eyes of an appropriate shade. Most desirable with
white fur are blue eyes (although this triumph of breeding seems to
leave most blue-eyed whites deaf as a post). The silver should have
emerald-green. Most of the others should range from orange, or
amber, to yellow.
Among other breeding oddities is the fact that
orange-colored females and tortoise-shell males are very
rare.
Siamese
Most prevalent of the
fancy short-hairs is the Siamese, which may once have been
the sacred cat of Siam and
is one of the common cats there today. It is strikingly handsome and
extremely smart, and is a good companion. It is too taut and
restless to be very cuddly, but it is a great talker and a fine
mouser. The voice has a high-pitched Asian twang with just a
suggestion of the jungle in it. If one finds the tone unpleasant,
one had better not get a Siamese, for it will be heard unceasingly
by one and all -- especially when the female is in heat. The yowls
of yearning sound rather as though the cat were being rent
asunder.
The Siamese is small, lithe and neat. It is leaner
than other cats, with long legs and tail, and a firm, muscular
appearance that implies power.
The head, too, is small, and of a more sharply
defined wedge shape than is found in long-hairs or domestics. The
eyes are almond-shaped, very blue and often crossed. This may be
disconcerting but, in this breed, is not considered a fault. The
tail may be kinked or curled, but this is, too, is a virtue in
Oriental cats.
The fur lies sleek and flat, and over the body it is
a light fawn color. Legs, tail and the mask across the face should
be a dark, chocolate color. This may also be described as a seal
brown, and the cat whose "points" are so marked is a Seal Point
Siamese. Some are a grayish white with blue points and are, of
course, Blue Point Siamese. The greater the contrast between the
colors of body and points, the better the cat is judged to
be.
B urmese
Similar to the Siamese, yet a distinct breed and
quite rare in the United States, is the Burmese cat. Its coat is usually
a dark brown, almost solid, and without points. Its eyes, too, are
golden or hazel rather than blue. By nature, it is docile and
friendly, and undoubtedly would be highly popular if imported or
bred in sufficient numbers.

Abyssinians
Also rare is the
Abyssinian cat, which is believed
to be in a direct line of descent from the famous cats of ancient
Egypt. It is a placid cat which talks little and has an affectionate
nature. It is basically a shade of brown with variegated markings of
black, gray or contrasting brown. These should be definite, however,
and not resemble the tabby. White spots of any sort are
undesirable.
Manx
Odd but not unusual is
the tailless Manx cat, which comes from the
Isle of Man, in the Irish Sea off the coast of northern England.
Historically, the first Manx landed in 1588, when they deserted the
sinking ships of the Spanish Armada. The sea-roving Spanish, in
turn, appear to have picked them up during their travels from either
Japan or the Asian continent.
The Manx
is an energetic and resourceful cat which hunts not only rats and
mice, but snakes as well. It is a courageous critter and fears no
dog alive.
Part of its strength and speed comes from its
curious build. Its fore-legs are, ideally, very short and its hind
legs long. This elevates the rump, which classically should be round
as a ball, with a small dimple at the base of the spine where the
tail begins in other cats. This results in a bobbing walk and a
tendency to leap frequently while running. The Manx does not hop
like a rabbit, however, despite what has often been said by many
people.
Over-all, the Manx is small and compact. The ears
are pointed. The fur is silky and comes in all the usual
colors.
Taillessness, incidentally, is an uncertain
characteristic. Manx kittens occasionally are born with tiny,
rudimentary tails -- which seems to disturb them not at
all.
There are also, as noted, some specialized or
locally varying de luxe breeds which are difficult, if not
unnecessary, to classify. The Maine Coon cat is one, a large
long-hair once thought to be a cross between the Angora and raccoons. The Blues
are often simply end points of breeding undertaken by breeders in
different countries. There are even some not-entirely-but-almost
Hairless cats. The types and color groupings listed above, however,
are those best known in the United States.
Domestic
short-hairs
Then there is, of course, the
Domestic Short-hair. Not many of them would meet the exacting
standards of the show ring, but should they find themselves there,
the judge would look first for a body s omewhat longer than the
long-hair's, slender, but deep and broad in the chest.
The head should have breadth between the ears, and a
generally more angular appearance, owing to the slightly longer,
more pointed nose and bushy cheeks.
The ears should be set more atop the head than is
the case with long-hairs, and should stand about as high as they are
broad at the base.
The tail should not be long and should taper to the
tip and be carried level with the back. A lot of perky-tailed
Domestics rule themselves out of elite classification on this score
alone.
The eyes should be large and round and convey a
pleasant expression. This is more important even than their color.
If the cat looks grumpy or mean, owing to imperfect shape or spacing
of the eyes (or to grmpiness or meanness), it won't matter how
beautiful their tint. Eye colors should complement body colors, as
in the long-hairs.
Body colors are likewise similarly defined, although
pure, unblemished coats are hard to come by in this crowd, and
smokes and silvers are particularly rare. Tabby types, of course,
are innumerable.
Show
Cats
Show standards are quite specific on the
general conformation of cats, but may become complex and variable,
depending on the association consulted or the fashion from year to
year, with regard to co loration
and marking.
What makes show cats beautiful, special and rare is
the fact that attractions like long hair or unusual coat and eye
colors are, biologically speaking, recessive characteristics. They
are cultivated by patient and careful breeding, until all vestiges
of tabby markings, say, are gone from the Siamese and disfiguring,
off-color splotches are eliminated from pure white, black, blue and
so on.
Just how delicate this balance is, and just how
recessive a recessive characteristic can be, has been proved time
and again by the mating -- accidental, of course -- of a
fancy-shmancy with a common cat who has no style but is bulging with
gross, salt-of-the-earth, dominant characteristics. The kittens
invariably come up plain cat, with tiger stripes and yellow eyes,
and no faint trace of grand lineage in any feature.
The mating of two common cats is equally
unpredictable. Often as not a pair of attractively marked parents
will produce babies with random spots and blotches -- black eyes,
striped noses, and so forth -- that are most unbecoming. The same
may be true of size and shape. A compact, neatly built mother cat
may find her youngsters growing up to be thin-shanked, lean-bodied
critters with no family resemblance at all.
If the owner likes cats impartially this will be no
problem. Certainly it has never troubled cats. They are not
self-conscious about aesthetic defects; none has ever felt out of
place at a social gathering.
As a matter of fact, cats of all breeds always try
to look as presentable as circumstances allow, and seem to have an
eye for tasteful backgrounds -- white bedspreads, red chairs,
bouquets of flowers -- which set them off to advantage. There may be
other, simpler reasons for it, but there is no denying that cats
have a sense of the dramatic. Every cat, whether a pure-bred Persian
lolling on a silken pillow or a nameless waif resting beside an
alley trash can, looks as though she expected to be looked at and,
better still, admired.
Go to: Chapter
2 Part 1: Choosing A Cat
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