Ocicat
The Ocicat is a new and still-rare breed
of cat which has spots resembling a 'wild' cat and the
temperament of a domestic animal, named for its resemblance to
the ocelot.
Despite its appearance, there is no 'wild' DNA in the
Ocicat's genepool. The species is actually a mixture of Siamese
and Abyssinian, and later American Shorthairs (silver tabbies)
were added to the mix and gave the breed their silver colour,
bone structure and distinct markings.
The first breeder of Ocicats was Virginia Daly, of Berkley,
Michigan, who attempted to breed an Abyssinian-pointed Siamese
in 1964.
The first generation of kittens appeared Abyssinian, but the
surprising result in the second generation was a spotted
kitten, Tonga, nicknamed an 'ocicat' by the breeder's daughter.
Tonga was neutered and sold as a pet, but further breedings of
his parents produced more spotted kittens, and became the base
of a separate Ocicat breeding program.
Other breeders joined in and used the same recipe, siamese *
aby, and offspring * siamese.
Today the ocicat is found all around the world, popular for
its temperament but wild appearance.
Ocicats are a very outgoing breed. They are often considered to
have the spirit of a dog-in a cat's body.
Most can easily be trained to fetch, walk on a leash and
harness, come when called, speak, sit, lie down on command and
a large array of other dog-related tricks. Some even take
readily to the water.
Ocicats are also very friendly. They will typically march
straight up to strangers and announce that they'd like to be
petted. This makes them great family pets, and most can also
get along well with animals of other species.
Ocicats make excellent pets for people who want to
spend a lot of time with their cat, but they do require more
attention than cats who aren't so people-orientated.
There are twelve colors approved for the ocicat breed. Tawny,
chocolate and cinnamon, their dilutes, blue, lavender and fawn,
and all of them with silver: black silver (ebony silver),
chocolate silver, cinnamon silver, blue silver, lavender silver
and fawn silver.
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