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Breed profile
the Ocicat
Dr David Richardson August 2005
History of the Ocicat
The Ocicat is accidental cat. The history of
the Ocicat started in 1964 when Virginian Daly was trying to breed
lynx point Siamese. She crossed Siamese with Abyssinian and then
crossed the kittens back to her chocolate Siamese. One of the
kittens was a beautiful chocolate spotted kitten called Tonga.
Tonga was neutered and sold as a pet, but when subsequent matings
produced more similar spotted kittens Virginia decided to make a new
breed called the Ocicat, because her daughter remarked that the
spots were similar to that on an Ocelot. Later the American
Shorthair was introduced to add the silver colour. The Ocicat breed
was first accepted as a standard in the US in 1986. It remains most
popular as the breed in the USA.
Description of the Ocicat
The Ocicat is a substantial spotted cat of
foreign body type. It is available in six colours and their silver
counterparts. These are brown chocolate, blue, cinnamon, lilac, and
fawn. In the silver: brown silver, chocolate silver, blue silver,
cinnamon silver, lilac silver and fawn silver. The Ocicat has a
square muzzle though not so square as in the Maine Coon. The ears
are moderately large and set on the corners of the head. The eyes
are large and almond shaped and slightly slanted towards the ears.
All eye colours except blue are accepted. Neck is arched. The body
is semi foreign large and substantial. Coat is fine, close lying but
long enough to carry several bands of ticking. Abyssinian facial
markings are desirable on the Ocicat including the mascara, the pale
area around the eyes, the line going horizontally back from the
eyes, and the M on the forehead.
The legs are moderately long, powerful and
muscular leading to compact oval paws. The tail is fairly long
moderately slender and tapering slightly to a dark tip.
What I'm looking for when judging the Ocicat.
I am looking for a lithe and muscular cat of
substantial size and semi foreign body type. I am looking from
clear well demarcated spots with the traditional vertical
orientation. I am looking for Abyssinian type markings on the face.
I am looking for a square muzzle large ears sitting on the corners
of the head, & almond shaped eyes. These eyes must not be blue in
colour. I am looking for a cat in one of the six traditional
colours (Brown, blue, chocolate, cinnamon, lilac or fawn) or their
silver counterparts.
Scoring the Ocicat
40 points for the coat, 35 for the body, legs
paws and tail, and only 20 for the head including 10 for eyes.
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