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- Xref: sparky tor.general:1684 rec.pets.cats:15960
- Newsgroups: tor.general,rec.pets.cats
- Path: sparky!uunet!utcsri!geac!zooid!gaea
- From: Lynda Fincham <gaea@zooid.guild.org>
- Subject: Re: Two Siamese Cats Free to a Good Home
- Organization: ZOOiD BBS
- Distribution: tor
- Date: Sun, 10 Jan 1993 21:27:51 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan10.212751.24540@zooid.guild.org>
- References: <1993Jan8.183514.5676@zooid.guild.org> <1ilklsINNamo@nigel.msen.com>
- Lines: 62
-
- dan@msen.com (Dan Sugalski) writes:
- >I wrote:
- >: Well, the funny thing is that after seeing over 5000 cats in my life (I worked
- >: in a vet clinic for several years), I've never seen a two colour cat that had
- >: orange and something other than white as it's secondary colour. Ie, I've never
- >: seen an orange and black cat only, or an orange and grey, as mentioned here. I
- >: do notice that many people misdescribe the colours of their cats. I recently
- >: adopted a black tabby (tabby, with black being the predominant colour), but
- >: before I saw her, I was told that she was calico (a tri-coloured cat, mixing
- >: white, orange and black or grey). And the person who told me she was calico
- >: was another vet tech!
- >
- >You've never seen a tortiseshell cat? In some areas, calicos are called
- >tortiseshell and white. Torties don't have white, just the red and black
- >(or the dilute versions thereof) and may be solid or tabby.
-
- A tortishell cat is still a tri-colour cat, although often the third colour
- (white) is hard to see, or only appears in small patches. Tortishells have a
- different type of markings, usually orange (with white) "sprayed" over black,
- where calico's have large patches of the three colours.
-
- >On your tabby, brown tabbies have black markings over a greyish-brown
- >base. Often these cats have red in the undercoat, causing those who don't
- >know cat colors to think that they are calico.
-
- No, no red in this cat, it was mostly black, with dirt brown and beige.
-
- >I've found that most vet techs (and vets for that matter) don't know much
- >about animal colors. Out of 7 cats I've had, only one was consistently
-
- That's not surprising, a good many of the people working at vet clinics are
- students who just like animals or need a job. They most often handle the
- "upfront" work, leaving the more techinical and medical aspects to the trained
- personal, like the vets and licensed technicians.
-
- >listed under the correct color, and she was a tortie. My others are/have
- >been a blue tabby, a brown tabby and the rest ruddy or brown ticked. The
- >two tabbies tend to be listed as grey tigers (both have broken
- >stripes/spots and heavy ticking) and unless someone has seen an Abyssinian,
- >I am asked what color the others are. We go through the same thing with
- >my parents husky cross, who is usually listed as black and tan but is actually
- >sable and cream. I always have to insist that my grey horses markings are
- >filled out on his health papers, too.
-
- I can see some one getting mixed up between a "blue tabby" and a "grey tiger",
- but mixing up a husky that's really "sable and cream" with "black and tan" is
- unexcuseable.
-
- >I suppose I wouldn't care, but I travel around the US and through Canada
- >with these animals, so I prefer that the health papers match the animal in
- >question. At least my 2 home dogs are easy-black and tan.:)
-
- I a) don't travel, and b) don't really care because all the cats I currently
- own are generically coloured - beige and white, grey and white, and black. If
- some technician ever confuses the colours of my cats, I'd probably go
- somewhere else! :)
-
- ---
- Gaea (Lynda Fincham aka Mother Nature) gaea@zooid.guild.org
- ZOOiD Online, Toronto, Canada (416) 322-7876
- Free and Paid Public Access Usenet (416) 322-0920
- "It's easy to spot the optics."
-