www.catsandkittens.com  

    
    
Subscribe Now
    
Back Issues
    
News & Articles
    
Cat Breeds
    
Cat Breeders
    
Reader Stories
    
Feline Links
    
Web Advertising
    
Print Advertising
    
Contact Us
 

Click Here!Six Months Free!

Click here to get your risk-free subscription to
Cats & Kittens magazine.

Visit Pet Publishing's other pet related sites

www.dogandkennel.com
www.birdtimes.com

The Somali has championship status in all cat associations.

CFA 1997 registrations
477

Change from 1996
-12%

Popularity for 1997
19th out of 36 breeds

 

 

The Somali
A Berry Lovely Cat

The Somali, we are told, resembles a fox. This might be true physically. In a metaphysical sense, however, the Somali resembles a raspberry -- not the kind you eat when it's summertime and the pickin's are easy, but the kind you make to express disapproval or contempt when some fool gets up your nose.

Image by Quarto
 

The primary force behind this raspberry was Evelyn Mague, who personified the adage: Breeding well is the best revenge. Until destiny came sidling up to her door in 1969, Mague was the president of a private cat shelter in Gillette, New Jersey. She was also a breeder of Abyssinian cats -- shorthaired, elegant creations with softly rounded, wedge-shaped heads and ticked coats in which the individual hairs accommodate contrasting bands of color.

By George

When destiny rang Evelyn Mague's bell, it came in the guise of a one-year-old Abyssinian cat named George, who, unlike the majority of his brethren and sistren, had long hair. George was accompanied to Mague's shelter by his fifth owner. No one but politicians and people with their photos in the post office move that many times in a year, but here was George with failed-cat-owner number five. We say failed because none of those dear hearts had seen fit to keep George more than an average of 9.5 weeks, and none had been fit to have George vaccinated and/or neutered. While we're handing out citations, we might as well add George's breeder to the lineup. He or she had sent George out into the world when he was five weeks old. That's seven weeks shy of the earliest age at which cats are placed by prudent breeders.

If luck were gasoline, poor George wouldn't have had enough to drive a baby gnat's snowmobile half way around a dime, but his luck was about to change. "When I opened the door," said Mague, "I thought here was the most beautiful cat I had ever seen."

So there was Mague, as smitten then as any woman now might be after seeing her first Leonardo diCaprio movie. Yet despite her titanic fondness for George, Mague was only his penultimate keeper. George would have been welcome to stay at her house but for the fact that he wasn't used to being around other cats, and Mague had other cats. Therefore, her fascination with George notwithstanding, she had him vaccinated and neutered and hung a $75 price tag on him, operating on the theory that most people value something in proportion to what they pay for it. George was eventually sold to someone who didn't have any other cats.

Home is Where?

George's stay at Mague's was something of homecoming for him. Even though he hadn't been born there, his mother, a shorthaired Abyssinian, was living there, having just been acquired by Mague from someone who had given up breeding. George's father, another shorthaired Aby, was living there, too. In fact, he had been born there. This meant that someone whom Mague had allowed to breed a cat to George's father had let one of the kittens go at the criminally young age of five weeks. Breeders don't like to be associated with that sort of greedoid behavior. As Mague noted, "This little longhair had been no better off than an unpedigreed cat in the street" -- just because he had long hair. No matter that he was, in Mague's opinion, "the most beautiful cat" she had ever seen. No matter that some of the finest Abyssinian bloodlines in the country coursed through George's pedigree. What mattered was that he had committed the unpardonable offense of being born with hair that was not the correct length. The standard specifies a short to medium coat. This cat has a semilong coat. He can't be shown or used for breeding. Yank him off that nipple and send him out the door.

Getting Mad and Even

The more Evelyn Mague thought about the shameful way George had been treated, the more she was determined to find another longhaired Abyssinian and to take that cat to shows. Better still, in memory of the original George she would seek out other Georges, and they would go forth and be fruitful. And also be the burr under the girths of a lot of Abyssinian breeders.

Cats being known for their graciousness, George's parents did not object to assisting Mague in creating a new breed. How many cats get to play Adam and Eve? Heck, how many people get to? Genetics being a taut little exercise, Mague was certain that although George's parents were shorthairs, they each possessed a gene for long hair. Because the longhair gene is recessive to the shorthair gene, if two shorthair cats produce a longhaired kitten, each parent must be carrying the longhair gene. She also knew that on average George's parents would produce one longhaired kitten in each litter of four.

Sure enough, the breeding that had produced George produced another longhaired Abyssinian, this one a female born on January 3, 1972. This kitten and others like her, in turn, produced dyspepsia in most Abyssinian breeders when longhaired Abys began turning up in experimental classes at shows. "It was all downhill from the start," Mague recalled. "One of my good friends -- who had the largest Abyssinian cattery in the country at the time -- told me that the longhairs would be recognized over her dead body; and sadly, that's exactly what happened."

The Name Game

The cat fancy can be like a daunting religion, only worse, if you're a sinner, especially if you're a sinner who shows a factory-imperfect cat for which you hope to obtain official recognition so that it can compete in championship classes alongside "purebred" cats. Shunning is a common punishment for sinners in the cat fancy. So is vilification. Furthermore, the official church has a proprietary attitude about names. Thus, Abyssinian breeders were not about to let Mague call her gorgeous Georges something simple like longhaired Abyssinians.

No problem. Just give 'em the old raspberry. Mague, in an inspired bit of impishness, decided to call her new cat a Somali. Somalia, in case you've forgotten your geography, forms the eastern and southeastern borders of Ethiopia, which was called Abyssinia until 1855.

Mague's choice of a breed name was brilliantly cheeky, there being, as we have seen, but one or two genes' worth of difference between an Abyssinian and a Somali. That difference, like the border between Ethiopia and Somalia, is a human fixation. Nevertheless, some breeders, obsessed perhaps with the notion of breed purity, insisted on crediting natural mutation for the appearance of longhaired kittens in Abyssinian litters. To this day one cat association declares, "The Somali originated as a longhaired mutation of the Abyssinian." In reality, there is a more parsimonious explanation.

Hitting the Books

Between 1900 and 1905, within one decade after the Abyssinian had been accepted as a breed in England, the stud book of the National Cat Club there contained the names of only 12 Abyssinian cats. Twelve's a nice round number if you're choosing up sides for apostles, but it makes for an anemic breed population. What the Aby lacked in numbers, though, it made up for in mystery. Each of those 12 registered cats had at least one parent of unknown origin. If you wanted to read longhaired cats or cats with longhaired ancestors for some of those unknowns, who could cast the first stone? Cat registries could, however, stop you from showing the descendants of those longhairs and from using such cats legitimately in your breeding program. Longhaired Aby kittens, therefore, were traditionally sold as pets with as little fanfare (and less acknowledgment) as possible.

The turn of the century wasn't the only time when shorthaired Abyssinian stock was in short supply. The post-wars years in this century were also occasions when longhaired cats (or cats with longhaired ancestors) might have been used in Abyssinian breeding programs. The list of registered Abyssinian stud cats in England in 1947-48 was four-cats long, and two of them hadn't sired litters yet. As former Cat Fanciers' Association president Richard Gebhardt has written, "Breeders looking to find mates for their females at that time obviously had to look elsewhere for eligible suitors." Breeders in this country were obliged to do likewise.

Can You Copy?

Not every Abyssinian breeder had rigor mortis about the Somali's existence. To be sure, longhaired Abyssinians had turned up once or twice at cat shows before George turned up at Mague's door. According to a proposal submitted to the Cat Fanciers' Association in 1978, when Somali breeders were petitioning for championship status, one breeder "reported seeing a longhaired Abyssinian being shown in the Household Pet classes of a Buffalo, NY, cat show in 1955."

When Mague placed an ad in a cat magazine hoping to locate other breeders working with longhaired Abyssinians, she heard from a Canadian cat fancier who had bought some longhairs from a cat show judge and had been breeding them for four or five years. Subsequently she heard from other Aby breeders with longhairs, and in 1972 she founded the Somali Cat Club of America (SCCA), which, in just one year's time, was able to obtain registration and championship status for Somalis in the now-defunct National Cat Fanciers' Association. By 1980, all the other cat registries in North America had followed suit, but not always gladly. As the Winter 1994 SCCA Newsletter observed, "[Name of association deleted] would like us to quit in disgust, let's surprise them and fight 'fire with fire.'"

Or with raspberries.

The Building Code

The Somali is a medium long, lithe and graceful cat with a rounded rib cage, slightly arched back and semilong coat. The Somali's head is a modified, somewhat rounded wedge with gentle contours in the brow and cheek. The chin is full and rounded; the muzzle is round with no hint of snippiness; and there is a slight rise from the bridge of the nose to an ample forehead, which is topped by large, moderately pointed ears that are broad and cupped at the base.

Large, brilliant, expressive, almond-shaped eyes -- accented by dark skin around the lids that is, in turn, circled by a light colored area -- complete the Somali face. Gold and green are accepted eye colors in all registries, and at least one cat association accepts hazel eyes as well.

The Somali's semilong double coat is extremely soft and fine. A generous ruff about the neck, and breeches on the hind legs are preferred. The Somali's full, foxlike tail is thick at the base and slightly tapered. Like its Abyssinian relatives, the Somali has a ticked coat in which the individual hairs contain contrasting bands of colors. In the red Somali, for example, red bands alternate with bands of chocolate brown. Somalis also occur in ruddy, blue, fawn and silver.

Personality Profile

According to its breed standard, the Somali shows "an alert, lively interest in all surroundings,an even disposition and is easy to handle." Those who own Somalis are wont to describe them as "the epitome of everything that most people would ever want in a companion animal" -- a "natural clown" whose "zest for life" is evident at home or in the show ring.

 

Copyright © 2000 Pet Publishing Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.