i’ll agree with “very cute” as his type of cat. bill looks like he has a touch of chocolate siamese in him, along with mostly tabby.
how old do they think he is?
my furry bud has more siamese colouring and light aqua eyes, with the classic tabby marks. his siamese points really kicked in between 6 months and a year. he will get a touch lighter in colour in the summer, and a touch darker in winter.
She said he’s 2 years old and that when he stretches out he’s almost 4’ long. Holy Hell!
The only cat I’ve ever owned weighed about 5 pounds and was under a foot long when stretched out. I have a hard time picturing a cat that big in person.
Someone found him wandering in Rugar Woods in Plattsburgh and brought him in to the shelter about a month ago. He’s afraid of loud noises (like the furnace). He loves to have his belly rubbed. Apparently he also likes to lay alongside my sister and knead her butt.
I’m so glad they found each other. I love my sister but she does have a tendency to be quite introverted. The fact that she’s positively giddy about Bill means he’s having a good impact on her.
I think I’m going to send her an automatic litter box for Christmas. She has borderline OCD and I know it’s just killing her smelling when he goes poo.
The kids and her boyfriend also love him which is good.
Anyway, since it appears there’s no factual answer to this, if a Mod feels like moving the thread to MPSIMS, I wont mind.
Cats typically don’t take good pictures, because they tend to squint or close their eyes because of the flash. The key is to get a cat in a well lighted room, and take the photo, and you can get a real good pic.
My Tiger is a Maine Coon mix that I adopted used when her previous human joined the military. She’s a bit over 16 pounds (which is considered her ideal weight by the vet) and I can believe she’s 4’ toes to tail when fully stretched.
In the town I grew up in, the neighbors across the street and up one house had purebred Maine Coons (back in 1970, before they were the hot breed) and they would scare the mailman, they were so big (the cats, not the neighbors).
These 2 may not go well together. The automatic cleaning litter boxes I have seen could be noisy, and some cats don’t respond well to having their litter box moving behind them. Making a cat afraid of a litter box is usually a bad thing.
Now it’s been a while since I looked at them. Maybe they have gotten better.
Bill is either a Northwest Appalachian Reticulated Angolan Medium-Short Bluehair, or just a cat.
Sorry, inside joke. I used to work as a vet tech. When making up the chart/record for new patient we had to indicate what breed it was. We’d make up exotic breeds like the Northwest Appalachian, but most ended up as just “DSH” - Domestic Short Hair. Or we’d decide they were not just DSHs, but purebred DSHs. If the owner didn’t know exactly how old it was we’d estimate and they give it a birth date of January 1, making it a Thoroughbred DSH.
I have mutt cats in my neighborhood and every once in a while we get one with what I call bunny fur. It’s super soft and silky, but shorter rather than long. To me it feels just like rabbit fur.
The one I have (a Littermaid Mega) has a 15-minute delay. If the cat re-enters the box before the end of the delay, it resets to 15 minutes from then.
Tiger was fascinated by it when she first arrived - she’d use the box, walk away, and when it cycled 15 minutes later she’d run over and hop in (which shut it down). After another 15 minutes, same thing. For over an hour.
No, she doesn’t think she’s a lap cat for some reason. She’ll occasionally put her front paws up, but she’ll usually just flop down very close to me, lean in, and start purring. That’s where she is right now.
This type of coat is characteristic of British Shorthairs, along with a round face, short muzzle, and stocky build. According to Wiki, the breed’s thicker coat is a consequence of intentional cross-breeding with Persians; I would guess that these kinds of genes are running around in the general American Shorthair population too.