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Cats and Kittens for Sale in UK Home ~Kittens ~Kings ~Queens ~Expected LittersAdults For Sale ~CONTACT INFO.~What We Feed ~Application For Breeder/Show ~Waiting List ~Our Prices ~Guarantee ~Bengal BlogPicking Up Your New Kitten ~About Bengal Cats ~Blue Bengals Video's ~Links ~Contact Me ~Considerations About Bengals ~Pay Pal PaymentsPrevious KittensE-Mail MeWe are a registered cattery with TICAServing Northern & Southern California Home 209-785-0669Cell or Text 209-202-2738Located in beautiful Angels Camp California 95222We are a registered cattery with TICA"Proud to be a member of the Bengals Illustrated We are a small in home cattery focusing on kittens with fabulous temperaments & type Bengal personalityBengal's, have a lot of personality! they are intelligent and very interactive cats.They are typically neither an ‘aloof’ cat who ignores you haughtily, nor a dull quiet cat.

Their character would not make them ideal pets for someone who wants a quiet, low key companion, but makes them amazing pets for people who want a more ‘dog-like’ member of the family.They are very much a dynamic and active part of the family. They genuinely crave affection.Bengal purrs are laced with all manner of trills and chirrups.They have much wider vocabulary chatters, and even a lovely frustrated short "nya!" they do have a varied range of outspoken calls which they use when they feel the need.A Bengal is not a wild animal. The basic aim of the Bengal cat is to mimic the appearance of the Asian Leopard CatIt is most definitely a domestic animal which has been selectively bred over several generations for character as well as appearance, The term Look of the wild Temperament of a loving house cat, is so right on.The Bengal's of today should be no more aggressive (or defensive) than any other cat. There are reports of some difficulties with temperament very early in the Bengal’s development but for many years breeders have been working very hard on Bengal character.

January 17 2016 Lori Barile and I are beyond proud of Home grown ANGELSIAM AMOTOZENSATION she received the 2016 Jean Mills Award for Best Bengal Female Pictured with Judge Sharon Kalani and Anthony Hutcherson Update RW TGC ANGELSIAM AMOTOZENSATION has won the following SW Regional awards: 2016 SECOND BEST BROWN (BLACK) SPOTTED TABBY BENGAL OF THE YEARMoto is now with Lori Barile at Sonoita Bengals
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15.6 Laptop Skin Asus Black Cat Breeds and History Throughout history, black cats have brought luck, both good and bad, to all types of cat owners.

Stacy N. Hackett | Updated: August 17, 2015, 8 a.m. EST Oriental cats, similar to Siamese cats, are often bred to bear a beautiful shade of black. Click here for our gallery of black cat photos! Ancient Egypt: People paid homage to Bastet, the cat goddess who represented prosperity and truth. Bastet often was depicted as a woman with the head of a cat, frequently with dark or black coloration. To gain favor from the goddess, Egyptian households kept black cats as pets. England & Ireland: Celtic folklore contains stories of Cat Sith, a mythological creature that took the form of a large black cat with a white spot on its chest. And here is one instance where bad luck enters the black cat’s past. While some believed Cat Sith was a fairy in cat’s clothing, others believed the creature was another form of a witch. North America: Black cats were associated with witches throughout history, with many of the tales originating during early settlement of North America.

Folklore includes stories of witches assuming the shape of black cats or of the feline companions acting as witches’ familiars. Rationale for the association likely stemmed from the cats’ nocturnal nature and was heightened by a black cat’s natural and obvious ability to be nearly invisible at night. Added to uncertainty brought about by unfamiliar surroundings and suspicion of anything unusual, the tales grew more elaborate. Continental Europe: Similar stories of the black cat’s relationship with witches may have led people to seek out and kill the dark-colored companions during the Middle Ages. Some speculate that this led to an increase in the rat population, eventually allowing diseases carried by rodents to spread throughout Europe. • Bombay: shorthaired cat breed • Devon Rex: curly-coated cat breed’s • Exotic: With the sweet features of the Persian and a short, plush coat, this breed earns the nickname "lazy man’s Persian.” • Norwegian Forest Cat:

• Turkish Angora: longhaired cat breed I adopted an all black cat,even his pads are black,nose as well. He looks like a cross of the two short hairs pictured in the article. He eats like a pig, but I think that comes from the shelter system. He is getting tall and lean, has olive colored eyes, nothing special. His name is Shadow, because he that is where he hangs out and sometimes completely invisible. But he is also an attack specialist, hiding in the shadows. Hell on wheels, I figured part Asian breed. He grows taller than fatter, long legs. We just adopted an all black kitten from the spca. What a beautiful girl, big purrs, feisty and affectionate. Asleep on my lap as I write this. Kathy Sherman Oaks, CA Just like Ruth in Salem, my 3year old male is also a Bombay named Midnight and is very intelligent, loving and likes to shred things!! I have a Beautiful black Bombay. His name is MIDNIGHT, and hr is very loving.The Shaded, or Burmilla, is the original Asian variety.

In 1981, an accidental mating between a male Chinchilla (Jemari Sanquist), and a female lilac European Burmese (Bambino Lilac Faberge), resulted in the birth of 4 black Shaded Silver shorthaired kittens of good Burmese type. The breeder, Miranda von Kirchberg, already well known for her Astahazy Russian Blues, had the foresight and knowledge to understand that these kittens could be the foundation for a new and exciting breed group which would fill a gap in the Cat Fancy - Silver and Tabby equivalents of the Burmese. With Astahazy Galatea, one of the first litter, she embarked on an experimental breeding programme with the advice and support of many leading Burmese breeders, geneticists and GCCF advisors. At the time of her death in 1997 her inspiration was about to become reality- the Burmilla was on the verge of competing for the first time at Championship status in GCCF, almost 16 years after the birth of the first kittens. The Burmilla may either be silver (above) or non-silver (right);