They don't have the ear tufts a MC has. And the ear hairs would be longer. No matter what they are, you have two beautiful fruffy little kitties.
And welcome to TCS.
And welcome to TCS.
Hi.
soo is a torbie a breed or coloration we looked up a few breeds she looks like some one said she could be a lynx-point or a bengal manx could that be possible?
He has fantastic looks, and it would be nice to give him some fancy label of a breed. But I myself dont see any clear cut look alike, and anyway, technically without papers or other proofs of ancestry, he is a domestic short hair, as Catspaw66 says.
If he is friendly and enjoys attention from people, you could of course participate in Shows, in the HOusehold Pet class. His looks would give him plus points there.
Calico + tabby as Catspaw mentions is tortoiseshell and white + tabby, so we have essentially the same description, although our descriptions come from different associations.
The question is possibly if he is diluted... I dont dare to say anything too exact with my so so monitor.
Torbie is an informal name for a calico that has stripes like a tabby. It is not a breed. Bengal and Manx are breeds, and have strict guidelines. Any cat without pedigree papers from a reputable breeder is a Domestic Short/Long hair.
soo is a torbie a breed or coloration we looked up a few breeds she looks like some one said she could be a lynx-point or a bengal manx could that be possible?
Torbie is a coloration. Lynx point is btw also a coloration, a tabby + point.
soo is a torbie a breed or coloration we looked up a few breeds she looks like some one said she could be a lynx-point or a bengal manx could that be possible?
I dunno either, but two possibilities spring to mind--a Bengal/Manx mix, or a Bengal/Bengal lookalike with a short tail. After all, it's entirely possible for a cat to just randomly be born with a stubby tail, or even no tail, without being a Manx. And very occasionally, a kitten will lose its tail very early on (perhaps because a scared young queen over-groomed and bit it, or someone stepped on it and it had to be amputated, etc.), so that once the cat is grown it's impossible to tell whether the cat had always been missing its tail. Random mutations can cause a cat to be born without a tail. Sometimes if the umbilical cord wraps around a limb before birth, the kitten is born without that paw, or without its tail, because the blood couldn't get to the end of the limb and so it simply didn't develop. At least that's one guess as to why healthy kittens are occasionally born missing a paw.What a "bengal manx" would be I dont have any idea. Otherwise bengal is a breed and manx is also a breed. different looks from each other, manx usually with short tail.
How do I do thatThat link doesn't seem to work. Can you please post a picture directly to this site? That's the easiest way for people to see your photos.