Turkish Van

The Turkish Van (Turkish: Van Kedisi, Armenian: Վանա կատու) is a rare, naturally occurring breed of cat from the Lake Van region of present-day Turkey. For Turkish Vans, the word van refers to their color pattern, where the color is restricted to the head and the tail, and the rest of the cat is white. It is the maximum expression of the piebald white spotting gene that makes the van pattern. The spotting gene appears in many different species (like the horse and ball python). It also shows up in the common house cat, so a cat that shows this color pattern but is not registered or from the Van region, is called a “Vanalike”.

Turkish Van

Turkish Van – The swimming Moggy

Characteristics

The coat on a Van is considered semi-longhaired. While many cats have three distinct hair types in their coat – guard hairs, awn hairs and down hairs – the Turkish Van only has one. This makes their coat feel like cashmere or rabbit fur, and the coat dries quickly when wet. Lake Van is a region of temperature extremes and the cats have evolved a coat that grows thick in the winter with a large ruff and bottlebrush tail for the harsh winters and then sheds out short in the body for the warm summers. The full tail is kept year round.

The Van is one of the larger cat breeds. The males can reach 20 lb (9 kg) and the females weigh about half of that. They have massive paws and rippling hard muscle structure which allows them to be very strong jumpers. Vans can easily hit the top of a refrigerator from a cold start on the floor. They are slow to mature and this process can take 3-5 years. Also, their fetching skills are quite good and they are quick to learn.

Perhaps the most interesting trait of the breed is its fascination with water; most cat breeds dislike being immersed in water. The unusual trait may be due to the breed’s proximity to Lake Van in their native country; it may have acquired this trait due to the very hot summers and have extremely waterproof coats that make bathing them a challenge. As such, Vans have been nicknamed the “Swimming Cats” for this most unusual trait. Most Vans in the United States are indoor cats and do not have access to large bodies of water, but their love and curiosity of water stays with them. Instead of swimming they stir their water bowls and invent fishing games in the toilet.

Breed standards

Breed standards allow for one or more body spots as long as there is no more than 20% color and the cat does not give the appearance of a bi-color. Although red tabby and white is the classic van color, the color on a van’s head and tail can be one of the following: Red, Cream, Black, Blue, Red Tabby, Cream Tabby, Brown Tabby, Blue Tabby, Tortoiseshell, Dilute Tortoiseshell (also known as blue-cream), Brown Patched Tabby, Blue patched Tabby and any other color not showing evidence of hybridization with the pointed cats (Siamese, Himalayan, etc).

British Longhair

The British Longhair cat is a semi-longhair version of British Shorthair. Apart from fur, it is identical to the British Shorthair. The British Longhair is also known as Lowlander in U.S. and Britanica in Europe, but is not recognised in the UK as a separate breed.

The rationale for this breed is that the original longhaired British cat, through interbreeding with imported longhairs, was developed into the Persian and became increasingly massive and extreme in type and with longer, thicker fur than the early Persians. During the late 19th Century and early 20th Century, the Persian was considered the longhaired analogue of the British Shorthair (Frances Simpson’s The Book of the Cat depicts and describes the old type of Persian).

During the latter part of the 20th Century a shorthaired version of the modern Persian was developed and was called the Exotic Shorthair; this was very different from the British Shorthair. It was therefore proposed that a longhaired cat of the British type be reintroduced into the cat breeds.

Just back from the scrap

Hello reader,

Sorry I haven’t been in touch for a while… just busy with things… you know how it is.

Thought I’d post about seeing off a rival cat in the garden the other day. I did try and make friends but the Tom was having none of it. So I told him where to get off in no uncertain terms. After all I have my reputation to keep up… But I guess one day I wont be king of the hill any longer and I’ll have to hand in my rebel crown….

That stray Tom was not dis-similar to this chap

Bye for now.

Norm

The Breed List

Presented below is the moggyblog.com breed list, showing the entries we have so far.

If you are the owner of a cat of a breed type not listed below, I would welcome any notification of that missing breed please. If you woudl like to create a post for your specific breed this would be most welcome please.

You can either register to post your entry (please mark [for breed] though) or else please email me a photo and text for the cat(s) concerned.

Thanks to the cfainc.org website for many of the breed descriptions and also to Wikipedia for other pieces of the information presented. Many other sources were also consulted in the creation of the list.

Ed.

  1. Abyssinian
  2. American Bobtail
  3. American Curl
  4. American Keuda
  5. American Shorthair
  6. American Wirehair
  7. Angora
  8. Asian Semi-longhair
  9. Australian Mist
  10. Bahraini Dilmun Cat
  11. Balinese
  12. Bengal
  13. Birman
  14. Bombay
  15. British Longhair
  16. British Shorthair
  17. Burmese
  18. Burmilla
  19. California Spangled Cat
  20. Chantilly/Tiffany cat
  21. Chartreux
  22. Chausie
  23. Colorpoint Shorthair
  24. Cornish Rex
  25. Cymric
  26. Desert Lynx
  27. Devon Rex
  28. Don Sphynx
  29. Egyptian Mau
  30. European Shorthair
  31. Exotic cat
  32. Foldex Cat
  33. German Rex
  34. Havana Brown
  35. Himalayan
  36. Japanese Bobtail
  37. Javanese
  38. Korat
  39. LaPerm
  40. Maine Coon
  41. Manx Munchkin
  42. Nebelung
  43. Neva Masquerade
  44. Norwegian Forest Cat
  45. Ocicat
  46. Ojos Azules
  47. Oriental Longhair
  48. Oriental Shorthair
  49. Persian
  50. Peterbald
  51. Pixie-bob
  52. Ragdoll
  53. Russian Blue
  54. Russian Blue II
  55. Savannah
  56. Scottish Fold
  57. Selkirk Rex
  58. Serengeti
  59. Siamese
  60. Siberian
  61. Singapura
  62. Snow Cat
  63. Snowshoe
  64. Sokoke
  65. Somali
  66. Sphynx
  67. Sterling
  68. Tonkinese
  69. Toyger
  70. Turkish Angora
  71. Turkish Van
  72. Ussuri
  73. York Chocolate Cat

Are you sitting comfortably

Well here’s Norman in a very quiet mood I must say.

You’d never know why he was dubbed stormin’ from this little piece… but just watch this space …or check out Normans’ story in Normans Blog (there’s a link just off to the right there). Bye, Ed.