Hybrid Vigor
by WereBear on Jul.04, 2008, under breeds
There’s usually some surprises going on. While cats of the same breed can vary, mixed breeds can vary, squared. There’s an infinite number of different combinations that can come up. I encourage everyone to try one of these “chaos theory” cats, where we leave our fate up to a bit of randomness.
Mixed breeds are just as likely to be a great cat as a purebred cat from a breeder. Mixes have a drawback, but there’s also an advantage.

more cat pictures
The tricky part of mixed breeds is that they often come from a stressed background. They can be the product of random breeding, often by people who don’t care enough about their cat to take care of them properly. They were carried by mother cats who are too young for the role, have trouble getting enough food, and only dream of vet care. The resultant kittens are rescued off the street, plucked from roadside ditches, or given away in parking lots.
Yet… these kittens grow up to be great cats.
Cats have a magical way of beating bad odds. Some cats get intervention soon enough to make a huge difference. Some cats are the result of accidents by well-meaning owners, who take care of the kittens the best they can and find them homes. A lot of them, like RJ, are so inherently loving not even the worst beginning can ruin them beyond repair.
Because every kitten has a genetic heritage. Whether it’s described on paper or inscribed in their little faces. Even the most meticulous breeder, or the most careless of circumstances, are no guarantee, one way or another, of how the cat will turn out. The first cloned cat, Carbon Copy, was created in Texas. But they are not identical. Her patches (almost all calicoes are female) are not the same as her donor cat’s patches.
It seems that the genes can be the same, but their expression is still random. We can duplicate the genetic code, but not the environmental factors which switch these codes on or off.
Each cat is different.
Whether we carefully deliberate over kittens from a good breeder, or drop by the shelter to see who’s there, choosing is still up to us.
It is probably the only factor we truly have control over.
The more we have decided what we’d like in a cat, and how to recognize it when we see it, the greater our chances of getting the cat we want.
No matter where the cat might come from.
Anything we like in a purebred can be found in a mixed breed. Any length or texture of hair, any shape of nose or eyes or tail. Huge Chunky chocolate bar paws or dainty little pointy paws. A range of personalities more varied than all the sample colors at the hardware store.
Cat or kitten, purebred or not, choosing carefully before we take the cat home is only the beginning of the cat relationship. It’s not the last decision we will make. Every day we have the ability, and the opportunity, to shape our interactions with the cat towards happiness; or towards misery.
Nature has already spun the big wheel, and formed the cat we are contemplating. But the environment will be equally influential.
And that’s us.
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There’s more to choosing a cat with The Way of Cats than the article you are reading now. See my CHOOSING A CAT.









July 7th, 2008 on 3:30 am
I have always had alley cats — what my paternal grandmother called “cats of the avenue” — and I think I always will. I love the refined look of purebred cats, but I wouldn’t trade my mixed-breed moggies for anything. You never know what you’re getting, true, but it’s always wonderful. I’ve been truly lucky to have such a wide variety of cat personalities in my life, and I look forward to meeting the alley cats that are still in my future!