There's a good reason for it that's rooted in our nature as cats. If we do something you don't like, it's not because we're deliberately being "naughty". Our emotions are like yours, but our motivations are not. Our litter-box needs to be big enough to use, and kept clean enough that we won't go elsewhere.Ĭats have complex brain structures that allow us to feel afraid, angry, sad, and happy. Tabby cats need a clean, well-kept litter box. Tabby cats need plenty of fresh, clean water.ĭrinking dirty water can make us sick, so if the water smells bad or stale, we might avoid it. It has just the right balance of vitamins and minerals we need to stay healthy. Well-meaning vegans have made their cats very sick trying to impose their animal-free diet on us.Ĭats need to eat cat food, not people food.Ĭat food is specially prepared to give us the nutrients we would get by hunting and eating prey in the wild. That's a fancy way of saying that we eat other animals, and only other animals. If we are suddenly abandoned outdoors, we are facing a short life and a very painful death.
While we have an innate drive to chase things, we don't know how to kill prey unless our mothers taught us.
This piece was originally published in 2015.Cats are not born knowing how to "fend for themselves" in the wild. Thumbnail: Photography by Shelagh Duffett/Thinkstock. The markings are usually more apparent on the legs and head. Patched tabbies can show any one of the above four distinct tabby patterns. In the typical form, there are separate patches of brown tabby and red tabby on the same animal.Ī tortie who also carries the tabby gene is often called a torbie. This is the term used to describe a tortoiseshell (also called tortie) tabby. Photography ©Angelafoto | iStock / Getty Images Plus. The ticked pattern is displayed prominently in Abyssinians but also appears in mixed breeds. What are agouti hairs? If you look up close at the lighter parts of a tabby’s coat, you will see that the individual hairs are striped with alternating light and dark bands, known as the agouti hairs. However, like all tabbies, this coat pattern has tabby markings on the face and agouti hairs on the body. It is not known whether these spots developed from a mackerel tabby or come from a separate gene.Ī ticked tabby cat (sometimes called Abyssinian tabby or agouti tabby) does not have the traditional stripes or spots on her body, and may not, at first, seem to be a tabby. Often, a mackerel tabby with a broken pattern resembles a spotted tabby. These spots can be large or small, and sometimes appear to be broken mackerel stripes. They branch out from one stripe that runs along the top of the cat’s back down the spine, resembling fish skeleton - which is why the term “mackerel” is used to describe it.Ī spotted tabby has spots all over his sides. Ideally, the stripes are non-broken lines evenly spaced. This is what some people refer to as a “tiger cat.” The body has narrow stripes running down the sides in a vertical pattern. The pattern of circular smudges on the classic tabby’s body closely resembles a bullseye.Ī mackerel tabby has narrow stripes that run in parallel down her sides. This tabby is called a “blotched tabby” in some regions. The classic tabby has bold, swirling patterns along his sides - much like a marble cake. See if you can figure out which tabby your cat is: We’ve listed them below alongside photos of each. There are five types of tabby coat patterns, each possessing its own unique markings. Still others believe it is the blessing of the Virgin Mary. Others think the “M” stands for Mohammed, who loved tabbies. Some believe the “M” is for Mau, the word for “cat” in ancient Egypt. And have you ever seen a solid red or orange or cream cat without the familiar tabby markings? You won’t, because the gene that makes a cat red or cream also makes the tabby markings visible.Īll tabbies have thin pencil lines on their faces, expressive markings around the eyes, and a distinct letter “M” on their foreheads. Sometimes you can see those faint tabby markings on a solid-colored cat who is sitting in the bright sun. All orange cats are tabby cats and vice versa. Other cat colors or patterns may hide those tabby markings, but they’re always present. Technically speaking, no matter what colors or markings you see on your cat, all felines possess the tabby cat gene. And it happens to be the most common of all the feline coat patterns. People sometimes call the average domestic cat a tabby, but tabby is not a cat breed - it is actually the pattern of kitty’s coat.