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Size: Small to medium.
Coat Length(s): Medium hair.
Body Type: Svelte.
Grooming Requirement: Every few weeks.
Talkativeness: Very vocal.
Activity Level: Very high.
Affection: Very affectionate.
Usually Good With: Adults, seniors, and children(6+).
Time Alone: 0 to 4 hours per day.
Attention: Needs lots of attention.
Handling: Can be a handful.
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| Despite the breed’s name, the Oriental Longhair’s coat is only medium length. It lacks the easily tangled, downy undercoat common to some longhaired breeds. Grooming is quick and simple. |
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The Oriental Longhair is essentially a Siamese not limited to short hair, the colorpoint pattern and a mere four colors. The Oriental Longhair is accepted in more than 300 color and pattern combinations. The breed was deliberately developed from the colorful Oriental Shorthair; the fanciers involved wanted a breed that had the same wide range of colors but with a longer coat. In the late 1970s, breeders crossed the Oriental Shorthair with the Balinese (longhaired Siamese), and the Oriental Longhair was born. In 1985, the breed achieved championship status in TICA. In 1988, the Oriental Longhair was accepted by CFA for registration and later for championship.
To really understand the Oriental Longhair, however, you have to know a bit about the colorful history of the Oriental Shorthair breed. The Oriental Shorthair was developed in the 1950s from crosses between the Siamese, domestic shorthair and the Abyssinian. The breed has the body style and personality of the Siamese but is not restricted to the colorpoint pattern; the Oriental Shorthair comes in every color of the rainbow except green—that color is reserved for the beautiful, almond-shaped eyes (the Oriental Shorthair may have green or blue eyes, or one of each, depending upon the coat’s color and pattern).
In 1995, CFA combined the Oriental Shorthair and the Oriental Longhair into one breed called the Oriental. The Oriental Longhair became a division of the Oriental breed, and suddenly breeding and registering the Oriental Longhair was much easier. For example, if two Oriental Shorthairs produced longhaired kittens (possible if both parents possessed the recessive longhair gene), those kittens could now be registered and shown in the longhair division instead of being sold or given away as pets. And when Oriental Longhair breeders cross back to the Siamese or Oriental Shorthair to keep the Longhair's bloodline diverse and healthy, any shorthair kittens born in those litters can be registered and shown as Oriental Shorthairs.
It also meant the Oriental Shorthair’s colors and patterns were acceptable for the Oriental Longhair. The same year, CFA accepted bicolor for the Oriental, which increased the number of possible colors and patterns to more than 300.
The Oriental Longhair is still quite rare, but the breed has fans and is gaining more. The breed appeals to the cat lover who wants the long, svelte body type and talkative temperament of the Siamese, the semi-long wash-and-wear hair of the Balinese and the rainbow of colors of the Oriental Shorthair. Most breeders who work with the Oriental Longhair also work with the Oriental Shorthair, and often with the Siamese or one or more of the other Siamese-derived breeds as well.
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The myriad colors and patterns may catch your attention, but the vivacious personality of the Oriental Longhair holds it. Very active, playful and entertaining cats, they are always underfoot and want to be involved in all of your activities, from aerobics to quiet evenings by the fire. A tall cat tree is necessary to keep your Oriental Longhair from climbing to the top of the highest bookcase. There are few places Oriental Longhairs cannot reach, and their curiosity and intelligence makes it hard to keep them out of closed closets and cupboards. They hate closed doors, particularly when their special person is on the other side.
Extremely people-oriented and trusting, Oriental Longhairs generally form a close bond with one person. While friendly to others in the household, it’s clear who their preferred person is. They spend most of their time with their favorite human and eagerly await his or her return. Once you form that close emotional bond, Oriental Longhairs put complete trust in you. If left alone or ignored for too long, they mourn. With the proper amount of love and attention, however, Oriental Longhairs become completely devoted companions. Like most Siamese-derived breeds, they are snugglers, wanting to be on your bed, in your lap and, most of all, at your side. The Oriental Longhair is not for those who work all day and have an active social life at night.
Although known to be demanding, noisy and mischievous, these qualities endear them to their many fans. This breed’s vocal tone is generally softer and milder than that of the Siamese, but Oriental Longhairs still love to share all the intimate details of their day with their favorite person. They are never at a loss for words on any subject.
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Oriental Longhairs often live 15 to 20 years if they’re kept indoors. However, some Oriental Longhair lines share the same hereditary weaknesses as some lines of Siamese, since the breed was created by using Siamese and is still outcrossed with Siamese and related breeds today. Liver amyloidosis, the heart disease cardiomyopathy, and gingivitis are several of the inherited problems found more often in the Oriental Longhair than in the general cat population. Be sure to buy from a breeder who provides registration papers and a written health guarantee. Annual health checkups, tooth care and cleanings done by a veterinarian are usually a must.
Even though this breed is a longhair, Oriental Longhairs lack the downy undercoat that mats so easily and therefore don't need very frequent grooming. However, grooming Oriental Longhairs more often than what is required is good for their health because it gives you the opportunity to check for developing health problems. It also gives your cat the additional attention that's so important to his feeling of well-being and happiness.
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| The ideal Oriental Longhair is a svelte cat with long, tapering lines. The body is fine-boned, elongated, tubular and lithe but muscular. The head is a long, tapering wedge in good proportion to the body. The total wedge starts at the nose and flares out in straight lines to the tips of the ears, forming a triangle with no break at the whiskers. Ears are very large, pointed, wide at the base and set wide on the head, the outside edge continuing the wedge lines of the face. The neck is slender, the legs are long and thin, and the tail is long, not kinked, and tapers to a point. The eyes are almond-shaped, medium in size, not crossed, and are either blue, green or odd-eyed, depending upon the coat color and pattern. Eyes are set not less than one eye width apart, with a slight slant toward the nose. Adult males weigh 7 to 10 pounds; adult females weigh 5 to 8 pounds. Show Oriental Longhairs are not bony, flabby or fat. Allowable outcrosses are Siamese, Oriental Shorthair, Colorpoint Shorthair, Balinese and Javanese.
This breed’s fine-textured coat is medium length, silky and lies close to the body, except for the plumage on the tail, which is lush, feathery and considerably longer than the body hair. Colors and patterns are too numerous to name, but are divided into the classes of solid, shaded, smoke, parti-color, tabby and bicolor. The newest class, bicolor, doubles the possible combinations. All these variables make for a bewildering array of possibilities, but some colors are more common than others. For example, solid ebony, pure white and some of the tabby patterns are popular. Because the Oriental is accepted in so many colors and patterns, breeders usually specialize in a few favorites.
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Photo copyright (c) 2006 Chanan Photography. All rights reserved.
Text copyright (c) 2006 Telemark Productions. All rights reserved. Written by J. Anne Helgren for Telemark Productions. |
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