Poto is a Ragdoll from a pair of original breed parent. The mother Lasy was imported from Japan and the Father was from Australia.
Medium hair and no under coat but still need some grooming and brushing to keep them healthy !
This pair are very laid back and are not aggressive even when bathing or playing. Dosent eat domestic food other then dry cat food thus easy for apartment owner.
We have to leave them as our new place are too small for 3 Cat and 2 dogs.
Its sad to give them away but we hope they will find a good family !
Call me if you are interest to adopt them. Sorry to say that We are selective on the new owner thus its not for petshop or breeder!
------------
Some info on Ragdoll :
History
In the family of cat breeds, Ragdolls are among the younger siblings. The cats were first developed by breeder Ann Baker in Riverside, California, in the 1960s. Baker’s foundation stock consisted of Josephine, a domestic longhair whose white coat concealed the genes for either a seal mitted or black tuxedo pattern, and various other longhaired cats of unknown ancestry that she owned or found in her neighborhood.
Baker selected for cats with gentle, placid personalities, large size, and beautiful long coats characterized by a Himalayan pattern, the name for the “points” seen on Siamese-type cats. The result was a cat she called the Ragdoll, for its propensity to flop happily into the arms of anyone who picked it up. Later, Persians, Birmans and Burmese may also have contributed to the Ragdoll’s development.
Baker made many unusual claims about the cats’ development, including alien influence, CIA experiments, and infusions of human genes, but that is all they are: claims, with no basis in fact. Other people had begun breeding Ragdolls as well. They broke away from Baker and formed the Ragdoll Fanciers Club International, with the goal of standardizing the breed and achieving recognition by cat registries.
The Cat Fanciers Association began registering the cats in 1993 and gave them full recognition in 2000. Most registries now recognize the breed, including the American Cat Fanciers Association and The International Cat Association. Ragdolls are not outcrossed to any other breeds.
Size
Females usually weigh 10 to 15 pounds, and some males weigh more than 20 pounds.