Tadofa Somalis

A Little Bit of Mischief....Lots of Love

History of the Somali

Photo used with permission © AGC

The Somali is a longhaired Abyssinian, originating as an undesirable product of a recessive gene in the Abyssinian cat. In early years, the Somali was not held in high regard; Abyssinian breeders were appalled to find these fuzzy kittens popping up in their litters, especially after all the hard work they had put into line breeding to "fix type," working with their imported English Abys. These longhaired kittens were petted out or otherwise "swept under the carpet," and many Aby breeders refused to even admit having them.

In 1963, CCA Allbreed Judge Ken McGill was asked to judge a show in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. As a practical joke, Aby breeder Mary Mailing put a longhaired Aby in the cage amongst the class of Abys. Ken took out the cat, looked down to describe how the cat fit the standard, and was surprised to see the longhaired Aby in his hands. The exhibitors had a good laugh, but Ken was so taken with this beautiful cat that he asked Mary for one to breed. With this cat, Ken founded the oldest Somali line in Canada.

About the same time in the United States, Evelyn Mague began working with Somalis, after finding that two of her Abys carried the longhair gene, Lynn-Lee's Lord Dublin and Lo-Mi-R Trill By. She and a friend had bred the two and produced a dark fuzzy kitten. Before Evelyn knew it, her friend had given the kitten away. Evelyn had been working with an animal welfare group, Cat Placement, and one day received a call from a woman who had developed an allergy to her cat. She brought it to Evelyn to place, and Evelyn found it to be the most beautiful cat she had ever seen. "George" turned out to be the very same longhaired kitten from the Lord Dublin x Trill By litter that had been given away. From that time on, Evelyn worked diligently for recognition and development of the Somali breed. Evelyn had the distinct honor of naming the breed with a bit of humor. Since some Aby breeders saw the Somali as an unwanted interloper, she picked a name of equal stature to the one derived from Abyssinia - she chose to call them Somalis after Somalia, the ancient neighboring country of Abyssinia.

The photographs and images appearing on this page are copyright © by AGC, and are used here with permission. None of these images may be downloaded, altered, reprinted, copied to your site, or electronically reproduced without prior written consent of AGC and Tadofa Somalis. Also, please do not link to the images out of context. Instead, link to the HTML pages containing the images.

 

Kitten and Cat AvailabilityHistoryCharacteristicsColorsGeneticsHealthExtended FamilyCandidsCats of TadofaMore Cats of TadofaTadofa Somalis in PrintTadofa AccomplishmentsHorses of TadofaFavorite LinksContact Us

 

 

Article © 1993 by Bethany T. Tod, Tadofa Somalis. No part of this web page or our brochure may be reproduced without the prior written permission of the author and this copyright notice.

This Web Site © Copyright 1997 - 2008 by Bethany T. Tod, Tadofa Somalis. All Rights Reserved. No duplication allowed without express written permission. Please see Copyright Information for further details.

Excerpts from "Somalis--The Next Generation" by Karen Talbert, Cat Fanciers Almanac, October 1992.