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Meow House Kittens Excellent

2016/5/3 14:49:42
Meow House Kittens is the best place on the planet to get the cutest and cuddliest little Kittens you could ever imagine. Meow House Kittens specializes in exclusively selling pure bred Persian Kittens and Himalayan Kittens. If you are a huge cat lover like me, you will love Meow House Kittens. When you go to their website and look at the pics of their kittens, your heart will just melt. They are absolutely the cutest little critters you will ever lay your eyes on.

I have personally met the founder and operator of Meow House Kittens and she is the nicest lady you will ever meet. Her name is Shannon McGraw. Even better than Meow House Kittens is Shannon McGraw and she has a very cool story.

Shannon McGraw is a middle school art teacher and she truly loves what she does. I have seen the paintings creating by her students and they are truly phenomenal. I think she has a few Vincent Van Gogh抯 and Pablo Picasso抯 in her class room. Her kids are truly that talented.

About Persian Kittens:

The first documented ancestors of the Persian were imported from Persia into Italy in 1620 by Pietro della Valle, and from Turkey into France by Nicholas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc at around the same time. From France they soon reached Britain. The longhaired cats from Persia were interbred with Turkish Angoras. Their appearance then differed greatly from today's standard. Hundreds of years of selective breeding made Persians cobbier cats with drastically shorter muzzle. It's not clear when longhair cats (in general) first appeared, as there are no African Wildcats (believed to be ancestors of domesticated cats) with that kind of fur. There have been claims that the gene responsible for long hair was introduced through hybridization with Pallas cat. Recent research however refutes this theory.

A show-quality Persian has an extremely long thick coat, short legs, a wide head with the ears set far apart, large eyes, and an extremely foreshortened muzzle. Due to their 'squashed' faces, it is not uncommon for persians to have moderate discharge from their tear ducts. This is easily cleaned, and a persian's eyes should be maintained consistently by its owner. The breed was originally established with a short (but not non-existent) muzzle, but over time this feature has become extremely exaggerated, particularly in North America.

The 1911 Encyclop鎑ia Britannica (Encyclop鎑ia) suggested that the Persian is derived from the Pallas Cat, a belief prevalent at the time. A photograph accompanying the entry in the Encyclop鎑ia shows a Blue Persian Cat, the conformation of which we would now call a "Doll Faced Persian" or "Traditional Persian". Early photographs and drawings from magazines show the Persian as a Traditional Persian Cat. The Persian was first registered with the Cat Fanciers Association (CFA) in 1871 when the association first kept records.

Photographic records indicate that Persians, up until the 1960s, show a difference in appearance to cats of the early 1980s onwards (i.e., from the Traditional "doll face" to the "extreme", "ultra", "flat-faced" or "snubby" face of today). However, the Persian Breed Council's standard for the Persian had remained basically unchanged over this period.