Times Colonist

Exotic sphynx cat traced to Toronto

- MADELINE SMITH

TORONTO — One of the most peculiar and polarizing pets — the hairless sphynx cat — can be traced back to Canada’s largest city.

The wrinkled cat with large, bat-like ears provokes strong reactions. To some, the sphynx is a grotesque, alien-like creature that barely deserves to be called a cat. To others, it’s an affectiona­te companion whose personalit­y belies its looks.

The controvers­ial cat dates back to the 1960s, when breeders say a hairless cat named Prune was born in Toronto in a litter of otherwise normal, furry kittens.

Riyadh Bawa, a University of Toronto student at the time, has been credited by breeders as the first to identify the hairlessne­ss as a result of a recessive gene. Bawa, in partnershi­p with other breeders, bred Prune with his mother, producing several more hairless kittens.

A brief 1966 article by the Associated Press says Bawa hoped to “develop a hairless line” of cats for allergy sufferers.

While the lack of a full furry coat means sphynxes don’t shed, they aren’t a totally hypoallerg­enic breed, since people often react to a protein in cats’ saliva rather than the hair itself. And although the cats don’t need to be brushed, they have to be bathed every week or two to deal with the oil that builds up on their skin, experts and owners say.

The line of hairless cats descended from Prune has since died out, but the cats Bawa bred represent the first attempts at establishi­ng an official breed.

More hairless cats were later discovered in Toronto and Minnesota, and the sphynx has now been recognized as an official breed by the Cat Fanciers’ Associatio­n for almost 20 years. Today, breeders sell sphynx kittens for up to $1,500.

Toronto isn’t the only place where these cats have been found, but the city has been credited by experts as the origin of the modern show breed. Other breeds of hairless cats, unrelated to the sphynx, have also emerged from Russia.

As animal-lovers celebrated Internatio­nal Cat Day on Monday, some sphynx fans urged critics to give the often-misunderst­ood feline a second chance.

LouAnn Vennettill­i, a breeder near Sarnia, Ont., who also handles sphynx-related matters for the Canadian Cat Associatio­n, says she often promotes the breed’s Canadian roots at cat shows.

“Most people, when you say sphynx, they think of them as coming from Egypt, or some faroff land. But in reality, the ones that we know and love today are of Canadian origin,” she says.

Vennettill­i currently has 10 sphynxes, some for breeding and some she keeps as pets. Such a big group of sphynxes is a handful — they’re active and mischievou­s, and Vennettill­i says she’s known them to figure out how to remove twist-on lids to get at a jar of cat treats.

“I’ve been to cat shows where I have people walk by and say, ‘Oh my god, those are the ugliest things I’ve ever seen.’ . . . But those same people end up circling back around, and I’ll say, ‘Why don’t you just hold one?’ If you swaddle them in a blanket they sort of just cuddle right in,” she says.

 ??  ?? The sphynx cat has been recognized as an official breed.
The sphynx cat has been recognized as an official breed.

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