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We are a small TICA registered in home cattery in Poway, CA (20 minutes North of San Diego, CA) and have been breeding for over 13 years. Health and socialization are top priorities. Breeding cats are HCM screened and PRA & PK Deficiency tested. Cats and kittens are raised/fed a human grade raw diet. It is the closest to what they would eat in the wild and is in line with the pricing of the higher quality canned foods. If continuing the raw diet is not for you, we will be happy to suggest other options which meet your budget. Kittens are introduced to canned food around 8 weeks of age to make the transition to food at your home easy.
Breeders come from TICA registered Championship lines. All breeders are TICA registered. Kittens are raised indoors, treated like members of the family and handled daily to ensure they develop a strong feline-human bond thus creating well socialized friendly kittens/cats which will transition into your home ready for adventure.
Kittens are litter box trained and are feeding on their own for several weeks before they are ready to be re-homed. Kittens are raised on a raw diet enriched with everything your kitten needs to have a long healthy life. Kittens are generally ready between 10-12 weeks old when they are 3 lbs, as long as they are a minimum of 10 weeks. Although it is not necessary to feed your kitten the raw diet it is the closest to the wild diet and gives the cat a gorgeous silky coat and overall excellent health! Cats are obligate carnivores. They cannot get any nutrition from carbohydrates, fruits or vegetables. When you look at the ingredients in store bought food look at the ingredients. If it is not meat, it is a filler (aka carbs) that will pass straight through the cat's body with no nutritional benefits. This includes ALL the grocery store dry foods. Though pet stores (PetCo, PetSmart, etc) have high protein dry foods we cannot recommend any dry food (Kibble), even "better quality" dry. Cats are not natural drinkers. In the wild they get the moisture they require from the blood and moisture of the flesh they consume. They get their water through the food they eat. A cat will become dehydrated on any kind of kibble diet and likely develop kidney issues earlier than necessary. Most cats die of kidney issues but on a wet diet can live a normal life of upwards of 20 years. A dry (Kibble) fed cat will begin having problems around 8 years old or so.
The goal is not to mass produce kittens, cats are bred only after time to recuperate. It is our goal to produce kittens that are both exceptionally beautiful and healthy with excellent, friendly & playful temperaments.
We are pleased to be a part of such a wonderful breed.
Please come to San Diego/Poway & have a look around!!!
Thanks,
Janet