Now to reply to everyone else's questions as long as my PC will let me. I had all the answers typed out last night, clicked the submit reply and the damn PC decide that the server couldn't be found
. My language was not very clever
. So here goes.
Hreow.
Only one of PF's parents could have been a Colourpoint as 2 x Colourpoints only produce Colourpoints and PF is a self. You could have had a Colourpoint and a self that either carried or didn't carry the Colourpoint gene. Apparent from that you seem to be on the right track
. Both parents would not have been Torties as this is a sex-linked gene to the female. Occassionally a male Tortie is born but they are infertile. As for the colour-chart on the website it is wrong you can only get Cream from 2 x Cream parents. I have told the lady who does the website and she will correct it. Well spotted
. Torbies, as they are kown in the US, are called Tortie-tabbies over here and they are basically a mix of the Tortie and Tabby markings. Tabbies do have a M on the forehead they should also have thumbprint on the back of the ears, lines coming away from the outside corner of the eyes, necklaces round the neck, bracelets round all 4 legs, oysters on their haunches and a ringed tail with a dark tip. This is the classic pattern there is also a spotted Tabby and a mackeral tabby.
Deester.
The eye colour does not carry as the coat colour does but is linked to a particular pattern, colour or breed. Blue-eyed cats tend to be White or Colourpointed but are also present in certain breeds eg. Turkish Van and Norweigan Forest Cat. In Persians all the other colours, except Chinchilla/ silvers which have green eyes, have orange/copper eyes. To throw a spanner in the works though
Whites can also have orange or indeed odd-eyes, one of each colour, and are registered as three different breeds.
Julie84.
In the UK Tabbies are registered as Brown Tabbies not Black or in the case of colourpointed cats Seal-Tabby. Although the Persian registered colour is Brown Tabby but with Black in brackets. Tabby and Tortoiseshell are both markings but have colour variations. The same applies to the colourpointed cats the onlt difference being is that the both the colour and the markings are restricted to the points, ears, face, legs and tail. A torbie, known as a Tortie-tabby in the UK, is not a bi-colour. A bi-colour is a colour and white eg Red & White, Black & White etc. You can however have Tortie and White, Tabby and White and Tortie-tabby and White in bi-colours.
Bobbie3917.
It is highly unlikely that the kittens out of a Ragdoll x moggie mating would have blue eyes but if the moggie carried the colourpoint gene then the kittens born with colourpoint markings would have blue eyes but the others wouldn't. All colourpointed cats have blue eyes as it is linked to the colourpoint gene.
Hope this helps everyone. Fingers crossed my PC will now submit it.