Posted: 06 September 2012 2319 hrs
INLE LAKE, Myanmar:
They are known for their sleek good looks, alluring eyes and sunny
disposition, but one group of "Burmese" are virtually unknown in modern
Myanmar -- the country's namesake pedigree cats.
Once believed to
be the favoured pet of royalty and guardians of temples, the Burmese
cat had vanished from its Southeast Asian ancestral homeland until
enthusiasts decided to return them.
Yin Myo Su, who took on the
project with the aim of preserving the country's heritage as it emerges
from military rule, has installed a growing family of the pedigree cats
in a house on the shores of Inle Lake, in eastern Shan State.
The
hotelier hopes to raise the profile of the breed among Myanmar people
and even gave one to democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi -- what seemed like
a sure-fire strategy to give the cats a badly needed public relations
boost.
But the Nobel Peace Prize winner's notoriously possessive
dog became "jealous" of the feline intruder and Suu Kyi was forced to
send the cat back.
"So now we are taking care of her cat at home as well! In case one day she can take it back with her," Yin Myo Su told AFP.
From
just seven cats imported in 2008 -- some sourced from Britain's Harrods
department store -- the project now has 50 moggies living around Inle,
including nine kittens, and has become a tourist draw.
A further 17 have been given to cat lovers in Shan State and the main city of Yangon.
Yin
Myo Su -- who has pursued the project despite a slight allergy to
felines -- gives neutered Burmese cats to interested local people free
and charges foreigners 500,000 kyats ($580).
"They like to be
cuddled all the time," she said at the cats' home, the Inthar Heritage
House, as a purring chocolate brown feline wound itself around her feet
before collapsing onto its back for a tickle.
The idea of
repatriating Burmese cats came from the China Exploration and Research
Society (CERS), whose activities have included tracing a new source of
the Yangtze river and promoting a yak cheese cottage industry in the
Chinese province of Yunnan.
According to the non-profit group,
Burmese cats -- which share characteristics with other regional breeds
such as the Siamese -- have existed in mainland Southeast Asia for over a
thousand years.
The breed was diluted out of existence by an
influx of other types of cats to the region in the 19th and 20th
century, with only a handful of purebreds taken to Britain during
colonial rule, which ended in 1948.
Much of the modern breed has
descended from a single female cat, Wong Mau, who was taken to the
United States in 1930, according to world pedigree organisation The
International Cat Association.
The short-haired cats have golden
eyes and come in a range of colours from silvery blue to cream, although
rich brown is the primary colour.
"We are quite happy with the
reproduction because we got (mostly) original colours," said Yin Myo Su,
who runs the upmarket Inle Princess hotel.
She has two of the
pedigree moggies at home in a menagerie of animals that she calls a
"mini zoo", including ducks, pigs, goats, geese and a monkey they have
to keep hold of because it was "a gift from a monk".
The hotelier
is involved with an array of preservation projects and said she was
keen for the house to be more than just a picturesque cattery.
"It's
hard for people to have a house in this region and I am building all
this for cats? No way," she said, adding that a restaurant, serving
traditional recipes, was added to cover the $800-a-month cost of looking
after the cats.
Among her other projects, Yin Myo Su is building
a centre for the study and preservation of fish native to Inle Lake,
but she said her staff have become sceptical about her motives for the
new aquatic endeavour.
"They laugh at me and say: 'Is it cat food?'"
- AFP
Have they change calling them Myanmese?
ehhhh...
no pictures?
Originally posted by ^Acid^ aka s|aO^eH~:ehhhh...
no pictures?
Ehhh... is the ash white normal?
One white among the blacks... and it looked extremely unhappy...
Originally posted by ^Acid^ aka s|aO^eH~:Ehhh... is the ash white normal?
One white among the blacks... and it looked extremely unhappy...
ash white is norm.
if that cat is happy or not, you have to ask the cat.