California Spangled
Developed in California in the late twentieth century, the California Spangled was a rare United States domestic cat breed meant to evoke the spotted coats of wild cats without using recent wild-cat crosses. Paul Casey promoted the breed with an eye toward conservation awareness and opposition to the spotted-fur trade. The desired cat was long, athletic, and low-slung, with clear spots, strong cheekbones, and an alert expression. Bronze, gold, silver, blue, and other colors appeared in breed descriptions, but the spotted pattern was central.
Today the California Spangled is best treated as a historical or extremely uncommon pedigree label. Active breeding is hard to verify, and many spotted rescue cats are only lookalikes. A legitimate breeder or archive should be able to explain the pedigree, registry history, and outcrossing practices behind a cat. Care needs are those of an energetic shorthaired domestic cat: interactive play, climbing options, weight control, and routine veterinary care. The wild appearance does not make it a wild hybrid, but local rules and housing policies should still be checked.
Colors: Bicolor, Black, Blue, Blue Point, Brown, Calico, Chocolate, Chocolate Point, Cinnamon, Classic Tabby, Cream, Cream Point, Dilute Calico, Dilute Tortoiseshell, Fawn, Flame Point, Golden, Harlequin, Lilac, Lilac Point, Lynx Point, Mackerel Tabby, Mink, Pointed, Red, Seal Point, Sepia, Shaded, Shell, Silver, Smoke, Spotted Tabby, Tabby, Ticked Tabby, Torbie, Tortoiseshell, Van, White