I had some questions for breeders if there happen to be any on the board. We have been considering doing a small cattery on our property for some time. We have an acre and a lot of room for a nice set up. We are home most of the time, don't travel, and spend a lot of time with our animals. I think we would be good candidates for breeding. I would love to teach my daughter about breeding and even do some 4H work around it. We would definetely like to breed bengals, I have bengals and Savannahs and know more about their personalities than other cats. We aren't doing it as a money making venture, just for the love of the breed. Although I am hoping that the kittens help to pay the vet costs, ect.
We aren't in a hurry, and we would like to start small and do everything by the book. Any advice? I have no idea how to get started, and I feel like only the more lax breeders will even talk to me at this point. I don't want our cattery to be that type of cattery that sells a bunch of cats to anyone to make a buck, but those are the types of people who want to sell cats to someone who is starting out.
I would love to find a breeder to take me under their wing, teach me a bit about showing and breeding. Any advice is helpful.
We aren't in a hurry, and we would like to start small and do everything by the book. Any advice? I have no idea how to get started, and I feel like only the more lax breeders will even talk to me at this point. I don't want our cattery to be that type of cattery that sells a bunch of cats to anyone to make a buck, but those are the types of people who want to sell cats to someone who is starting out.
I would love to find a breeder to take me under their wing, teach me a bit about showing and breeding. Any advice is helpful.












I have also gotten some negative feedback on the same matter, in this forum actually. But that's how almost all catteries are run in this part of the world: small family catteries who keep their adults because they are family members, not just some breeding stock you dump after you've used it.


The breeder obviously pays for all breeding related expenses (tests, shows etc.), and the 'foster' family pays for the regular stuff (after all they are getting the cat for free or very cheap after he's neutered).


First I got a pet quality kitten (pet quality just because longhairs weren't recognized yet back then) and just few months after that I got a kitten which was the best of the litter. His sister was bought by a new breeder to be a founding queen of her new cattery because of the good lines.