![]() ![]() They feel it accentuates the ‘wildcat’ look. Many breeders and Highland Lynx fans prefer spotted tabby markings, though. You can expect to find this breed in all sorts of colors. Highland Lynxes should also have quite strong chins which make them faces appear a fair bit longer than they are wide. The nose of the Highland Lynx is slightly wider than most other cats and the ‘nose leather’ is prominent. They have quite large heads, wide-set and angled eyes and well-developed muzzle areas and whisker pads. ![]() Some larger males can tip the scales at over 25lbs! Males generally weigh in at between 15lbs and 20lbs. You can expect a female to grow anywhere up to 14lbs. They are larger than your average housecat. They are strong, muscular and solidly built. Highland Lynx full grown are impressive specimens. Some breeds can be what’s called ‘polydactyl’, where the cat has more toes than usual on each paw. ![]() With five each on their front paws and four on their back paws. Polydactyl PawsĪll examples of this breed have large paws and pronounced knuckles. They’re not overly delicate, but cartilage in the ear can be damaged if they are handled too roughly. Unusually small and rounded for a feline.Ī certain level of care should be exercised when handling a Highland Lynx’s ears, though. There’s no sense in tiptoeing around the subject… Even though Highland Lynx cats have unusually bobbed tails, it’s the ears that everyone always notices first. Developed in the United States back in 1995, the idea behind the new pedigree was to introduce the distinctive curly ears of the Jungle Curl to the bobtailed wildcat look of the Desert Lynx. Fairly recently established as a breed, the Highland Lynx is a mixture between two hybrid breeds – the Jungle Curl and the Desert Lynx. ![]()
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