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This occurred to me last night when I was lying in bed trying to get to sleep.
There are at least a few definitions of what a landrace is. I have a story from France that discusses the history of a landrace of cats. Only the beginning and end of this story are true. The rest is filled in from my imagination, but I like to believe it went something like this:
Marie Antoinette collected cats the way the reader collects cannabis strains. So she had a shitload of them; ostensibly enough to fill an entire ship. So that's what she did.
She was in fear for her life, the French Revolution was underway, so she decided to flee to the New World. She had to get her cats safe first so she had them smuggled to a ship in the harbor, and would board another ship in two days.
Unfortunately, she was grabbed by the revolutionaries and executed by guillotine before she was able to make her escape. And it bears mention that she died courageously. Marie Antoinette was a badass, even if she did have an unhealthy association (literally) with cats.
When the ship transporting her hundreds of cats to the New World arrived in Maine, the news of the boss' death had already arrived. The crew just dumped them on the beach because they didn't have other options.
That winter, the majority of the cats were killed by the harsh Maine winters. But the survivors were breeding, and not like rabbits - like cats. For a few decades their numbers stayed fairly low as winter killed off most of their offspring. But eventually their numbers grew to the point where they were here to stay.
The only cats to survive were the ones with enough fur to keep them from freezing to death. Eventually, a landrace of cats emerged-the Maine Coon.
This chart shows some Maine Coon phenotypes. Just like cannabis, there's a lot of variation, but of course all of them had a common trait, which is the ability to survive harsh winters.
I don't know whether those phenotypes were created by nature, or breeders. I suspect the feral population looks something like this most of the time:
So if you were to order a Maine Coon sight-unseen, it could look like any of these pictures or something else entirely. But the person receiving a kitten would at least be guaranteed their cat could crap outside in cold temperatures without dying and is probably a great mouser.
Think of the Maine Coon next time your seeds don't grow what you expected!
There are at least a few definitions of what a landrace is. I have a story from France that discusses the history of a landrace of cats. Only the beginning and end of this story are true. The rest is filled in from my imagination, but I like to believe it went something like this:
Marie Antoinette collected cats the way the reader collects cannabis strains. So she had a shitload of them; ostensibly enough to fill an entire ship. So that's what she did.
She was in fear for her life, the French Revolution was underway, so she decided to flee to the New World. She had to get her cats safe first so she had them smuggled to a ship in the harbor, and would board another ship in two days.
Unfortunately, she was grabbed by the revolutionaries and executed by guillotine before she was able to make her escape. And it bears mention that she died courageously. Marie Antoinette was a badass, even if she did have an unhealthy association (literally) with cats.
When the ship transporting her hundreds of cats to the New World arrived in Maine, the news of the boss' death had already arrived. The crew just dumped them on the beach because they didn't have other options.
That winter, the majority of the cats were killed by the harsh Maine winters. But the survivors were breeding, and not like rabbits - like cats. For a few decades their numbers stayed fairly low as winter killed off most of their offspring. But eventually their numbers grew to the point where they were here to stay.
The only cats to survive were the ones with enough fur to keep them from freezing to death. Eventually, a landrace of cats emerged-the Maine Coon.
This chart shows some Maine Coon phenotypes. Just like cannabis, there's a lot of variation, but of course all of them had a common trait, which is the ability to survive harsh winters.
I don't know whether those phenotypes were created by nature, or breeders. I suspect the feral population looks something like this most of the time:
So if you were to order a Maine Coon sight-unseen, it could look like any of these pictures or something else entirely. But the person receiving a kitten would at least be guaranteed their cat could crap outside in cold temperatures without dying and is probably a great mouser.
Think of the Maine Coon next time your seeds don't grow what you expected!