Norwegian Forest Cat

Substantial

Coat

Solid:
Tabby: Brown, blue, red, and cream tabby in any of the patterns. These in silver tabby are also accepted. Heavy tabby is allowed.
Tortoishell: Black and blue tortie are accepted.
Torbie: Torbie versions of the above listed tabby/tortie combinations are accepted.
Amber: Amber and light amber are accepted.
Smoke/Shaded/Chinchilla: Any of the above in any of the patterns, silver base only.
White Patterns: Any of the above colours may come with or without in any amount. White tailtip is accepted in this breed without fault.

Eyes


Solid whites and catz with at least 50% white spotting may have one or two

Nose

Matches surrounding coat.

Faults

Wrong nose colour.

Disqualifications

Chocolate/lilac. Colourpoint pattern.

Varieties

None

Notes

Known as the Skogkatt in its native Norway, the Norwegian Forest Cat is a sturdy cat with a distinctive double coat and practical body conformation shaped by its past as a feral village and ship’s cat in Scandinavia. It was the cat known to the Vikings, and spread with them—and thus helped found a wide variety of other breeds, from the Manx to the Maine Coon and Siberian. Like many breeds, it was endangered following World War II, but Norwegian cat fanciers worked hard and preserved it in the form it exists today. It is the official cat breed of Norway, by royal decree. Norwegian Forest Cats only reached North America in 1979—although some will tell you they arrived with Leif Eriksson around the year 1000 when he voyaged to Vinland, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence—and were accepted for championship in 1993.

Although often mistaken for a shelter cat, the Norwegian Forest Cat—called the Norgie or Wegie by its fans—is remarkably distinct in conformation and personality. It is a quiet cat, but active and alert with bursts of energy followed by long naps. A frustrated or bored Norgie can be very destructive if it so chooses, so it is important to keep them occupied and entertained. The Norgie can take up to five years to mature, making it one of the slowest-maturing breeds despite being a medium-sized cat.

Type & judging remarks
Sturdy yet refined, with more refined boning than the other two forest cat breeds and a unique equilateral triangle for its head, and a profile that is straight from the brow ridge to the tip of the nose.

Breed Files

Filename: Nor Forest Cat
Offset: 1204
Base: Persian
SCP: Tabby
Accepted: December 14, 2011
Notes: Three addball tail variations and addball ear tufts. The coat grows in as the cat ages.

Filename: Norwegian Forest Cat
Offset: BC03
Base: Maine Coon
SCP: Maine Coon
Accepted: July 15, 2009
Notes: Includes a moving or an addball tail (which can be up or down).

Filename: NorwegianP
Offset: A6B9
Base: Persian
SCP: Persian
Accepted: January 5, 2006
Notes: The addballz ruff grows in with age.

Filename: NorwegianP
Offset: A6B9
Base: Persian
SCP: Persian
Accepted: December 12, 2005
Notes: Updated colours, outlines, ruff and muzzle area.