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Introducing
the Fancy Rat You breed WHAT? I’m used to that response now, and I can’t really blame people. Most have never even heard of Fancy Rats. When you say RAT most people picture either wild rats or the pink-eyed domestic rats sold for years as snake food in pet shops. I’ll admit this vision of rats is not particularly appealing and I can almost understand their dislike of such creatures. They have never met a fancy rat. What Is A Fancy Rat?But what is a fancy rat? A fancy rat is a rat who has been bred to conform to a written standard. Its coat, color, conformation, size, and personality all were taken into account by its breeder in an attempt to create an ideal show animal. In other words, the term “fancy rat” is the equivalent of saying “pure-bred dog.” Today’s fancy rats are as far distanced from wild rats as poodles are from wolves. The rat actually has a rather long history as a domestic animal. The first documented domesticated rats were bred in England in 1800, but it is most likely that they had been around for hundreds of years before that. Whatever the date, by 1901 enough unusual colors and patterns had turned up that there was interest in them as desirable exhibition animals, and thus the rat fancy was born.
Popularity Skyrockets
Variety Of
Colors
As the fancy rat’s popularity has grown, so has its availability.
Most colors and coat types are available anywhere in the U.S.
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© 1995–2008 American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association.
All text, artwork, and photos are copyright to AFRMA, and/or the author, artist, or Photographer.
Unauthorized copying of any part constitutes a breach of copyright law.
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