Binki
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2020
- Messages
- 69
Hope for some help in solving this mystery,
About a month ago I rescued male chin who looked to me (no expert in chin genetics and previously only had beiges) like an ebony carrier, with a white tummy, a very black triangle on the head and a black back. What baffles me is that he is looking more and more like a standard: starting on the head the black is vanishing, the coat becoming more veiled in white. His rump is still black but perhaps not for long.
He has no health issues, is friendly, happy and loves his food. The only change is that because his paws were always cold (as it is my house, even in summer) and he has completely ignored his fleecy hammock, two weeks ago I moved his cage within the peripheral range of a radiator at a temp around 16 °C. Coudl that have an effect on his fur? I did the same with my beiges but their coats never changed; or not noticeably, at least.
Do chins take pleasure in baffling their owners?
About a month ago I rescued male chin who looked to me (no expert in chin genetics and previously only had beiges) like an ebony carrier, with a white tummy, a very black triangle on the head and a black back. What baffles me is that he is looking more and more like a standard: starting on the head the black is vanishing, the coat becoming more veiled in white. His rump is still black but perhaps not for long.
He has no health issues, is friendly, happy and loves his food. The only change is that because his paws were always cold (as it is my house, even in summer) and he has completely ignored his fleecy hammock, two weeks ago I moved his cage within the peripheral range of a radiator at a temp around 16 °C. Coudl that have an effect on his fur? I did the same with my beiges but their coats never changed; or not noticeably, at least.
Do chins take pleasure in baffling their owners?