impossible to know just wait and see
The best prediction I can make is that they will have one orange, one silver, one mix, and another that nobody knows yet. I am sorry this is all I can say. I am sure there is a book on it though.
Depends on their genes.
The kittens will probably either be a grey tabby or an orange tabby.
In rare cases you may get a tortoise-shell cat.
they would (probably) look can of a darky gray color. not so sure though......it's impossible to know......good luck with ur kittens!!!(:
Tortoiseshell or orange tabby she-cats. Orange tabby toms.
You will get a multi-colored cat likely..............
Purple, with a side of who the $@%^ cares.
You can get orange, calico, tabby, and black kittens. However it would be best to get your cats neutered or spayed.
orange is sex linked dominate, a female orange cat will almost always have a few orange kittens, and a male orange cat can have orange daughters --- If the orange one is the mother, all the male kittens will be orange. If the orange is the father, you wont get any ginger kittens but you will get tortoiseshell female kittens.
The kittens might be a mix of both colours or just grey tabby or just red tabby. You also might get one that is white with red tabby and grey, it's the cutest thing ever (:
Kittens, possibly tabby kittens
it depends on which is the male and female
'tabby point' does not supply enough information to calculate possible colors of the kittens. Most people consider brown tabby as plain tabby. Judging that's what you mean, and that the parents do not carry anything else, your kittens may be any of these colors: Female kittens: Brown/seal lynx (tabby) point, Tortoiseshell lynx point Male kittens: Brown/seal lynx point, Red/flame lynx point. Dilutes of all these colors are possible of the tabby point carries dilute. If he does, that would add Blue lynx point to both genders, cream lynx point to males and dilute tortie lynx point.
no that is not true calico kittens can be born to just about any breed of cat. I myself have two calicoes, their mother was a black/orange tortie and the father a orange longhair tabby. also in the litter was a two black and white males and an orange tabby male.
No, I have personally had female orange tabby cats.
She is called an orange tabby and white, or an orange tabby bicolor if she is half white half orange.
I don't believe it is possible for a cat's coat to have orange spots. Cats that have a Red Tabby (often called orange) coat can indeed have white patches on them, but more often than not these patches are random patterns and do not resemble actual spots.
They can eat normal cat food like any other color of cat.
Try your county animal shelter.
The 'O' gene found in an orange tabby cat suppresses a gene called the 'aa' gene. This 'aa' gene decides if the tabby pattern will be blocked in a cat or not. Because this gene is suppressed in an orange cat there is always a tabby pattern. This means that there is no such thing as a solid orange cat and a cat with patterns in its fur is considered to be a tabby. Thus all orange cats are tabby cats.