The short answer
Real purebred Russian Blue at Calgary rescue is vanishingly rare. CFA registered only around 541 Russian Blue kittens in a single tracked year (2003 data, directional). Almost every Calgary listing tagged “Russian Blue mix” is really a blue or grey Domestic Shorthair (DSH) with the dilute coat gene. The three quickest tells for a real Russian Blue: vivid green eyes (not copper, gold, yellow, or hazel), a silver-tipped shimmer coat (not flat blue), and a wedge-shaped head plus slim long-legged body (not round or stocky). Blue DSH cats are wonderful pets with full DSH temperament range and no breed-specific health risks. Without paperwork, every rescue blue cat should be priced and cared for as a DSH.

The honest reality: real Russian Blue at Calgary rescue is near-zero
The Russian Blue is a low-population breed in North America. CFA registered roughly 541 Russian Blue kittens in 2003, the most recent year for which a public registration count is widely cited. Numbers have remained in the same general range for decades. Compare that to the millions of Domestic Shorthair cats living in North American households and the asymmetry becomes obvious: any random blue or grey cat in Calgary is statistically a DSH with the dilute coat gene, not a Russian Blue.
The dilute black gene that produces a blue or grey coat is common across all cat genetic backgrounds. A blue or grey kitten can come from two black DSH parents who both carry the dilute gene as a recessive trait. The resulting kitten looks “Russian Blue-like” without any Russian Blue ancestry at all. This is the underlying reality of why Calgary rescues are full of blue or grey cats while real Russian Blue surrenders are uncommon.
Calgary rescues label blue or grey cats as “Russian Blue mix” because the look is recognisable and adopters search for it. Foster volunteers see a blue cat, recognise the visual association, and tag the listing in a way that helps adopters find what they are searching for. The label is foster shorthand for the visual look, not verified breed ancestry. This is pattern recognition rather than malice, and it is not unique to Russian Blue. The same dynamic plays out across British Shorthair and Chartreux mix listings as well.
From an adoption standpoint, this rarely matters. The cat in front of you is a wonderful blue DSH with whatever temperament the foster reports, whatever health status the workup confirms, and no breed-specific elevated health risks (because DSH cats do not carry the breed-specific risk profile that purebreds do). The breed label is the marketing wrapper; the cat is the cat.
For adopters who specifically need verified breed ancestry (show registration, breeding programs, allergy concerns where lower Fel d 1 actually matters), the rescue path will not deliver that. The realistic options for verified Russian Blue are CCA-registered Canadian breeders ($1,500 to $3,000) or cross-border placements through Specialty Purebred Cat Rescue, which occasionally facilitates US-based placements of retired breeder cats into Canadian homes.
The three quickest visual tells for a real Russian Blue
When you are looking at a blue cat at a Calgary rescue or in a breeder photo, three traits together settle most identification questions in under thirty seconds.
1. Vivid green eyes (mandatory)
The single most decisive test. Vivid green eyes are mandatory in the Russian Blue breed standard across CFA, TICA, FIFe, and the Canadian Cat Association. Copper, gold, yellow, hazel, or mixed adult eye colour means the cat is not breed-pure regardless of seller claims. Russian Blue kittens are born with blue eyes that transition through amber to vivid green by 12 to 16 months. An adult Russian Blue with anything other than vivid green eyes is misidentified.
2. Silver-tipped shimmer coat
The hardest trait to fake. Russian Blue have a short silky double coat with silver tipping at the ends of the guard hairs. The tipping catches light and creates a shimmer or glitter effect under direct light that flat-coloured blue DSH coats do not produce. The coat stands slightly away from the body rather than lying flat, giving the cat a faintly plush outline despite the short length. Run a hand against the grain in good light: a real Russian Blue coat appears to glow at the surface. A blue DSH coat looks uniformly grey with no light-catching shimmer.
3. Wedge head plus slim long-legged body
Russian Blue have a refined wedge-shaped head (not round like BSH or Chartreux), a slim athletic body (not stocky), and long legs proportionate to the body length. The silhouette reads as elegant and aristocratic rather than compact and chunky. Adult weight runs 7 to 12 lbs, notably smaller than BSH (9 to 17 lbs) or Chartreux (7 to 16 lbs). A blue cat with a round head, stocky chunky body, or short legs is closer to BSH ancestry or DSH than Russian Blue. Even a Russian Blue mix shows some wedge influence in the head shape if real ancestry is present.
Comparison: Russian Blue vs Blue DSH vs other blue cats
Five different blue-coated cat types get confused at Calgary rescue or in breeder photos. The comparison table below summarises the distinguishing traits. Russian Blue and Nebelung are the only two that consistently show vivid green eyes per their breed standards. Everything else allows other eye colours.
| Trait | Russian Blue | Blue DSH | BSH (blue) | Chartreux | Korat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eye colour | Vivid green only | Any (green, yellow, copper, gold) | Copper or deep gold | Copper to gold | Green (matures late) |
| Coat structure | Short double coat, silver-tipped shimmer | Flat blue or grey, no tipping | Dense plush single coat | Woolly water-resistant double coat | Silver-tipped single coat (less pronounced shimmer than double coat) |
| Head shape | Wedge-shaped, refined | Variable | Round with broad muzzle | Round with narrow muzzle | Heart-shaped |
| Body type | Slim elegant, long legs | Any build | Compact stocky, broad chest | Muscular, shorter legs | Semi-cobby muscular |
| Paw pads (blue cat) | Mauve or lavender | Grey, pink, or mixed | Blue | Blue | Lavender to blue |
| Adult weight | 7 to 12 lbs | 8 to 15 lbs | 9 to 17 lbs | 7 to 16 lbs | 6 to 11 lbs |
| Calgary rescue rate | Occasional pure; common as look-mixes | Very common | Rare pure; common as mixes | Essentially nil | Essentially nil |
The Russian Blue row and the Blue DSH row are the two most relevant for Calgary adopters because those two cover the realistic rescue population. BSH and Chartreux comparison is covered in detail in the BSH vs Chartreux vs Russian Blue identification guide. Korat is included for completeness but is genuinely rare at any Canadian rescue.
What “Russian Blue mix” at a Calgary rescue actually is
This is the most adoption-relevant part of the article. Calgary rescue cats tagged “Russian Blue mix” are almost always blue Domestic Shorthair with partial breed ancestry at best. They are wonderful cats; they just are not breed-pure in any verifiable sense.
Walk through the MEOW Foundation listings or the Calgary Humane Society cat section on any given week and you will see blue or grey cats tagged “Russian Blue mix”. The real rate of verifiable Russian Blue ancestry in these cats is low. Most fall into one of the following categories:
- Blue Domestic Shorthair (most common): blue or grey DSH with the dilute coat gene, non-green eyes (often yellow or copper), variable head shape, and any body type. No verifiable Russian Blue ancestry. The look is the dilute gene; the rest is generic DSH genetics. This is the realistic baseline for almost every Calgary rescue blue cat.
- Russian Blue cross with DSH: slim grey cat with green-tinted (but not vivid green) eyes, slightly refined head, partial ancestry from somewhere in the family tree. Less common than pure DSH but the most credible “mix” signal. This cat may carry some Russian Blue DNA without being breed-pure.
- Verified surrendered Russian Blue (rare): occasional pure Russian Blue surrender with paperwork, usually for owner allergy, financial hardship, or breeder retirement. A handful per year across all Calgary cat rescues combined. If a listing genuinely has pedigree paperwork, the rescue will note it explicitly.
The honest framing we tell adopters: the breed label on a rescue listing is foster shorthand for the visual look, not verified ancestry. Foster notes that describe the actual cat (body type, temperament, coat texture, paw pad colour, eye colour) are more useful than the breed tag. If a foster note reads “slim 9 lb body, vivid green eyes, silver shimmer to the coat, lavender paw pads, wedge head, calm and shy with strangers,” you have actionable information pointing to genuine Russian Blue ancestry. If it just reads “Russian Blue mix,” you have a label.
Common adopter mistake: assuming purebred because the cat looks the part. The look is the easy part; the breed verification is the hard part. Without pedigree paperwork or DNA testing, the “Russian Blue mix” label translates to “blue DSH with the look” from a cost and care planning perspective. This is not a bad thing. Most adopters who want a Russian Blue for the colour and temperament find the rescue route satisfies the want at a fraction of breeder cost.
The Nebelung variant
Nebelung is the long-haired variant of the Russian Blue. The name comes from the German word for “creature of the mist,” a reference to the silvery shimmer of the long blue coat. The breed was developed in the 1980s by Cora Cobb of Nebelheim Cattery in the United States from Russian Blue crossed with black domestic longhair lineage. The goal was a breed with the temperament, head shape, and silver-tipped coat structure of Russian Blue but with the long coat of a domestic longhair.
Registry recognition splits across organisations:
- TICA: championship status since 1997. The first major registry to fully recognise Nebelung as a distinct breed.
- CFA: preliminary status only. CFA recognises the breed but has not advanced it to championship.
- GCCF (UK): preliminary recognition. The UK registry maintains the breed at preliminary status.
- FIFe: not recognised. The European registry does not recognise Nebelung as a separate breed.
The cat itself has the same wedge head, silver-tipped coat structure, vivid green eyes, and slim elegant body as Russian Blue, with longer hair. Adult Nebelung weight runs slightly higher than Russian Blue due to the heavier coat, but the underlying body type is identical. Temperament matches Russian Blue: shy with strangers, bonded to one or two humans, quiet, observant.
Nebelung is genuinely rare. Worldwide registration numbers are very low even compared to Russian Blue. At Canadian rescue the breed is essentially nonexistent. Long-haired blue or grey cats at Calgary rescues are almost always Domestic Longhair (DLH) with the dilute coat gene, not Nebelung. A DLH with green eyes and a silver-tipped-looking coat is still a DLH unless pedigree paperwork accompanies the cat.
Adopters who specifically want Nebelung are realistically looking at US-based breeders with import logistics or at Specialty Purebred Cat Rescue cross-border placements. A Canadian Nebelung breeder may exist but is rare; the breed has not established significant Canadian breeding stock.
The Korat differentiator
Korat is the other blue-coated breed that gets confused with Russian Blue at first glance. The breed has documented Thai origins dating back over 200 years, with references in the Thai “Cat Book Poems” (Tamra Maew) from the Ayutthaya kingdom era. The breed reached Western registries in the 1950s and 60s; CFA and TICA both recognise Korat at championship status today.
Korat shares the silver-blue coat colour and green eye colour with Russian Blue but differs on every other major trait:
- Coat structure: Korat has a single coat that lies close to the body. Per the CFA Korat breed standard, Korat does carry silver tipping, but the single coat produces a less pronounced shimmer than the Russian Blue's standing-out double coat.
- Head shape: Korat has a distinctive heart-shaped face when viewed from the front, not a wedge. The cheeks are full, the muzzle is short, and the top of the head forms a heart-shape outline.
- Eye colour development: Korat eyes mature later than other breeds; kittens often show gold or amber eyes that gradually transition to green over the first two to four years. Adult Korat green is luminous but less vivid than Russian Blue.
- Body type: Korat is semi-cobby and muscular, with a body type closer to a slightly slimmer Burmese than to a Russian Blue. The legs are proportionate to the body, not the long legs of Russian Blue.
Calgary rescue availability is essentially nil. Worldwide Korat numbers are low and Canadian breeding stock is minimal. Most Calgary listings labelled Korat are misidentified Russian Blue-look DSH or partial Burmese-DSH crosses. Adopters who specifically want Korat are realistically looking at US or Thai breeder routes with import logistics. The breed is genuinely rare from breeders too.
The “I think my cat is a Russian Blue” question
Adopters who already own a blue or grey rescue cat often ask whether the cat is “really” Russian Blue. The honest answer has three parts.
First, without paperwork you cannot confirm purebred status. Cat breed registration is built on documented pedigree records: both parents registered, breeding tracked, kitten registered at birth, registry verifies the lineage. A rescue cat with no paperwork has no breeding records, no parental registration, and no registry verification. The cat may be 100% Russian Blue by ancestry and still cannot be registered as Russian Blue.
Second, DNA testing can give breed percentages but is not a registration substitute. Wisdom Panel offers a cat DNA test at around $129.99 USD (Canadian pricing varies with import and shipping). The test reports breed percentages plus health markers. For Russian Blue-leaning cats the breed report often comes back as “mostly domestic” with low-confidence Russian Blue signal, because cat breeds are less genetically distinct than dog breeds and the test database is smaller. The result is useful for curiosity but does not change registration status.
Third, for adoption purposes the breed question rarely matters. The cat in front of you is the cat in front of you regardless of what a DNA test reports about ancestry percentages. Daily care, lifespan, temperament, and health risks are driven by the individual cat and its environment, not by registered breed status. A rescue cat with strong Russian Blue traits (vivid green eyes, silver shimmer, slim body) gets the same care as a registered Russian Blue. The difference is the paperwork.
For show or breeding (not adoption), CFA, TICA, or CCA paperwork is the only verification that registers as legitimate. DNA testing alone does not qualify a cat for show registration. If you want to show or breed Russian Blue, the realistic route is a registered kitten from a verified breeder with documented pedigree, not a rescue cat with strong breed traits.
For everyone else (the overwhelming majority of adopters), the rescue blue cat is exactly what it is and the breed label is decorative. Treat the cat as a wonderful blue cat with DSH genetics and you will be making accurate care and cost decisions.
How to verify a real Russian Blue breeder
If you are buying a kitten from a breeder rather than adopting from a rescue, breed verification matters because the price gap between Russian Blue ($1,500 to $3,000) and DSH ($300 to $500) is large. The step-by-step verification is consistent across registries.
- Ask for CCA, CFA, or TICA registration paperwork by name. A vague “registered” claim is not enough. The breeder should provide a specific registration number and cattery name. Cross-reference the cattery on the registry online directory (cca-afc.com for CCA, cfa.org for CFA, tica.org for TICA). If the cattery does not appear in the directory, the paperwork is fake.
- Verify the cattery directly. The Canadian Cat Association directory at cca-afc.com lists Canadian catteries specifically. CFA and TICA both maintain searchable breeder directories for North American catteries. The Russian Blue Fanciers Association also maintains a breeder list specific to the breed.
- Confirm both parents are registered with photos, registration numbers, and verified vivid green eyes. The pedigree should document at least three generations back. Ask for parent photos at adult age (not just kitten photos) to verify the eye colour developed correctly.
- Confirm HCM screening via annual echocardiogram by a veterinary cardiologist on both parents. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is the most common feline heart condition overall. Russian Blue do not carry a documented breed-specific elevated HCM risk (they sit at the general feline population baseline; see our Russian Blue health issues guide for the full picture), but ethical breeders still screen breeding cats annually as general best practice. No breed-specific DNA panel is universally required for Russian Blue.
- Confirm kitten release age of 12 to 14 weeks minimum. Kittens released earlier are usually being moved before health issues become apparent.
- Visit the cattery in person. Meet both parents. Observe living conditions. Ethical breeders welcome cattery visits; sellers who refuse visits or insist on parking-lot meets are running fraud.
- Pay via verifiable method. Never cash in a parking lot. Etransfer, certified cheque, or credit card through a documented invoice creates a paper trail.
- Read the contract. Look for a spay or neuter agreement, a return-to-breeder clause, and a health guarantee covering HCM diagnosis within the warranty window.
- Red flag: “hypoallergenic kitten” marketing. Russian Blue is not scientifically hypoallergenic. The breed produces lower levels of Fel d 1 (the primary cat allergen) than most breeds, which some allergy sufferers tolerate better, but lower Fel d 1 is not zero Fel d 1. Sellers marketing “hypoallergenic Russian Blue kittens” at premium pricing are misrepresenting the breed. The full picture is covered in our Russian Blue hypoallergenic myth article.
Ethical Canadian Russian Blue breeders charge $1,500 to $3,000 for a registered kitten with paperwork, HCM screening on both parents, and verified conformation including the mandatory vivid green eye colour. Anyone advertising purebred Russian Blue under $1,000 with no waitlist and no health testing documentation is running a scam or selling mix kittens as purebred. The kitten may be healthy and adoptable; the label and price together are fraud.
Scam patterns specific to Russian Blue
Russian Blue scams cluster around eye-colour misrepresentation, hypoallergenic marketing, and breed-mix repricing. Knowing the breed standard tells you which listings are fraud.
“Russian Blue” with copper, yellow, or hazel eyes
The single fastest scam tell. Vivid green eyes are mandatory in the Russian Blue breed standard across every major registry. A blue cat with copper, yellow, hazel, amber, or mixed adult eyes marketed as Russian Blue is misidentified. The seller is either uninformed or running fraud. Either way, the cat is not a Russian Blue. If breeder-tier pricing ($1,500+) accompanies a copper-eyed cat, walk away. The same cat at a Calgary rescue at $300 to $500 is the honest answer.
“Hypoallergenic Russian Blue kittens” premium pricing
A pattern of social-media listings claiming hypoallergenic Russian Blue kittens at $3,000+ markups over standard registered pricing. No cat is truly hypoallergenic. Russian Blue produces lower Fel d 1 than average but lower is not zero. Allergy response varies by individual. Marketing the breed as guaranteed allergy-safe is dishonest. Premium pricing built on the hypoallergenic claim is built on a misrepresentation. Real ethical breeders explain the lower-allergen reality without overpromising; sellers who lead with “hypoallergenic guaranteed” are red-flagged.
“Russian Blue” at $200 to $500 from a backyard seller
The reverse pattern. Real registered Russian Blue from a verified Canadian breeder runs $1,500 to $3,000. A “Russian Blue kitten” at $200 to $500 from a Kijiji or Facebook listing is almost certainly a blue or grey DSH being sold as Russian Blue. The price is the tell. The kitten may be a wonderful cat at $400 if labelled honestly as a DSH; at the same price labelled Russian Blue, the seller is misrepresenting ancestry. The Calgary rescue rate for the same cat is $300 to $500 with full vetting included, which is the honest answer.
Photo theft and stock image fraud
Sellers post stock photos or stolen breeder photos of high-quality registered Russian Blue while delivering different cats at meet-up. Verification: reverse image search the photos before paying anything. Insist on cattery visits with the specific kitten in real time. Sellers who refuse visits or pressure deposits before viewing are running this pattern. Real breeders share unique photos with the kitten in the cattery environment and welcome visits.
“Imported Russian bloodline” markup
A pattern of listings claiming imported Russian bloodlines at premium pricing. Real imported breeding stock comes with documented transit history, microchip records, and registry transfers. Vague “imported from Russia” claims with no paperwork are a fraud signal. The bloodline of a registered Russian Blue is what the pedigree documents; geographic origin claims with no paperwork are decorative.
“Nebelung” misidentifying DLH
Long-haired blue or grey cats marketed as Nebelung at premium pricing when the cat is realistically a Domestic Longhair with the dilute coat gene. Verification: ask for TICA or CFA registration paperwork (Nebelung is recognised by both at different status levels). Real Nebelung breeders are extremely rare; a Nebelung listing in Canada at $2,000+ should be verified against the registry directory before deposit. The same long-haired blue rescue cat is realistically $400 to $600 from a Calgary rescue.
Skip the breed-paperwork drama. Browse adoptable blue-coated cats in Calgary.
Calgary rescue blue and grey cats deliver the Russian Blue look at $300 to $500 in adoption fees. Most are DSH with the dilute coat gene rather than breed-pure Russian Blue. Foster notes describe the actual cat.
See Available Russian Blue-type Cats →The rescue path bypasses all this
Calgary rescue blue cats (Russian Blue-look, BSH-look, or generic blue DSH) are domestic cats with whatever genetic profile they happen to have. Adoption fees run $300 to $500 and cover spay or neuter, vaccinations, microchip, deworming, and a vet workup. Zero paperwork verification. Zero breed-claim verification. Zero scam risk. The cat in front of you is the cat in front of you.
For most adopters who want a Russian Blue for the coat colour and the temperament rather than show registration, the rescue path is the clean answer. If the priorities are blue-grey coat, calm or shy temperament, indoor lifestyle, and a 12 to 17 year companion, every Calgary rescue blue cat delivers exactly that. Daily care and care costs follow the cat, not the breed label. The difference is verifiable ancestry and breed-specific health screening, both of which matter for breeding programs and show registration but rarely change daily ownership.
Several Calgary rescues consistently list blue-coated cats. MEOW Foundation is the largest cat-only rescue in Calgary; their foster homes do detailed temperament and grooming-tolerance assessments. Calgary Humane Society has the highest cat intake volume in the city. AARCS pulls cats from rural Alberta shelters and overflow situations, occasionally including purebred surrenders. Watch foster notes for the specific traits described above rather than relying on the breed label alone.
For adopters who specifically want documented Russian Blue ancestry, Specialty Purebred Cat Rescue operates across North America and occasionally facilitates cross-border placements of retired breeder cats into Canadian homes. Worth checking if you want a confirmed Russian Blue without the breeder route.
For Calgary owners committed to the breeder route, establish a relationship with Western Veterinary Specialist & Emergency Centre for HCM screening referrals and breed-specific cardiac monitoring. The full medical picture for Russian Blue specifically is covered in our Russian Blue health issues guide, and the rescue-versus-breeder cost breakdown is in our Russian Blue adoption guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
How can I tell a Russian Blue from a blue DSH?
Three quickest tells. First, vivid green eyes are mandatory in the Russian Blue breed standard across CFA, TICA, FIFe, and CCA. Copper, gold, yellow, hazel, or mixed eye colour points to blue DSH, not Russian Blue. Second, a silver-tipped double coat that catches light and shimmers; flat blue or grey with no tipping points to DSH. Third, a wedge-shaped head, slim athletic body, and long legs; round head, stocky body, or short legs points to DSH or to BSH ancestry. Without pedigree paperwork, you cannot confirm purebred status, but these three traits together signal genuine Russian Blue or strong Russian Blue ancestry.
Why do Calgary rescues label so many cats “Russian Blue mix”?
Pattern recognition, not malice. The dilute coat gene produces blue or grey colouring in any cat genetic background, so blue DSH cats are common at Calgary rescues. Foster volunteers recognise the look as “Russian Blue-like” and tag the listing to help adopters find what they are searching for. The label is foster shorthand for the visual look, not verified breed ancestry. Most adopters search “Russian Blue Calgary” rather than “blue Domestic Shorthair Calgary,” so the mix label connects supply and demand. From an adoption standpoint the cat is a wonderful blue DSH with DSH temperament and no breed-specific health risks; the breed label does not change daily ownership.
Are all Russian Blues supposed to have green eyes?
Yes. Vivid green eyes are mandatory in the Russian Blue breed standard across CFA, TICA, FIFe, and the Canadian Cat Association. A blue or grey cat with copper, gold, yellow, hazel, or mixed eyes marketed as Russian Blue is misidentified, regardless of seller claims. The green eye colour develops over the first year of life; kittens are born with blue eyes that transition through amber to vivid green by 12 to 16 months of age. An adult Russian Blue with anything other than vivid green eyes is not breed-pure. This is the single fastest verification test in breed identification.
What is the difference between Russian Blue and Korat?
Both have silver-tipped blue coats but the breeds differ on coat structure, head shape, and body. Russian Blue has a short double coat that stands out from the body, producing a pronounced shimmer effect, plus vivid green eyes, a wedge-shaped head, and a slim elegant body. Korat has a single coat that lies close to the body (per the CFA Korat standard the silver tipping is present but the single coat produces a less pronounced shimmer than the Russian Blue double coat), green eyes that mature later (often gold in kittens), a heart-shaped face rather than a wedge, and a semi-cobby muscular body. Korat originates in Thailand with 200+ years of documented history; Russian Blue originates in the Russian Archangel Isles. Both are CFA and TICA recognised. Korat is extremely rare in Canadian rescue networks and uncommon even from breeders.
What is a Nebelung?
The long-haired variant of the Russian Blue. Developed in the 1980s by Cora Cobb at Nebelheim Cattery in the United States from Russian Blue crossed with black domestic longhair lineage. TICA recognised Nebelung at championship status in 1997. CFA holds preliminary status only. GCCF maintains preliminary recognition. FIFe does not recognise the breed. The cat has the same vivid green eyes, silver-tipped coat structure, and wedge head as Russian Blue, just with longer hair. Long-haired blue or grey cats at Calgary rescues are almost always Domestic Longhair, not Nebelung; true Nebelung at Canadian rescue is essentially nil.
Can a “Russian Blue mix” at a rescue actually be part Russian Blue?
Possible but rarely verifiable. The most credible mix signal is a slim grey cat with greenish eyes and a slightly refined head shape; this combination suggests partial Russian Blue ancestry from somewhere in the family tree. A chunky blue cat with copper eyes labelled “Russian Blue mix” is almost certainly a blue DSH with no Russian Blue ancestry. Without DNA testing or pedigree paperwork, the breed label is foster shorthand for the visual look. For adoption purposes the ancestry question rarely matters: the cat is whatever cat is in front of you, the temperament is whatever the foster reports, and care costs follow the cat, not the breed label.
Should I get DNA testing on my “Russian Blue mix” rescue cat?
For breed curiosity, optional; for health screening, mostly unnecessary for a Russian Blue-leaning cat. Wisdom Panel offers a cat DNA test at around $130 USD (Canadian pricing varies with import and shipping). The breed report often comes back as mostly domestic with low-confidence percentages because cat breeds are less genetically distinct than dog breeds. Unlike BSH-leaning cats (where the test reports useful blood type B and PKD1 status), Russian Blue does not have a breed-specific DNA panel that meaningfully changes care planning. Standard feline health markers apply. The test is worth running for curiosity but should not change adoption decisions or daily care.
How do I verify a real Russian Blue breeder?
Ask for CCA, CFA, or TICA registration paperwork by name with a specific cattery number, then verify the cattery directly on the registry online directory (cca-afc.com, cfa.org, or tica.org). Confirm both parents are registered with photos, registration numbers, and verified vivid green eyes (mandatory). Confirm HCM screening via annual echocardiogram on both parents. Kitten release age 12 to 14 weeks minimum. Visit the cattery in person and meet both parents. Pay via verifiable method, never cash in a parking lot. Contract should specify spay or neuter, return-to-breeder, and a health guarantee. Ethical Canadian breeders charge $1,500 to $3,000 for a registered kitten with paperwork and parent health testing.
Is a “Russian Blue” with copper or yellow eyes a scam?
Either fraud or seller ignorance, but either way the cat is not a Russian Blue. Vivid green eyes are mandatory in the Russian Blue breed standard across every major registry. Adult kittens with copper, gold, yellow, hazel, or mixed eyes are not breed-pure regardless of seller claims. The cat may still be a wonderful blue DSH or BSH-leaning mix and a great pet; the breed label is the problem, not the cat. If a seller is asking breeder-tier pricing ($1,500+) for a copper-eyed blue cat marketed as Russian Blue, walk away. The same cat at a Calgary rescue at $300 to $500 is the honest answer.
What are blue paw pads vs mauve paw pads?
Russian Blue have mauve or lavender paw pads on the blue-coated cat per the CFA and TICA breed standards; the soft pinkish-purple tone distinguishes Russian Blue from British Shorthair (blue paw pads matching the coat) and from blue DSH (any colour, often grey or pink or mixed). Paw pad colour is a subtle verification step ethical breeders welcome you to check on a kitten. The mauve tone is most visible on light backgrounds and in good light. Grey, pink, or black paw pads on a blue cat marketed as Russian Blue should prompt questions about ancestry, though paw pad colour alone is not as decisive as eye colour or coat structure.
Are Nebelung cats real?
Yes, Nebelung is a registry-recognised breed under TICA (championship status since 1997), CFA (preliminary status), and GCCF (preliminary recognition). The breed was developed in the 1980s by Cora Cobb of Nebelheim Cattery in the United States from Russian Blue crossed with black domestic longhair lines. Population numbers are very low globally; Nebelung is one of the rarer recognised breeds. In Canadian rescue the breed is essentially nonexistent. Long-haired blue or grey cats at Calgary rescues are Domestic Longhair, not Nebelung. Adopters who specifically want Nebelung are realistically looking at US-based breeders with import logistics or at cross-border specialty rescue placements.
Can a Russian Blue have any eye colour besides green?
No. Vivid green is the only accepted adult eye colour per CFA, TICA, FIFe, and CCA breed standards. The colour develops over the first 12 to 16 months of life: kittens are born with blue eyes that transition through amber to vivid green during the first year. Yellow, copper, hazel, blue, or mixed adult eye colour disqualifies a cat from breed-pure Russian Blue registration. This is the strongest single verification test for the breed and is consistent across every major registry. Sellers who insist their copper-eyed cat is a Russian Blue are either misinformed or running fraud.
How rare are real Russian Blues in Canadian rescues?
Verified breed-pure Russian Blues with paperwork at Canadian rescues are uncommon but not unheard of. Occasional surrenders happen when owners face allergy issues, financial hardship, or breeder retirement. Most rescue listings tagged “Russian Blue” or “Russian Blue mix” are blue DSH with the look, not breed-pure cats. From an adopter perspective the distinction rarely matters: rescue blue cats at $300 to $500 deliver the look and temperament most adopters are searching for. For adopters who specifically need documented breed ancestry (show, breeding, allergy testing concerns), Specialty Purebred Cat Rescue occasionally facilitates cross-border placements of retired breeder cats into Canadian homes.
What about Russian White or Russian Black?
Australian-developed colour variants of the Russian Blue, recognised by some smaller registries (including the Australian Cat Federation and the Russian Blue Fanciers Association) but not by CFA, TICA, FIFe, or CCA as separate breeds. The cats have the same wedge head, slim body, double coat, and vivid green eyes as Russian Blue, just in white or black coat colour. Russian White and Russian Black are extremely rare globally and essentially nonexistent in Canadian rescue networks. A white or black cat marketed as Russian White or Russian Black at Canadian rescue is almost certainly a DSH; verification requires direct registration paperwork from an Australian or European registry.
Russian Blue Cats in Calgary
Browse adoptable Russian Blue and Russian Blue-look mixes from Calgary rescues.
Russian Blue Adoption Guide
Rescue sources, real costs, surrender patterns, and how to find a real Russian Blue or mix in Calgary.
Russian Blue Health Issues
HCM, bladder stones, kidney monitoring, and the Calgary specialty vets who handle breed-specific care.
Russian Blue Hypoallergenic Myth
Lower Fel d 1 is not zero Fel d 1. What the science actually says and how to test tolerance before adopting.