The Asherah cat is being sold by Lifestyle Pets, a California, USA, based animal company. The Ashera leopard cat is a mix between an African Serval, an Asian Leopard and a domestic cat and can weigh up to 30 pounds (14 kg). This cat resembles a mini leopard and sells for $22,000. The cat was given the exotic name 'Ashera' after an early Semitic goddess translated into 'queen of heaven'.
The cheapest Ashera leopard cat costs $22,000 while the most expensive asherah cat costs $125,000. A 'Hypoallergenic' version of the Asherah costs $37,000 while the 'Snow' white Ashera costs $65,000. The Royal Ashera is the world's most rare and expensive domestic cat. It has a cream background, but its spots and stripes are 'tiger orange' instead of plain black.
The ashera leopard cats look like a "mini-leopard" but is supposed to be as domesticated and affectionate as a regular house cat.Every year, less than four Royal Ashera kittens are born, making them available only to selected clients. The company sells an average of 50 other Asherah cats in a year.
2 comments:
You mean to say "spend like a fool"? Or shall I say "A fool and his money are easily parted"?
Ashera cat is a SCAM, a clever marketing ploy by Simon Brodie, a man who served time in prison for fraud. There is no such breed. DNA tests proved that Ashera cat is an early generation Savannah cat bought from breeders for 2000-5000 and re-sold for several times the price. Read wiki entry on Ashera, also google for "Ashera cat scam".
Oh, and thinking before believing anything is a good idea. Not "Asian Leopard", but Asian Leopard Cat - a small wildcat, same size as a domestic, a wild cat used to start Bengal cat breed.
Hm... I made a comment explaining how ashera cat is a scam and is really a savannah cat - a fact obvious to anybody who knows about savannah cats and bengal cats, and my comment wasn't posted.
I guess you want to help a known scammer who've been in trouble with the law before (google "ashera cat scam" also "ashera allerca background") to scam people by providing advertising for a fraud.
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