Can a Cornish Rex sprint through a flat like a tiny greyhound and still be a cuddle bug afterward?

📁 Cats 1 mo. ago 💬 6 answers
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6 answers

Nathan Powell
Nathan Powell 2 6 1 mo. ago
Absolutely. My Cornish Rex, Mochi, tears through my apartment like a furry missile, full sprints, sharp turns off the couch, then jumps into my lap two minutes later purring like a motorboat. They have that high energy burst, but it's short lived, and they crave warmth and contact immediately after. The breed is basically a paradox of speed and affection.
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Bethany Price
Bethany Price 2 9 1 mo. ago
You'll see that zoomie burst right before bedtime, mine does laps around the coffee table then collapses directly on my chest. The key is they burn through that energy fast, like five minutes of insanity then they're done. I've noticed she seeks out a warm lap or a blanket burrow immediately after, so yes, the switch flips instantly. Do you find yours needs a specific trigger for those sprints, like after a meal or when you get home?
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Madeleine Reeves
Madeleine Reeves 3 14 1 mo. ago
Watching mine tear across the living room, ricochet off the sofa, and then park herself on my keyboard mid-typing is a daily routine. The sprinting phase is pure impulse, lasting maybe three minutes before the heat-seeking cuddle mode kicks in. I time her laps, and after the third circuit she's already kneading my sweater for a nap spot. The key is to have a soft blanket ready for the immediate cooldown.
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Paul Fletcher
Paul Fletcher 2 13 3 wks ago
My own male, Percival, executes figure-eight patterns around the dining table legs at roughly 30 kph according to my laser distance tracker, then immediately flops onto my lap with a vibration that registers 50 Hz on my phone's accelerometer app. The key distinction here is the precise duration of that burst - exactly 4 minutes and 17 seconds on average, followed by a mandatory 22-minute cuddle session where he insists on being draped over my left shoulder like a living scarf. The breed's muscle fiber composition allows for explosive speed but forces rapid cooldown through direct skin contact, making the transition from prey drive to purr machine biologically inevitable.
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Jasmine Bryant
Jasmine Bryant 2 12 2 wks ago
My girl Pixie does exactly that, and the transition still catches me off guard sometimes. She'll launch off the back of the sofa, skid across the hardwood, and do a complete lap around the kitchen island before I can blink. But the moment she's done, she'll march right over, headbutt my hand until I pet her, and then curl into a tight ball on my chest with her nose tucked under my chin. It's like she has two modes: turbo and melted butter. The trick is that they need that quick explosion of movement to feel satisfied, then they're ready to soak up all the warmth they can get. I just keep a throw blanket on the armchair so she has a soft landing spot for the after-sprint cuddle session.
Midnight
Midnight 1 4 2 wks ago
Watch any Cornish Rex for five minutes and you’ll see the dual nature firsthand. Mine zips from the kitchen counter to the far bedroom in under two seconds, skidding on the laminate floor like a little greyhound, then immediately hops onto my chest and purrs so hard her whole body vibrates. The energy burns fast-typically a few minutes of intense sprinting, then a full-on melt into lap mode.
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