"No working terrier has ever been created
by the Kennel Club, but every working
terrier breed that has been drawn in,
has been destroyed there."
by the Kennel Club, but every working
terrier breed that has been drawn in,
has been destroyed there."
People who care about working terriers are generally dismissive of the Kennel Club, for the simple reason that they know what the Kennel Club has done, through either omission or commission, to the working terriers they care about.
The simple fact is that no working terrier has ever been created by the Kennel Club, but every working terrier breed that has been drawn in, has been destroyed there.
The Reverend John Russell noted the negative impact of dog shows on working terriers -- he judged only one show (when he was a very old man), and he swore he would never do it again!
Though the destruction of working terriers started with the Allied Terrier Shows run by Charles Crufts in the U.K. (Crufts was a dog food salesman who never even owned a dog himself!), the Americans quickly got into the game as well.
A quick historical tour of "Best in Show" winners at the Westminster Kennel Club Show in New York City suggests the intense attention given to terriers at the turn of the 20th Century.
- The first "Best in Show" winner at Westminster in New York City was in 1907. This first "Best in Show" winner was a smooth fox terrier that looked a little bit like today's Jack Russell.
- Fox terriers won again in 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1926, 1928, 1930, 1931, 1934, 1937 and 1942.
- A Sealyham (another working breed ruined by the show ring) won in 1924, 1927 and 1936.
- Airedales made Best in Show in 1912, 1919, 1920, 1933, and 1936.
- A bull terrier went Best In Show in 1918, and a Welsh Terrier in 1944.
It was during this period that the face of the fox terrier was elongated and the chest enlarged by show ring breeders.
Prior to World War II, if you were really intent on wining the top award at a dog show, you went into fox terriers.
Probably no breed could have survived such intense attention without being wrecked by fad, and the fox terrier certainly did not.
A popular line of rhetoric within the Kennel Club crowd is that individual breeders ruin the dogs, not the Kennel Club itself. This rhetoric is designed to absolve the Kennel Club of its responsibility for the genetic decline of working dogs.
In fact, the rules and selection bias of the Kennel Club are a very large part of the problem -- every much a part of the problem as individual breeders (who have no power to reform the Kennel Club itself).
The genetic destruction of working dogs begins with the fact that the Kennel Club mandates that each breed club "close" its registry after an initial influx of "pure bred" dogs.
In fact most breed clubs start with a very small base of dogs, and then move to close breed roles as quickly as possible in order to create economic value for the breeders that are "in" the club.
A closed genetic registry results in increasing levels of inbreeding and increased concentrations of genetic faults.
In fact, Kennel Club dogs are so deeply inbred and rich with genetic defects that mapping the genome of Kennel Club dogs was one of the first tasks undertaken by genetic scientists eager to crack the human genetic code in order to eradicate diseases.
If you are looking for the gene associated with genetic deafness, it is rather hard trait to find in a random-bred human, cat or chimpanzee, but thanks to Kennel Club inbreeding, there are entire lines of deaf dogs, with deafness common to 25% or more of all puppies from some breeds. Genetic defects associated with ataxia, cataracts, dysplasia, and dwarfism are similarly easy to find by simply comparing one breed, or line of dogs, with another.
Along with a requirement that breed registries be closed, the Kennel Club rejects the notion that there should be a morphological continuum within the world of dogs.
In fact, "speciation" of dogs based on looks alone is what the Kennel Club is all about.
Under Kennel Club rules and "standards," a cairn terrier cannot look too much like a Norwich terrier, which cannot look too much like a Norfolk terrier, which cannot look too much like a Border terrier, which cannot look too much like a Fell terrier, which cannot look too much like a Welsh terrier, which cannot look too much like a Lakeland terrier, which cannot look too much like a Fox terrier, which cannot look too much like a "Parson Russell" terrier (the non-hunting, show-ring version of the Jack Russell Terrier).
The show ring is all about "breeds," and all about differentiating one breed from another.
In the world of the working terrier, of course, the fox or raccoon or groundhog does not care too much what breed the dog is! In fact, the fox or raccoon cannot even see the dog it faces underground, as there is no light inside a den pipe.
What the fox cares about is whether the dog can actually reach it at the back of the sette.
The good news (at least as far as the fox is concerned!) is that a Kennel Club dog often cannot get very close to the quarry . The reason for this? A Kennel Club dog is likely to have too big a chest.
The overlarge chests you find on so many Kennel Club terriers are a byproduct of putting too much emphasis on head shape and size. By requiring all the terriers to be morphologically distinct from each other, the Kennel Club puts tremendous emphasis on heads.
People who do not dig much (if at all) imagine that a big head is important to work. In fact, it really is not; most small cross-bred working terriers have heads big enough to do the job, and are well-enough shaped to boot.
An over-emphasis on terrier head size almost invariably leads to a larger chest size on the dog -- a bigger chest size is needed to counterbalance the larger head, since one is attached to the other.
A large chest size, in turn, results in a dog that cannot easily get to ground in a tight naturally-dug earth.
The end result is what we see in the Kennel Club show ring today -- transvestite terriers. These dogs may LOOK like they can do the part (and they are so eager!), but when push comes to shove, most of them lack the essential equipment to do the job, whether that is chest size, nose, voice, brain, or a game and gritty character.
.
7 comments:
I once made a professional handler quite cross at a show when I asked to pet her Norfolk at ringside. I gave the dog some scritches along the back and the handler snatched the dog away and lectured me about what "petting" means (apparently "petting" means don't "mess up" the dog's coat)!
Running a dog around a show ring does not tell you how it can run in the field.
I think of a basset hound that I knew, purchased to be used as a rabbit hound, the same way that beagles are. There are very good beagles in West Virginia, working dogs. In fact, the colloquialism is to call the "rabbit beagles." The beagles have been bred to drive rabbits a slow enough speed so as not to ruin the shooter's chances. They can run rabbits all day and never tire.
This basset was not a working-type basset. He was a show-type dog with legs bent outward. He had drive to chase the rabbits. He could run through the undergrowth well, but that was his only advantage. After about 45 minutes of rabbit chasing, he would simply wear out. His legs weren't designed to carry him hour after hour through the multiflora roses.
There are working type bassets.
Some people even cross beagles with bassets to make the colloquial "bench-legged beagle" to run through the thickets better.
But the show type basset can't do the work of a field-bred beagle. It just can't.
I didn't know about the differences between show dogs and working dogs as far as breeding goes. I have a Jack and always thought she'd burrow if she got the chance. But now I see that she was bred more for show. Her chest is too large. I prefer my dogs to be dogs and more like their wolf ancestors. A pretty dog is nice, but I want my dog to play fetch and run around. If their fur gets a little messed or they get a little dirty, so what? My dog is my companion, not a trophy.
Here's the difference between AKC conformation judges and JRTCA conformation judges. It speaks volumes:
"Recommendations from three JRTCA working judge as to your field experience. The JRTCA Breed Standard, to which we judge terriers in conformation, is based on the structure a terrier needs for the work it is intended to do. Actual experience in working terriers in the field is crucial to understanding this structure, and all JRTCA conformation judges are required to have first-hand knowledge/experience in working terriers in the field".
This is part of the requirements to become a JRTCA conformation judge. Spanning a terrier on a table, if done at all in the AKC ring, just doesn't cut it. If you watch a JRTCA judge span and an AKC judge "span" it's like they're from 2 different planets.
I don't need to span a working dog -- I can look at it and tell. If it's close, it's too big. Span? Screw that! My thumbs better overlap!
P
Evaluating a purpose-bred dog on the basis of conformation is a slippery slope. Yes, a terrier needs to have the right chest and overall size to go down a burrow. But, to use another breed as an example, there are plenty of Border Collies with cow-hocks, long or short bodies/legs that are tireless, all day workers. Nothing proves a good working dog but good, consistent work. Of course, color, coat type and ear set are pretty irrelevant, but there is a wide latitude for structural differences. If you start letting dogs be evaluated by conformation alone you soon end up with dogs that can't do the work.
That is so interesting regarding the sprung chests. I adopted (I'll never pay for a dog) the loveliest little smooth fox terrier from a breeder. Her head and ear set were perfect but she was sprung like a barrel. I believe they got a litter out of her too. :(
Great dog but no, she could only get up to her shoulders in a 'chuck hole.
Post a Comment