MISTEL DOBERMANS TEN GENERATIONS OF BREEDER OWNER HANDLED CHAMPIONS |
Breed type is much more subtle and much more
complicated than what can be defined by words alone.
One of my favorite sources on the subject of breed
type is a book written by Richard Beauchamp entitled
Solving the
Mysteries of Breed Type. In his book Mr.
Beauchamp examines
many breeds and discusses qualities of type
that are important for each breed.
He gives the reader an appreciation of how
diverse the dog species is ... and how difficult it
is to describe breed type in words.
After considering these many breeds and identifying
their defining qualities, Mr. Beauchamp concludes
that there are five elements that determine breed
type.
Those elements are:
First let's look at
Silhouette.
The visual outline of a dog is the major way we
identify a breed.
You should be able to see a dog at a distance
and be able to identify the breed by outline alone.
The silhouette conveys much about breed type; size,
proportion, substance, angulation, topline,
underline, tailset, head carriage, along with a
myriad of other traits.
All of these traits must combine in a unique
way to become that breed, and to be unlike any other
breed.
You can describe a dog until you exhaust your
vocabulary, and still not have a person visualize a
breed that he has never seen before.
But show a live dog or a photo of a correct
Doberman, and that person has an immediate
appreciation for how the breed should look.
Since outline or
silhouette is decidedly a mark of breed type, it is
important to have an image of the breed in mind to
determine breed type.
Below are photos of
very good male and female Dobermans.
These images should be so affixed in your
mind that you can very quickly compare a Doberman
standing before you to the mental image of the
ideal.
You can see from these images the compactness, the
correct head proportion, the proper neck that flows
smoothly into the 90º
front angulation. You will observe the solid
slightly sloping topline ending in a 2 o'clock
tailset with a moderate underline and with rear
angulation that matches the front.
With the silhouette, you will see the strong
substance, cat tight feet and athleticism.
Once you have the ideal silhouette committed to
memory, and after observing many representatives of
the breed, you will be armed with the tools to help
you identify that element of breed type.
Now let's look at
heads
Just as you should be able to identify a breed by
profile alone, you should be able to identify the
breed of any dog when only the head is visible.
Though the description of our
head is similar to other breeds, the Doberman
head does not look like any other breed.
Many breeds
ask for parallel planes, blunt wedge, dark eyes, and
high ear set, but they are not even close to
resembling a Doberman.
Dobermans have a dry head with a flat skull, smooth
planes on the side of the head, erect ears and a
vigorous and energetic expression.
The head should give the impression of
planes, not curves, and intensity, not softness.
The standard's wording of a blunt wedge is not an
exact measurement.
A blunt wedge can vary from very wide (think
Rottweiler) to very narrow (think Collie).
A
heavy-bodied Doberman will likely have a wider angle
to the blunt wedge, whereas a narrower skull may be
more appropriate on a dog with lesser substance.
Both could be acceptable as long as the head
fits the rest of the dog.
You must know the limits of the wedge that are
correct for a Doberman.
You can do this by having the image of the
ideal head stored in your mind's eye for reference.
Of major importance of the head is a full muzzle
with a full complement of teeth.
The Doberman was bred as a personal
protection dog.
To protect against threats, a Doberman needs
the strength of head to manage a full sized man that
threatens the dog or his owner.
The standard calls for a disqualification for dogs
with four or more missing teeth, or overshot more
than 3/16ths of an inch, or undershot more than
1/8ths of an inch.
The most frequently missing, and easiest to
find teeth are
the pre-molars.
Missing teeth can occur at any part of the
mouth, incisors, pre-molars, or molars (usually the
rear-most molar).
It is imperative to check all teeth for
proper dentition.
Extra pre-molars are quite common in the breed.
The standard calls for 42 correctly placed
teeth.
More teeth is not better.
More
actually represents two faults.
First is that there are more than the 42
specified by the standard, and second the teeth
cannot be correctly placed if there are too many of
them.
Having said all of that, a missing or extra tooth is
incorrect, but a dog should not be excluded from
consideration for this singular fault.
Another consideration in the mouth is the occlusion.
Occlusion is best examined with by examining
the bite, then lifting the lips to reveal the upper
and lower premolars.
These premolars should fit such that the they
mesh symmetrically between each other as shown here.
A good
understanding of the correct head will lead you to
become a better Doberman judge or breeder.
The next element of breed type is gait.
Each breed has distinct gait, but there are many
common factors of the gait that are typical of many
breeds.
Dobermans tend to have a
strong, powerful gait, yet with light footed
action.
They tend to have wider strides than many breeds.
As an example, some herding breeds call for
similar structure in their standard with strong
reach and drive, but in comparison they have a more
moderate gait than a Doberman.
When observing the "running gear," the essential
characteristics for Doberman side gait movement are
correct reach and drive, interchange of the feet
under the dog, and feet close to the ground.
The reach and drive should be balanced with the
front foot reaching near the nose and the rear drive
extending in a like angle and with the hock joint
fully open and the rear pastern fully extended.
The
exchange under the dog should be with the back foot
stepping into or near the exiting front foot.
In addition the dog must maintain a look that is
very similar to the dog when he is in a stacked pose
including topline, underline, with slightly forward
head carriage, and tail carriage as shown below.
The figures below show the correct movement for the
down and back for a Doberman.
Notice that the front leg forms a
straight-line column and moves in the same plane as
the rear leg on the same side.
The legs converge toward a centerline under
the dog.
"Which is more important, the side gait or the down
and back?"
The answer is "both."
The characteristics that are important in
side gait are not observable in the down and back.
Conversely, the characteristics of correct
movement in the down and back are not observable in
the side gait.
Even though you can see more characteristics
in the side gait, the down and back is equally
important.
Both must be observed
to find a sound dog.
The fourth element of breed type is the coat.
The dog world is teeming with different types,
textures, lengths, and colors of coats. It is
clearly one of the most important components in
breed type.
This element is the easiest to understand in the
Doberman.
It has no unusual characteristics, but it's
coat does help define the breed.
The Doberman coat is a short, hard, shiny coat, with
little or no undercoat.
If undercoat
exists, it will typically be in the neck area.
The coat should always be hard.
There are coats that are soft, smooth, and
shiny.
They can be very attractive, but they are not
correct.
There are four colors, black, red, fawn, and blue,
all with tan or rust markings.
The only allowed white is a small patch on
the chest measuring no more than 1/2 inch square.
Any other color is a disqualification.
The elements of breed type discussed above deal with
the physical appearance of the breed.
That's all that has been described and many
people would stop here, but those elements don't
tell the whole story.
The breed must present the proper character
for its breed.
The AKC Glossary of Terms defines character as
"Expression, individuality, and general appearance
and deportment as considered typical of a breed."
Harold Spiro's book
Canine
Terminology limits his definition
towards
temperament and defines character as "Dogs mentally
equipped to perform those functions for which they
were originally designed are referred to as being
'true in character' for that particular breed."
The Doberman is a regal breed with the distinctive
combination of being elegant while still maintaining
strong substance. It
should be a compact, athletic, confident dog that
presents himself as aware of his surroundings and in
total control.
The standard has descriptive phrases (Elegant
in appearance, of proud carriage, reflecting great
nobility and temperament. Energetic, watchful,
determined, alert, fearless, loyal and obedient.)
They all are important.
Since the Doberman was bred as a personal protection
dog, he should exhibit the traits of a animal that
can perform those duties ... quick, powerful,
determined, confident, and controllable.
The athleticism, stature, and presence of a
confident Doberman draws attention from everyone,
irrespective of their breed of choice.
Observe a good Doberman returning from moving
and hitting that perfect stack with the look of "I'm
here, and I'm in command."
Could that be one of the reasons that
Dobermans are so successful in group competition?
If you have watched a number of strong
working groups, you've seen it.
When you see it you will know "that's a
Doberman!"
Thoughts about crop
and dock A
docked tail is clearly defined the standard.
There should be no other acceptable tail. A
dog with uncropped ears deviates from the standard
in three specific instances.
It
is not cropped.
The ears are not carried erect.
The standard states that the Doberman look is
"determined, alert, fearless, loyal and obedient."
Natural ears on this breed have a much softer
and less daunting look than the erect ears of a
cropped Doberman.
A soft look is counter to the appearance
desired in our breed.
This is a third and important deviation.
One should be able to identify a breed solely by its
silhouette.
The Doberman silhouette cannot be identified
as correct breed type if it has natural ears and an
undocked tail
Conclusion If
you thoroughly learn the first four elements of
breed type and have those mental images in your
mind, your will be able to choose the physically
correct Doberman.
The final and arguably the most important
factor that you will evaluate is breed character.
Choose carefully, breeders and judges.
You control the future of the breed.
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