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There is a
question of verisimilitude here. The notion that every exhibit of
every breed should, ideally, look more or less exactly alike, in
other words be of precisely the same so-called type, is one which
many folks seem to subscribe to without giving due thought to what
this really means. Even if this desirability were biologically
possible, which, because of fundamental genetic vicissitudes, it is
not, would breeds necessarily be in better condition? Does
uniformity in this context perforce have some sort of axiomatic,
connate, elemental, self-evident advantage? I think not! In fact, on
the contrary, quite the opposite is true. With diversity and
variability comes what can best be referred to as a certain
biological safety-net. This is not to say, however, that the concept
of type itself is moot and inapplicable, that the characteristics by
which individual breeds are recognized cannot be specified, at least
in broad terms. Where the danger lies is in attempting to define the
morphology and structural peculiarities of breeds too restrictedly,
thereby failing to accommodate reality.
A failure to
accept and recognize the fact that the pure-bred dog represents a
highly complex and seemingly inexhaustible store of genetic
diversity and variability can certainly lead to a much too
narrowly-conceived perspective on how individual breeds are, or
should be, viewed and defined. It has happened. Hence the attempts,
in many instances, to highly particularize breed standards and to do
so to such an extent as to become, to some degree at least,
counterproductive. The variabilities existing among populations of
individual breeds of the pure-bred dog are not, after all, going to
go away just because someone, or a group of individuals, sees or see
fit to produce a very narrow and ultra-restricted blueprint of what
a breed should be like. An ample, all-embracing perspective is
surely required here, rather than a limited, myopic one. The form of
the dogs came and evolved, after all, before the standards were even
written but we sometimes seem to conveniently forget that fact.
Repeat; the dogs came first, their description came subsequently,
afterwards! Is there some fundamental or dire disadvantage to having
considerable latitude in terms of specifying the precise form, in
order to accommodate variation, in an open standard such as is
exemplified by that of the Greyhound? The standard of that breed is
one of the broad perspective, of the big picture, of the harmony of
parts, with strength and flexibility being the essential and key
elements of the breed's very essence. There is a certain outline and
a capacious chest, as the English standard so very well describes
it. Is there anyone out there with the chutzpah or temerity to
venture an opinion to the effect that this breed's spare but
wonderfully concise and succinct standard, in which there are
certainly no wasted words, is inadequate and has not served it well
all through the years? I sincerely hope not!
There is, of
course, a message here for all those within the fancy intent on
tampering habitually and incessantly with breed standards. Pray
tell, what real purpose is being served? I am told, incidentally,
that someone, somewhere, wants to describe the Pekingese as having
reach and drive; I'm serious! My goodness, I wonder what the
legendary Dowager Empress Tzu Hsi would think of that? Did she not
say that let its forelegs be bent, so that it shall not desire to
wander far or leave the imperial precincts? What does it need these
facilities for; running rapidly up and down and around American Best
in Show rings in the manner of the Shih Tzu in order to be
additionally competitive? Is there, one sometimes wonders, an
ever-increasing trend toward this desire to unceasingly modify
standards occurring within pure bred dogdom today? Has this now
become an end in itself, so to speak, the in vogue thing to indulge
in? What could be the cause, the motivation? Don't fanciers have
more important things to preoccupy themselves with? The question
which must surely be asked goes something as follows; is repeatedly
attempting to refine breed descriptions to the extent of making them
cumbersome, unwieldy, and narrowly restrictive serving any useful
purpose? The intent may certainly be altruistic and meant to be
beneficial but overkill is overkill. When the descriptions become
overly detailed there is always the danger of the fanciful
overtaking reality and when that happens breed integrity can well
become compromised. There has to be some discipline exercised in the
apparently compulsive obsession to particularize in an unrealistic
and unreasonable fashion.
Unfortunately,
there also exists the problem of many breed standards, and even
individual opinions regarding the particular peculiarities of
breeds, being derivative. There are so very many examples of this.
Take the 45 degree shoulder angulation bit, for instance. If the
notion of this being an ideal and commonly-occurring condition
across a whole range of dog breeds, including members of the sight hound complex, is pretty obviously unreal, or even hair
raisingly ignorant, it has at least the excuse most of the time of
not being original to its promulgator. It really is rather amazing
how certain generic generalizations take hold in the mind and are
rather indiscriminately and uncritically applied across a wide
cross-section of breeds without due regard to what is real and what
is imagined. This sort of mindless spillover is very unfortunate.
Once ingrained in the common consciousness this sort of false notion
seems well nigh impossible to eradicate. The supposed occurrence or
existence of parallel head planes in many breeds is, oftentimes,
likewise an example of the fanciful taking precedence over reality.
The matter of shoulder layback in sight hounds has been a veritable
bone of contention for many years but if more attention was focussed
on the actual condition of the dogs and less on someone's opinion of
what is imagined to be ideal, an accurate assessment of their
correct form could be achieved. At least we would be nearer the
truth. Thereby much of the undisciplined reasoning as to what are or
are not the proper structural peculiarities in this or that breed
could, perhaps, be eliminated. Please let's not continue to maintain
that a 45 degree shoulder angulation is an ideal to be aimed at in,
say, breeding an Ibizan Hound or a Pharaoh Hound! In reality, in
their original and present condition, these breeds and all others in
the extensive sight hound complex, including the Azawakh, Saluki, and
Sloughi, have a much more open angle.
In the larger
scheme of things it has to be realized that all of the segregating
and mixing and selecting and recombining, over numerous generations,
has resulted in a veritable cornucopia of genetically-controlled
morphological expressions and multitudinous variations thereof. The
genetic material, that which we now commonly refer to as the genome,
of all dogs is the same but yet there is this almost incredible
range of form, of structure, of morphology. Think of all the shapes,
the proportions, the sizes, the colors, the various type of coats,
etcetera. Biological science tells us in no uncertain terms that
variability is a critically important feature of all living
organisms. It makes possible, for one thing, adaptability. Fanciers
of the pure-bred dog should always bear this in mind. Although the
primary aim of conscientious, dedicated breeders is to maintain,
preserve, and perpetuate the unique and peculiar characteristics of
breeds according to the strict dictates of their respective
standards some allowance must always be made for the phenomenon of
variation. In this context absolute uniformity surely has no
particularly intrinsic value or virtue, in and of itself. What has
to be looked out for, however, and assiduously guarded against, is a
significant drift away from that which is considered typical.
In the process
of attempting to improve breeds, to enhance the quality of the dogs
being bred and shown, there is always the risk of losing, to various
degrees, that totality which we commonly refer to as type and
thereby violate a breed's integrity. It happens in parts of the
populations of different breeds at different times. This is surely
happening, for instance, in Rhodesian Ridgebacks, among others,
currently. Some of the exhibits of that breed seen in today's show
ring are certainly very different in form from that which must be
considered typical and I'm not just talking about those rather
frequently-encountered exaggerated rears. The essential message in
all of this has to be as follows. A balance has to be set and
adhered to. Allowance has to be made for variation whilst at the
same time a breed's integrity must be protected. In the case of many
breeds, of which the Irish Wolfhound is perhaps a very good example,
their rather complicated and composite background in terms of
ancestry, makeup and development in some part accounts for the
degree of existing variability. It is most interesting to note that
the parent club of that breed has struggled mightily with the task
of coming up with an acceptable illustrated standard and has finally
elected to employ pre-1970 photographs in order to try and
effectively convey to judges what they should be looking for! Great
size and commanding appearance, after all, comes in animals of
rather different form. This is a breed in which considerable
diversity remains quite evident. Fortunately, it also, in common
with the Greyhound, has a rather economical, lean standard. Some
judges might think this excessively exiguous but it surely serves
its purpose.
Even in some of
the older breeds, such as the Saluki, which, as we know it in the
conformation show ring today, is a conglomerate of slightly differing
forms with many local variations, diversity of form is, not
unexpectedly, of common occurrence. There has been a long history in
this breed of intermixing dogs originating from disparate
populations and the results are there for all to see. Added to this
the attempts to so-call improve the breed, whatever that actually
means, and you have a veritable potpourri of exhibits, some of which
must surely approach being caricatures of what the breed was
originally like. The desert-bred Saluki, that which is still bred in
countries recognized as historical places of origin, serves to
remind present-day fanciers of the essential physical attributes of
the native hunter although it must be said that even some of these
have in their ancestry animals imported from elsewhere, including
the United Kingdom.
During the
course of the past several decades concern has repeatedly been
voiced about the condition of many of our breeds and what we are
doing to them. Although generalizations are rarely ever valid there
is, of course, every reason to believe that breeding over many
generations for the specific purpose of American conformation dog
show competition has resulted in substantial changes occurring.
These undoubtedly continue. It is in the nature of things. Who can
dispute the fact that the Pembroke Welsh Corgi of today's show ring
is appreciably different from the comparatively short bodied, higher
on leg little red dog that so energetically worked the verdant hills
of my beloved Wales half a century and more ago. I know, I grew up
with them in the small village of Rhostryfan in Snowdonia. My first
ever show dog was a Pembroke Welsh Corgi. He won Reserve Best Puppy
in Show at the Anglesey Canine Society Open Show at Llangefni with
myself, as a teenager, handling. The Best Puppy in Show award went
to a black English Cocker Spaniel. The year was 1956. In those days
this 40% longer that tall thing hadn't entered anybody's mind, at
least not in my neck of the woods, and the dogs were not so
proportioned. Would he be competitive today? I'm afraid not. He was,
nevertheless, a beautifully made dog, I have the photographs to
prove it, but different. So what of it? We have to put such thoughts
as these in some sort of acceptable context. The changes that have
occurred and continue to occur in all breeds are a thing that we
have to contend with, one way or other. In breed after breed we have
to accommodate change, within limits. The most important thing in all
of this, it seems to me, is to be aware of and realize what we are
dealing with and to accept that a certain dynamic exists which is
difficult to control. As Kurt Vonnegut would say, and so it goes.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Dr. Gareth
Morgan-Jones was born and brought up in Wales. Educated at the
University of Wales and the University of Nottingham, England, he
earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the latter. His alma mater
conferred the degree of Doctor of Science upon him by decree in
recognition of his internationally-recognized contribution to
knowledge in mycology, the branch of biological science involving
the study of fungi. He has held faculty positions at universities in
four countries; Canada, South Africa, the United Kingdom, as well as
the United States. He currently holds the rank and title of
Distinguished University Professor at Auburn University, one of only
seven individuals to do so in a faculty of over twelve-hundred. At
Auburn he has, for many years, headed a research program focussing
on plant disease inducing microfungi funded at various times by the
National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the
United States Department of Agriculture, and Abbott Laboratories. He
has owned, bred and exhibited a number of breeds, including Afghan
Hounds, Basset Hounds, English Cocker Spaniels and, in recent years,
Pekingese. As an owner-handler during the 1990s he piloted two dogs
of the latter breed to a combined total of twelve all-breed Best in
Show awards and seventy-eight Toy Group Firsts. He contributed
monthly essays to 'The Canine Chronicle' for nine years (1992 2000),
an activity which he is now resuming, and is currently approved by
the AKC to judge the Hound Group, English Cocker Spaniels and
Pekingese. Other than his involvement with the pure-bred dog, his
main avocation is growing and hybridizing camellias in his four-acre
southern garden.
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