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BULL TERRIER TIMES
COMPILATION
Breeding Bullish Terriers
These are difficult times for
those who favour the distinctive breeds of Terrier with Bulldog blood. The
threat of action, under the now discredited Dangerous Dogs Act, is a constant
worry. The implementation of this shabby Act by ill advised animal welfare
officers, misguided police forces and a couple of strangely motivated vets,
shames a nation once famous for its judicial system, sense of fair play and love
of dogs.
That apart, the untypical
anatomies inflicted on Bull Terriers, with their relatively new 'downface' or 'ruggerball'
heads, and, Staffordshire Bull Terriers with their short whippety legs, is most
surprising in two breeds whose fanciers were once archetypal traditionalists,
level-headed and single-minded.
If you look at paintings of these two admirable breeds in the last century, the
loss of true type soon becomes apparent. This may apply to other breeds too of
course, but when it concerns these two particular breeds, it seems especially
sad. I always think of those in these breeds as being resistant to the usual
pressures: the pursuit of fad breed points in each decade, some temporary flight
of fancy or one influential breeders partialities. You only have to look at the
faces of some of the characters in old paintings of these breeds, to see why I
say that.
No rational humane person wants to own a dog for use in dog-fighting, a cowardly
distasteful activity mainly designed to release undesirable aggression in
unpleasant humans. But I can see distinct merit and no harm in desiring to
reproduce in a breed of dog the physique which permits it to carry out its
original function. In such a way you can obtain sounder setters and
scent-hounds, hounds and herding dogs. In Stonehenge's 'Dogs of the British
Islands' of 1878, he states "the Bull Terrier is still judged by the fighting
standard - that is to say, he must have all the points, mental as well as
bodily, which are necessary to the fighting dog". In 'Staffordshire Bull
Terriers' edited by Major Count V.C.Hollender, of 1952, H.N. Beilby writes "we
can if we wish, produce dogs which in virtue of their build, toughness, courage
and intelligence are most likely to inherit and perpetuate the sterling
qualities of their ancestors. Are we doing this.? Only I fear to a limited
extent." Sadly, his words apply as much today as they did nearly half a century
ago. Fighting dogs were superbly fit, hard muscled, fiercely determined (to the
point of self-destruction), but eminently sound anatomically.
Nowadays thankfully, we do not seek unacceptable, sustained ferocity in our
dogs, but soft-muscled, unfit, overweight dogs of this type stand out perhaps
more than others. A podgy Bull Terrier looks quite dreadful; an overweight
Staffie can look almost porcine. I have seen both at recent shows, including
last year's Crufts, and it saddens me, for these are justly famous British
breeds on their way to being ruined. Or do I exaggerate.? What are the judges
saying.?
Here are some recent critiques on these two breeds: Staffordshire Bull Terrier
bitches at Crufts 1996: - "Fatness was a surprise and there were many in this
category" Bull Terriers at Crufts 1994: - "I am really saddened to see how we
are losing movement. I have never seen such bad movement....Oh for a few of the
South African dogs". Bull Terriers at the clubs 1994 championship show at Hemel
Hempstead: - "I am fully aware that some of my higher placed animals are not
good movers". Staffordshire Bull Terrier championship show in 1994: -
"...movement caused me great concern...a number of dogs lacked bone resulting in
thin feet" The Bull Terrier club of Wales open show in 1994:- "My main concern
at this show and others I have been to recently is the acceleration of the
number of dogs with poor movement". And Bull Terriers at a 1995 championship
show:- "...many were in anything but a fit condition".
For former canine gladiators to be fat or otherwise unfit, have poor movement
and lack bone is appalling. Good movement comes mainly from a combination of
sound construction and physical fitness. Movement is an excellent commentary on
the whole dog and unfailingly reveals anatomical faults. For a judge to place
dogs which were not good movers is depressing, poor movement is a serious fault
and indicates other serious faults. In Tom horners book on the Bull Terrier he
writes "It took a very long time to persuade people in the breed..that no dog
can move correctly unless it is properly built, and that the movement of the dog
inevitably betrays the faults in its conformation" A man like the late Tom
Horner is worth heeding. In his book, he also writes "concentration on downfaces
brought the conformation and movement of the breed to an appallingly low
level...There are some clever breeders..the majority quite single-minded about
breeding bigger and better downfaces". Such comments on the breed and its
breeders are not new. In his "Points of the Dog" of 1927, T.W. Hancock Mountjoy
wrote on the Bull Terrier, "The majority of the judges seemed to make a fetish
of the head, and nothing but the head. On going round the benches, it breaks
ones heart to see the slab-sided, greyhound-bodied specimens, placed in the
money. Some other faults are snipey faces, small round pig eyes, dudley noses,
long backs, no spring of rib, throatiness".
Bigger and better downfaces and pig eyes are with us today and how they spoil
the appearance of this splendid breed. The breed standard sets the design of the
dogs head with these words: "Viewed from front egg-shaped and completely
filled...Profile curves gently downwards from top of skull to tip of nose.." But
in Vero Shaws "The Illustrated Book of the Dog" of 1879, the 'points of variety'
demanded a wedge-shaped head, with an oblong eye. Then sixty years ago this
standard demanded a head which was 'oval, almost egg-shaped', with 'the more
downface the better'. The significance of Hinks, the father of the breed, never
desiring a dog with an eggshaped head and bigger and better downface, is
carefully overlooked in the pursuit of modern whim. It is a wholly undesirable
feature, never found naturally in dogs, and one that will go on exaggerating
itself until a proud breed looks like a caricature of itself.
Sixteen years ago when I wrote in "Our Dogs" on this concern for a breed I am
fond of, I received a response from a leading Bull Terrier figure of that time.
It answered none of the points that I had striven to make and patronisingly
referred to my ' boyhood dreams' of Bull Terriers and sneeringly advised me not
to form a 'sweeping judgement' by a visit to a single show. In other words,
leave the fate of this fine native breed to us breeders, we know best. If only
that were true.! Look at the Bull Terriers depicted before this rugger-ball head
was pursued as a fad breed point, not a traditional feature of the breed, and
say which is more natural, more appealing, typical of the breed which Hinks
passed down for our safekeeping. Are we really honouring his blueprint.?
Turning to the Staffordshire Bull Terrier, in his own book on the breed of 1943,
H.N. Beilby wrote "are we paying enough attention to the activity and agility of
our Staffordshire Bull Terriers?...The front legs must show no weakness at the
pastern - the latter is a common fault and needs attention. There are too many
Staffords with thin flat feet.."
Against that background, it is disturbing to find the same faults in the breed
nearly half a century later. Writing in the breed notes some years ago, Mary
Pringle makes my next point for me "Mercifully not all Stafford breeders are
complacent. We realise the shortcomings, the good points and the bad. With such
a short show history, from 1935, such mixed up backgrounds, variance of coat and
colour too, we have much to contend with. There is work to be done in every
breed and those with the shortest life as a registered breed need
understanding." Bull Terrier breeders have less of an excuse.
When type, soundness and movement need urgent priority in any breed, it is
disappointing to see an obsession with size, colour and petty interpretive fine
points taking precedence. Reading long and largely mistaken discussions about
whether a dog bred to fight in a small ring has any need to move well in a
larger show ring is both depressing and distressing. Depressing because there
are so many much more important topics to be aired, and distressing because of
the irrational comparison being made and the tendentious argument being
attempted, probably mischieviously. Famous British breeds, renowned the world
over, deserve a higher level of debate than this.
You only have to look at the annual registration figures produced by the Kennel
Club to see the decline in numbers of many famous British breeds, part of our
canine heritage, and the enormous increase in the breeds from abroad, especially
Germany. The miniature Bull Terrier is now one of the ten rarest of our national
breeds. The staffordshire Bull Terrier is numerically strong, but the Bull
Terrier popularity is not so assured: over 3,000 registered in 1989, then 1,810
four years later. It is simply foolish for a group of misguided individuals to
redesign a breed, away from its classic mould and into a disfigured replica. I
would love to own a Bull Terrier, but I have no wish to own a dog with a rugger-ball
for a head, piggy eyes and poor movement. I admire Staffies, but I don't want a
badly timbered dog, with poor feet and questionable movement.
At the last two World Dog Shows, the breed with the best movement for me was the
American Staffordshire Terrier. As the old saying goes - "they moved right,
because they were made right". With the head of a 19th Century Bull Terrier,
good bone, sound eyes and a powerful but athletic anatomy, they represent the
classic Bull Terrier mould. Although of "Pit Bull Terrier Type" and therefore
likely to fall foul of the infamous DDA, the genes of this fine modern breed,
now establishing a huge following on the continent, would have some contribution
to make in a much needed revision of our Bull Terrier. What a shocking thing to
suggest in these days of closed gene pools.! But it could be of greater value
than those clandestine matings between Bull Terriers, Borzois and Smooth Collies
to get the extraordinary 20th Century head on the Bull terrier. We have
inflicted enough physical handicaps on our Bulldog, do we have to spoil our
splendid Bull Terriers too.?
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