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ALSH
- Livre des Origines Saint-Hubert [dogs that have unknown parents in
3 generations] Provisional registration for dogs of uncertain ancestry in Belgium
RISH
- Livre des Origines Saint Hubert [dogs without known parents taken
into breed]
NHSB
- Livre des Origines Hollandais [Nederlandsch Hondenstamboek, a
Dutch FCI registry]
NVBK
- Belgian [Holland] a non - FCI registry
KNPV
- Is a club, not a registry
LA
- Livre d'Attente, France
LOB
- Livre des Origines Belge non reconnu par la
Fédération Cynophile internationale
LOF
- Société Centrale Canine, France [Livre des Origines Françaises]
LOI
- Livre des Origines Italien
LOSH
- Livre des Origines Saint-Hubert, Belgique [Belgian kennelclub
register for dogs with full FCI pedigree]
FCI
- Fédération Cynologique Internationale
DSaZB
- German Registration designation
CQN
- Certificate of Natural Qualities, the Belgian working test,
prerequisite for the Belgian Championship for the protective heritage
working breeds
IPO
- Internationale Prufungsordnung [The FCI trial for the protective
heritage breeds, very similar to the German Schutzhund]
SchH
- Schutzhund, the German sport and trial system with a tracking,
obedience and protection phase [used to qualify serious working
breeds for breeding]
SHSB
- Schweizerisches Hundestammbuc ou LOS - Livre des Origines Suisse,
de la SCS
AKC
- Livre des Origines Américain [American Kennel Club]
Explanations
ALSH
- This certificate is issues to a dog which hasn't all the parents
known since the 4th generations on his pedigree. Like this the dog is
registered with [Société Royale de la Saint Hubert],
Belgium Kennel Club.
LOSH
- This certificate is issued to a dog which has all the parents
known since the 4th generations on his pedigree. Like this the dog is
registered with [Société Royale de la Saint Hubert]
Belgium Kennel Club.
LOI
- To have this document, and be registered to the LOI, the dog must
have all the parents known on his pedigree. He must have been
examined by a judge who must say if it 's OK. Like this the dog is
registered to the L.I.R., managed by the ENCI [Ente Nazionale
Cinofilia Italiana]
Le
Certificat de Naissance - [Birth Certificate] - This certificate is
issues to a dog when he born and include its registration # to the
LOF [Livre des Origines Françaises] - French Stud Book.
Mondioring
- World Ringsport is a working dog sport with new rules from
different national regalements taken from the working dog sports in
France (French Ringsport), Belgium Belgian Ring, Netherlands KNVP,
and a little bit of Schutzhund from Germany and Switzerland.
Mondioring is tested in 3 progressively harder levels, earning the
degree Mondioring I, Mondioring II, Mondioring III, with level
III being the hardest.
The
Brevet [French] - a test of obedience and protection work, to assess
character, courage, trainability, and suitability for work.
CFC
- Canadian Federation of Canada
Belgian
Ringsport
The
Belgian Ringsport is the oldest and one of the hardest
defense-dogsports in the world. It is completely dominated by the
Belgian Mechelaar [Malinois in french]. Ringsport is also closely
related with the Belgian Police/Gendarmerie/Army forces as most of
the service dogs are bought or trained in the Belgian Ring-circut.
In
Belgium, in about the 1700's was the first time they used dogs to
help the city guards. These dogs where not trained, they only
companioned the 'policeman'. Also between 1700 and 1900 a light type
of dog was used for herding sheep's. They where middle sized, very
intelligent and fast dogs. All colors and coats where present. This
is where the real beginning starts, because the 'Belgium Shepherd' is
at the foundation of the Ringsport.
General
Info
FCI
- Fédération Cynologique Internationale
The
F.C.I. counts 75 members and partners. The F.C.I. recognizes only
one organization by member state. In Belgium, it is the U.R.C.S.H,
represented by the SRSH Union Royale Cynologique Saint-Hubert -
[U.R.C.S.H. / K.K.U.S.H.] Is the Management of the Belgian Cynology.
Société
Royale Saint-Hubert - [S.R.S.H. / K.M.S.H. Belgian Cynologic
Society] This Society holds the "Livre des Origines de
Saint-Hubert" and delivers the LOSH pedigrees.
In
parallel with the LOSH., the SRSH holds the ALSH [Annexe au Livre
des Origines de Saint-Hubert is the appendix of LOSH] and the RISH is
the Initial Register Saint-Hubert.
ABIEC
- BVIRH - Belgian association of identification & dogs registration.
Körung
SV
Breed survey. The purpose of the breed survey is to select from the
breeding registry a number of dogs that in their character,
performance, and anatomical construction appear suitable for the
conservation and improvement of the breed. This demonstrates a dog
has passed strict requirements in breed suitability,
conformation, working, protection, and is hip dysplasia free.
A
Körung is an event where breed survey/s are done. In order for
a dog to try for a breed survey, it must minimally hold either a SchH
1 or an HGH title. It must also have completed the AD, the
Ausdauerprüfung [a 12 mile endurance test] and have received at
least a "G" [meaning Gut, in English "good"] or
better in a conformation show, and have hips and elbows cleared by
one of the organizations that does this [the SV a stamp program, OFA
in the US, and others in each country]. When a dog passes a breed
survey, which begins with a proscribed protection routine that it
must pass first, then the Körmeister [a special certification
held by only a few people] will use a specified form to fill out
describing the dog. This report is known as a Kör report.
KNPV
PH-1
TRIAL - Politiehond I [Police Dog I] is the basic program in KNPV.
The starting point in training a dog in KNPV is PH-1. It is the most
popular program in Holland. In The Netherlands, starting in the early
1900’s KNVP [Royal Dutch Police Dog Association] has been
providing trained and titled working dogs to its police, military,
rescue organizations for a fraction of what other countries charged
for untitled and untrained dogs.
The
KNPV program is separated in three sections. Besides parts 1, 2,&
3 there are two parts of “general outlook”, one for the
dog and one for the handler. There is also the opportunity to do the
'additional exercise'.
The
Keurinsstaat Politiehond One, or PH-1. The PH-1 has 800 to 1,000
competitors annually. There are three levels of certificates
available. Each level requires a certain score. These are: PH-1
Certificate A, this means that the dog achieved a score of 305 out of
a possible 435. This certificate is good for a one-year period. The
next certificate level is titled PH-1 Certificate and is good for the
life of the dog. This requires 348 out of 435 possible. The final
level is Certificate 'Met Lof', which is good for life and means that
the dog was exceptional, achieving a score of 392 points or more out
of 435. The majority of dogs usually earn the standard PH-1
Certificate. Fewer obtain the higher Met Lof score and fewer
still obtain the lower score of Certificate A. Trials are
offered at local clubs at the provisional level three times a year.
History
of the Belgian Shepherd Dogs - [Malinois, Sheepdog and Tervuren]
Belgian
Shepherd Dogs have been in the United States for over 80 years.
These dogs are not wolf-hybrids, part Collie or part German Shepherd.
The American Kennel Club recognizes the Belgian Malinois, Belgian
Sheepdog (Groenendael) and Belgian Tervuren as separate breeds. They
differ in color and length of coat.
The
known history of the Belgian Shepherds traces to the 1880s when
these dogs, along with German Shepherds, French Shepherds and Dutch
Shepherds, all were called Continental Shepherd Dogs. In September
1891, the Club du Chein de Berger Belge [Belgian Shepherd Dog Club]
was formed for the purpose of determining if there was a true
shepherd dog representative only of Belgium.
On
November 15, 1891, under the direction of veterinary professor
Adolphe Reul, a gathering was held at Cureghem, on the outskirts of
Brussels, to examine the shepherd dogs of that area. Besides
identifying Collies, Old English Sheepdogs, Beauceron, Briards,
Bouviers and German Shepherd Dogs, Professor Reul and his panel of
judges also concluded that, for the Brabant province, there was a
consistent type of native shepherd dog: a square, medium-sized dog
with well-set triangular ears and very dark brown eyes that differed
only in the texture, color and length of hair. Similar exhibitions in
the remaining Belgian provinces resulted in similar findings.
In
1892, again under the direction of Professor Reul, and modeled after
England’s Collie standard of the time, the first Belgian
Shepherd Dog standard was issued, and recognized three varieties:
dogs with long coats, short coats and rough coats. The CCBB
petitioned the Societe Royale Saint-Hubert (Belgium’s equivalent
to the AKC) for breed status in 1892, but was denied. Between 1892
and 1901, when Saint-Hubert recognized the Belgian Shepherd Dog as a
breed, efforts were concentrated on developing the varieties and
establishing type.
Foundation
Couples
The
documented genealogy of today’s Belgian Shepherd Dogs can be
traced back to three foundation couples. In 1885, Adrien Janssens, a
shepherd from Laeken (a suburb of Brussels) purchased a pale, fawn
rough-hair (known as Vos I, or Vos de Laeken) from a cattle dealer in
Boom, in northern Belgium, where these rough-haired shepherd dogs had
long been used to guard the laundry-bleaching fields from human
thieves. Mr. Janssens used Vos I (“fox” in Flemish) to herd
his flock and to serve as his foundation stud. First bred to the short-haired,
brindle-brown Lise (known as Lise de Laeken or Liske de Laeken), and
then to his daughters, Vos I sired a line noted for its homogeneity
of type, both in the grey rough-hairs and short-hairs, and fawn
rough-hairs and short-hairs. Today, Vos I and Lise de Laeken are
recognized as ancestors not only of the modern Belgian Shepherd Dogs
but also of the Bouvier des Flandres and Dutch Shepherd Dogs.
At
the first dog show in Belgium where the Belgian Shepherd Dogs were
shown separately from the Continental Shepherds (May 1, 1892),
several of Vos I and Lises’ offspring were exhibited, and placed
in their classes. On that same date, the first sheep-herding trial in
Europe was held in Cureghem, Belgium, and the team of Adrien Janssens
and Vos I placed third.
Other
Vos I descendants served as foundation dogs for new kennels. M.
Joubert acquired Diane, a brindle-grey, short-haired daughter of Vos
I and Lise and bred her to Samlo, a brindle-fawn dog owned by P.
Beernaert of Uccle. The mating produced Tomy, LOB 138, an
extraordinary guard dog as well as winner of first prizes at dog
shows in 1898. He was described as a very beautiful fawn short-hair
with black overlay, ideal conformation and an explicit black mask.
Tomy sired a number of litters, but his most outstanding offspring
was Tjop LOSH 6132, born November 1, 1899 in Malines, north of
Brussels. A great-grandson of Vos I and Lise, Tjop became the first
Malinois champion in Belgium, as well as the most influential
Malinois sire of the early twentieth century.
The
second foundation couple were two long-haired blacks, Picard
d’Uccle and Petite, purchased by Nicolas Rose, a restaurateur in
the village of Groenendael, southeast of Brussels. Previously owned
and used by shepherds, both Petite and Picard were exhibited several
times, and at the first show for Belgian Shepherd Dogs, Petite
received a first prize in the long-hair class. The first known litter
of Picard and Petite, whelped May 1, 1893, produced, among others,
Duc de Groenendael, who, when bred to the long-haired fawn, Miss, in
1896 sired Milsart, the first Tervuren champion of the breed.
The
third foundation couple were two long-haired fawns who lived in the
village of Tervuren and were owned by M. Corbeel, a brewer. M.
Corbeel bred his dog, Tom, which he used during the day to pull the
beer cart and at night to guard the brewery, to his bitch, Poes, a
fawn long-hair lacking a tail (a genetic problem found in all
standards today as a disqualification). Through their fawn daughter,
Miss (bred to both Duc de Groenendael and Picard d’Uccle), Tom
and Poes were the grandparents of the Tervuren champion, Milsart, as
well as the great-grandparents of Dax, who in 1906 became the first
Groenendael champion of Belgium.
Naming
the Varieties
During
the first decade of the twentieth century, place names were coming
into use for the different varieties of Belgian Shepherd Dogs,
honoring the kennels in Belgium with which they were most closely
associated. The city of Malines had formed a club for the promotion
of the fawn short-hairs in 1898. Led by Louis Huyghebaert, an early
breeder under the “ter Heide” kennel name, as well as a
judge, author and the “godfather of the Malinois” (and the
Bouvier), the Malines club had done much to help popularize these
short-hairs, and the name “Malinois” was the name used most
often for the fawn short-hairs. “Groenendael” seemed the
most appropriate name for the long-haired blacks (for Nicolas
Rose’s kennel). Later, the rough-haired fawns were named
“Laekenois” (for Adrien Janssens’ kennel), and the
long-haired fawns (and later greys) were named “Tervuren”
honoring the dogs of M. Corbeel.
From
photographs and descriptions of the herding done in Belgium in the
1890s, we know that the Belgian Shepherds were used as “moveable
fences,” shepherding flocks of sheep and herds of cattle from
one pasture to another and protecting the livestock as it grazed.
In
December 1897, Louis Huyghebaert, disturbed by the Club du Chien
Berger Belge’s plans for conducting herding trials, noted that
there were very few sheep left in Belgium at the time. He recommended
that different trials be started to “bring forward the three
fundamental characteristics that a shepherd dog should possess:
intelligence, obedience and loyalty.” This recommendation led to
the development of dressage trials, with individual exercises testing
a dog’s ability to leap over high and long obstacles and to
perform swimming exercises. When combined with protection work, the
dressage trials developed into the Belgian Ring Sport and
“Compagne” (field trials). The first dressage trial, held
on July 12, 1903 in Malines, was won by M. van Opdebeek and his
Malinois, Cora van’t Optewel, the dam of Ch. Tjop LOSH 6132.
Belgian
Shepherds were also used as guard dogs and draught dogs (often
teamed with the larger Matins and Bouviers), and were the first dogs
to be used by Belgian police forces. In March, 1899, the city of
Ghent began its police dog service with three Belgian Shepherd Dogs.
International police dog trials became very popular in Europe prior
to the first World War, and Belgian trainers and their dogs earned a
number of prizes at the trials. The Groenendael, Jules du Moulin, and
his trainer, M. Tedesco, won the World Champion title at the trials
for four consecutive years (1908-11).
In
October 1911, the first tracking trial was held in Belgium and was
won by the Groenendael, Polo. In 1913, the Kennel Club Belge (a rival
national kennel club to the Societe Royale Saint-Hubert) began yearly
national ring sport trials, followed in 1926 by Saint-Hubert’s
national Grand Prix de Belgique yearly ring trials.
At
the beginning of World War I, many Belgian Shepherd Dogs were
requisitioned by the military and served in a number of war
capacities: as messenger dogs, Red Cross dogs, ambulance cart dogs
and, reportedly, light machine-gun cart dogs.
Refining
the Breeds
In
1921, two Tervuren were born in Belgium that greatly altered the
history and genealogies of this variety: Minox LOSH 15141 and Colette
ex Folette LOSH 20495. Both were from generations of Malinois, but
produced the Tervurens Jinox, Lakme and Noisette in 1924. Jinox
entered the “du Camp” kennel of M. Ledieu, Noisette entered
the “Cite des Gilles” kennel of M. Rombeaux, and Lakme
entered the French “de la Sente” kennel of M. Baudouin,
where she produced several excellent offspring sired by the French
champion Pitou des Barricades (a Groenendael owned by Mme. Jacqueline
Aubry). All three of these offspring of Minox and Colette ex Folette
were, through their descendants, key dogs in the evolution of the
Tervuren and Groenendaels.
During
the 1920s and ’30s, a number of outstanding Malinois kennels
were started in Belgium. Emphasizing both beauty and working ability,
Arthur Hanappe’s “Jolimont” kennels and F.E.
Verbanck’s “Ecaillon” kennel became famous for the
high quality and homogeneity of their dogs. The Malinois (and
Tervuren born in Malinois litters) from Chalet des Glycines, and
Malinois from the Pimprenelles kennel, were important links in the
evolution of the breed. From the Gaulois kennel came Herdo du
Gaulois, registered as a Malinois but shown in the Tervuren classes
at dog shows. His son, Vici du Val Clos des Sarts, is an important
link, through his dam, to the old Tervuren lines of Tom and Poes, as
well as to the modern Tervuren and Groenendaels.
Groenendael
kennels in Belgium after World War I were the slowest to recover
quality. Many Groenendaels were registered with the Kennel Club
Belge, whose pedigrees Saint-Hubert refused to honor. Joseph
Drossart, noted Groenendael, Malinois and Schipperke breeder prior to
W.W. I under his “L’Enfer” kennel name, produced a few
Groenendael litters after the war. Several of his dogs were imported
into the U.S.
Late
in the ’20s, the two most influential kennels in modern
Groenendael history were started in Binche, Belgium. They were Emile
Boudart’s “Mont-Sara” kennel and Jean Beaudoux’s
“l’Infernal” kennel. Several Mont-Sara Groenendaels
were imported into the U.S. in the late 1930s, 1949 and 1950.
L’Infernal Kennel concentrated on refining breed type, producing
dogs not dissimilar to those we see today, and the 1940s and ’50s
importations greatly contributed to American breed history.
Establishing
Belgians in America
During
the first decade of the twentieth century, Malinois and Groenendael
exports (the most popular of the varieties in that era) began to
appear in the stud books of the Netherlands, France, Switzerland,
Canada, United States, Argentina and Brazil. In 1911, two
Groenendaels and two Malinois were registered by the AKC as
“German Sheepdogs” (changed in the 1913 AKC stud books to
“Belgian Sheepdogs,” a misnomer applied to Groenendaels,
Malinois and Tervuren from 1913 until 1959, and to Groenendaels since 1959).
Josse
Hanssens of Norwalk, Connecticut, imported these first
AKC-registered Belgian Sheepdogs. A native of Belgium, Mr. Hanssens
did not long retain these dogs; the two Malinois went to L.I. De
Winter of Guttenberg, New Jersey. Mr. De Winter, also a native of
Belgium, produced several litters from the Malinois under his
Winterview kennel name (later famous for German Shepherd Dogs). The
Groenendaels were sold to a Mr. Harris on Long Island. No current
Belgians trace back to these first imports, although all trace back
to their relatives, which remained in Europe.
After
World War I, AKC registrations of Belgian Sheepdogs increased
dramatically. In 1924, the first Belgian Sheepdog Club of America was
formed and soon became a member club of the AKC. Active in this first
BSCA were a number of individuals from Belgium: Pierre Danco of
Englewood, New Jersey; L.I. De Winter of Guttenburg, New Jersey; H.A.
Ghislain of Shreveport, Louisiana; and Alphonse Geerearts of Staten
Island, New York.
A
number of others also were instrumental in developing the breed
here. Peter Michiels of Hicksville, New York, imported the
Groenendaels Marca de Ranst and Dick des Batards from Belgium, and
began his “Lilo” kennel. These two Groenendaels were
ancestors of many American-bred Belgians. Calvin Augustin imported
the Groenendaels Jet and Marco in 1923, followed in 1924 by Pearl of
Belgium from Georges Domus “Belgium” kennel in Canada. (All
became AKC conformation champions.) Mr. Augustin, originally from
Canada, did much to popularize Belgians in the 1920s through his
articles in dog magazines. Walter Mucklow, a lawyer in Jacksonville,
Florida, popularized the Malinois through GAZETTE articles published
in 1924 and ’25, and briefly bred Malinois under the
“Castlehead” kennel name.
Oliver
Ormsby Page began his “Saint-Hubert” kennel in Pittsburg,
Pennsylvania, with a Groenendael from Peter Michiels named La
Terrible Lionne. Mr. Page imported Cesar (born in 1920) from Robert
Henry’s “Select” kennel in Belgium. Cesar was a fawn
color, but we don’t know whether Cesar was a Malinois or
Tervuren. (Cesar’s sire was registered with Saint-Hubert as a
Malinois, but his dam has not been traced.) Cesar and La Terrible
Lionne produced several AKC registered fawns and blacks; both are
ancestors of many of our dogs today.
The
breed columns in the GAZETTE in the mid-1920s cite the Groenendael
as the best-known of the varieties in the United States. The AKC stud
books record Groenendaels, Tervuren and Malinois imports, and
American-bred Tervuren born in Groenendael litters. The AKC standard
for the Belgian Sheepdog from the 1920s through June 30, 1959,
recognized two varieties of the breed, the Groenendael (strangely
listed for color as a) black, b) fawn or c) any other color) and the
Malinois. By the end of the 1920s, the Belgian Sheepdog had risen in
popularity to rank among the top five breeds.
Then
came the Great Depression and its devastating effect on everything,
including dog breeding. The first Belgian Sheepdog Club of America
ceased to exist. During the 1930s, occasional Malinois and
Groenendaels were registered with the AKC as imports trickled into
the country, and a few Groenendael litters were bred. But no Tervuren
were registered in the AKC stud books after 1934. With so few numbers
and such little interest in the breed, the Belgian Sheepdog was
relegated to the Miscellaneous Class at AKC shows in the 1930s and ’40s.
After
World War II, a number of people new to the breed became interested
in Groenendaels and developed their stock from descendants of the
Tervuren and Groenendael imports of the early 1920s, as well as the
Groenendael imports of the 1930s.
In
1949, a second Belgian Sheepdog Club of America was incorporated in
Indiana. Also in 1949, John Cowley imported two Malinois and began
his “Netherlair” kennel (all traces of previously AKC
registered Malinois had been lost). Several were shown, and piqued
the interest of various individuals enough that in the 1960s,
additional Malinois kennels were established.
Rudy
Robinson, whose “Candide” Groenendael kennel was started
in 1947, is the individual primarily responsible for reintroducing
the Tervuren in the United States. Through his correspondence with
breed experts F.E. Verbanck and Mme. Aubry, Mr. Robinson became
interested in promoting the Tervuren in this country. In 1953, three
Tervuren arrived here from Mme. Charlotte Mueller’s “Clos
Saint-Jacques” kennel in France, followed in 1954 by four
additional French imports from the Clos Saint-Clair and Clos
Saint-Jacques kennels.
Within
the Belgian Sheepdog Club of America, Rudy Robinson’s numerous
Groenendael imports of the late 1940s and early ’50s were not
gracefully accepted by the club’s founders, who considered them
inferior to their American-bred stock. Major problems quickly
developed as additional varieties were imported. Belgian Sheepdog
Club of America newsletters from May 1953 (the club’s first
newsletter) to July 1958 (when the varieties were separated into
breeds) reveal that little was known about the history and genetics
of the varieties or the role of past intervariety breedings, and
nothing was printed about their common ancestry. The AKC standard,
unchanged from the 1920s, listed only the Groenendael and the
Malinois as varieties, yet Tervuren quickly began winning over
Groenendaels in the show ring. The Tervuren import D’Jimmy du
Clos Saint-Clair finished his championship in June 1958, and was the
first Tervuren in the United States to achieve this title.
Separating
the Varieties
A
small but very vocal group of Groenendael breeders began protesting
to the AKC that the other varieties were too different — perhaps
not the same breed at all. American intervariety breedings of the
1950s became the focal point for the group’s demands for
separate breed status for the other varieties. The AKC responded by
sending out a questionnaire asking Belgian Sheepdog owners for their
opinions on intervariety breeding and conformation competition. Less
than half of the BSCA’s members responded, but in July 1958, the
AKC Board of Directors voted to separate the varieties into breeds.
Groenendael owners wished to keep the name “Belgian
Sheepdog” for their breed; the appellation “Belgian”
was added to the Malinois and Tervuren names.
At
the time of the separation, Belgian Sheepdog and Malinois imports
were restricted to having three generations of the same variety for
AKC registration. It was then believed that the short coat of the
Malinois, being controlled by a dominant gene, would continue to
appear after this number of generations, and the recessive fawn and
grey Tervuren colors would not appear in Belgian Sheepdog litters.
This has not proven to be the case. In 1980, the three-generation
restriction was extended to include the Tervuren imports, as the AKC
Foreign Registration Department noted that Belgian Champion
Qu’Rack du Bois de l’Emblise, a Malinois, was the sire of
several Belgian Malinois imports, and was also the grandsire of
several Belgian Tervuren imports.
Since
the AKC separation of the varieties into breeds, many changes have
taken place. In 1959, the Belgian Sheepdog Club of America maintained
its AKC breed club status, and the American Belgian Tervuren Club was
started by Bob and Barbara Krohn (AKC breed and obedience judges and
breeders of the “Fauve Charbonne” Belgian Tervuren). This
club, whose motto “A well-balanced Tervuren has a Ch. on one end
and a UDT on the other,” is the AKC parent club today.
The
Malinois, few in numbers in 1958, was relegated to the Miscellaneous
Class (while continuing to have individual AKC stud book
registration) until 1965, when sufficient numbers allowed it back
into the Working Group. (In 1983, all three breeds became part of the
Herding Group). In March 1992, the American Belgian Malinois Club
received AKC parent club status.
Three
separate AKC standards were approved and became effective July 1,
1959. Almost identical in content originally, modifications made
since 1983 have begun to reflect differences, primarily in size,
although the dogs themselves are (and should remain) anatomically
identical. All three standards describe the dogs as alert,
well-balanced, medium-sized and elegant in appearance.
Breeders
and owners of the Belgian Shepherd Dogs will tell you that they are
not for everyone. Active and intelligent, they are easily trained,
but can be a trial for the person who does not have the time to work
and play with them. They are aloof with strangers, but should not be
fearful or aggressive. Very devoted to their owners, they do not make
good kennel dogs.
Endowed
with the natural ability to do whatever is required of them, the
Belgians are thinking dogs, which means that once they learn
something, they want to get on to something else. If forced into
repetition, they tend to become “creative.” They are eager
to please and very sensitive. If you use a heavy hand on them, they
will forgive, but never forget.
With
the advent of the AKC’s herding program, the Belgian Malinois,
Sheepdog and Tervuren are being trained to do the work of their
ancestors. American fanciers are working their dogs in all three
styles of AKC-sanctioned herding: boundary (or tending), fetching and driving.
The
Belgian Tervuren, whose parent club has long emphasized multiple
achievements, consistently earns the most conformation and obedience
titles of the three Belgian Shepherd Dogs. (See sidebar, “1991
Performance Statistics for the Belgian Shepherd Dogs.”)
The
history of the Belgian Shepherd Dogs has been one of closely
interwoven ties between the varieties rather than separate or
parallel development. The modern Belgian Sheepdog (Groenendael) owes
its existence to its Tervuren, Malinois and, ultimately, its
Laekenois ancestors as much as to its Groenendael ancestors. The
modern Belgian Tervuren can still be traced to M. Corbeel’s Tom
and Poes, but its Groenendael and Malinois ancestors are predominate.
The genealogies of today’s Belgian Malinois have remained the
most consistent, but still we find they have Tervuren, Groenendael
and Laekenois ancestors.
In
the rest of the world’s kennel clubs, the Belgian Shepherd Dogs
have remained one breed. Although the AKC separated the Belgians into
three breeds 33 years ago, the ancestry of American imports continues
to reinforce interdependency, as is evident in the occasional puppies
that more closely resemble one of the other Belgian Shepherd Dog
breeds that the breed of their parents.
Recent
opinions and recommendations of European breed experts who have
judged our Belgians have alerted many American breeders to the need
to establish more uniformity of correct breed type. The AKC’s
new policy on importation of frozen semen provides a marvelous and
truly exciting opportunity for American breeders in general, and
Belgian Shepherd Dog enthusiasts in particular, to use some of
today’s top producers. The AKC’s three-generation
restriction on imports also applies to foreign semen importation,
however, and limits the selection drastically for American
Groenendael and Tervuren breeders, as most of the world’s top
producers today, as in the past, are not the result of three
generations of the same variety.
Today,
unlike a decade ago, there are more breed-specific books dealing
with the history, genealogies and genetics of the Belgian Shepherd
Dogs. More individuals are also realizing that, because of their
shared genetics, a health problem in one of the AKC Belgian breeds is
a problem shared by all three breeds. By working together, the three
AKC parent clubs could secure the kind of future the Belgians deserve.
The
three-generation restriction on imports and imported frozen semen
was lifted on June 13, 1995 when the AKC voted in a new foreign
registration policy for all breeds of dogs. Provided the dog is
exported with a certified export certificate accompanied by a
three-generation pedigree tendered from a primary country registry,
it will be registered by the AKC as the breed (variety in the case of
Belgians) it is registered as in its original country. This decision
took place after four years of negotiation with the American Belgian
Tervuren Club as well as because of a high number of problems with
the authentication of pedigrees of the imports of other breeds by the
AKC’s foreign registration department. Thus while imports can
now be registered exactly as they are in their homeland regardless of
the variety of the Belgian Shepherd Dog parents, all American-bred
Belgian puppies still must be registered under the breed name of
their parents regardless of their inherited coat type or color.
IPO
- [International Prufungs Ordnung] is one of the "great
sports" in Europe. Since Schutzhund primarily was for German
shepherds, the international dog association F.C.I.
(Fédération Internationale Canine) decided to create a
sport where ALL breeds could compete and today many people train and
compete IPO.
IPO
is a working dog sport comprised of 3 disciplines: tracking,
obedience and protection. IPO is tested in 3 progressively harder
levels, earning the degree IPO I, IPO II, IPO III, with level III
being the hardest.
Each
discipline is assessed on 100 points. The maximum number of points
per competition is 300 points. Before being admitted to a competition
according to IPO, all the dogs entered must be submitted first to a
test of character.
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