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| Dog shows Our show successes, how to prepare a CzW, how to show him... |
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#1 | |
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I fully agree with you with one exception: IF the dog will have the right angulation than the hock joint will EXACTLY under the "ischium". Usually it is not with the right angle because USUALLY the dogs have wrong angulation (in the most cases they are overangulated - with the angulation more or less similar to these of German Shepherd Dogs). I wrote these articles a VERY long time ago Now I plan to reedit all of them and not only post better photos but fix some parts which are not clear enough.... To see the angulation of the dog it must be standing in the show position which I showed - the legs MUST be vertical to the ground. Of course a judge will be able to judge the legs even if the dog is not standing in the right possition because you always can see if the angulation is OK or not. Here you have two examples: FIRST (the photo is not perfect because it is also almost a puppy ![]() Here you can see the right (show) position of the legs & the right (standard) angulation. As written in the standard: "An imaginary vertical line drawn from the point of the ischium, would run midway through the hock joint." ) SECOND: ![]() Here you have also the case that the line comming from the ischum goes through the hock joint BUT the legs are not vertical to the ground. WHY? Because of bad angulation - if you would move the legs to the "show possion" you will have to move them very far to the back. What you will get would be an angulation of a German Shepherd Dog. Really bad angulation of a Wolfdog. Simply said: if the legs of a dog are standing so that the line comming from the ischum goes through the hock joint BUT the legs are NOT vertical to the ground it means only one: the angulation is wrong. Now all people will for sure check their dogs And for the end - two photos of the wolves with a nice angulation and (almost) show position.... ![]()
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#2 |
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Howling Member
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Margo -cool! Thanks! I think I understand better now!
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"What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us."~Henry David Thoreau http://www.galomyoak.com
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#3 | |
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Canadian Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Montréal
Posts: 423
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#4 | |
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VIP Member
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Wolfdogs are in the first group FCI but they vary from other "shepherds". But the judges do not get the difference and they judge our dogs according the same patterns as other breeds - usually GSD. And in such case good wolfdogs ALWAYS have more problems than the untypical dogs. Typical faults for Czechoslovakian come from German Shepherds: wide chests, short legs, angulation in the front 90°, overangulation of the back legs, long ears, heavy heads with open lips... And such fauls are exactly what many "allrounder judges" expect from wolfdogs in the show ring. It is why we have so many untypical Interchampions and Champions... There is no problem to show your dog if the judge knows the breed - you just go, show the dog and finito... My first show in Germany. Judge from a country with 0 Wolfdogs... Similar situation in Slovakia - also an allrounder judge. People who were showing the dog before us were going outside the rings saying "make the front legs wide"... We have done like this and get "good "chest". While other people who where showing their nice dogs on the "normal" way get as fault "to narrow chest"... But in the most cases you are not able to make your dog WORSER than it is ... There are MANY problems - where the allrounder judges want to see something what is untypical for Wolfdogs but typical for many other Shepherds: - with the angulation - that are unhapy when Wolfdogs are not angulated and do not move like GSD - with the chest - when it is too narrow and not deep enough (do not pass the elbows like by GSD) - with the legs - that they are too long (even by dogs which still do not have the 55% as written in the standard) - with the tail (character) - when especially by males it is carried to high (usually when there are other males in the ring) Example - two males in the ring. One with good character, the second shy. The good one start to pose - tail up - "look, I'm the best". Who wins? - first is "very good" because of the tail - "dog should never carry the tail over the back line" (he lost because of too good character). Won the shy scarred dog. Nobody cares about the standard - "When dog is excited, generally raised up in sickle shape." If you have dog with stable character you will MANY times loose against shy dogs who will carry their tails as "good German Shepherds should do"... And there are MANY "faults" so typical for Czechoslovakian Wolfdogs. By some judges you can really win only if you have REALLY untypical dog... And I don't think it will change since there is no possiblity to influence the judges or to write any protests - and we had really cases when in the evaluation cards there were written almost excepts from the breed standard - but in the breed standard it was description of the PERFECT dog and for the judge it was a list with faults... ______________________ PS. I know that in some countries after the "problems" with the judges the breeders decided to change the... wolfdogs and they breed dogs which are fitting to the judge's expectations. And no more to the breed standard. But.... I know that sometimes it is much harder to win with really good dog who has too many characteristics typical for Czechoslovakian Wolfdog but characteristics not necessarily liked by the allrounder judges. BUT there are good judges and bad too... The same apply to the club judges - not all of them who have approvement for our breed really know the standard. Some of them don't even have idea how to judge at all...
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#5 |
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Member
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Yes, Margo, you are right that the legs are wrong in the photo
![]() but, the correct posture is not exactly vertical hocks, but only near to vertical. The line that joins the hock joint and the point of ischium should be vertical in correct posture, but the paws of the hind legs are slightly to the front, so the back of the paws can touch the line, not the middle of the paws. The dogs which stand with their hocks vertical to the ground usually have the paws and hock joint positioned behind the point of ischium, or the posture is too steep (or how it is called).
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Saschia (Sasa Zahradnikova) http://www.chiens-loup-tchecoslovaqu...ei-et-damon.ws |
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#6 | |||
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BUT I like dog shows. Any my dogs are crazy about them. When they see that I pack the show leashes they already wait by the car... ). Shows are also great for socialization - there is no other place where you can meet so many people, children and dogs... But we go there mainly because of what you wrote - it is nice possibility to meet other people, other dogs. Usually we make that same what you do by you - we combine dogs shows with meetings. If I would go there ony to show the dogs and if I would believe what some judges are saying... I would stop to show a lot time ago already...
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#7 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Germany
Posts: 369
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I think that Margo wrote exactly what is indeed the real problem with dog shows and judges !
- If these judges are no experienced judges just for our race. So i decided to go ONLY to special- shows for Cws . ( PS: I have got new dog "Zeus lupus ibericus" in december 2009 after death of my old one in november 2008 - Zeus now is nearly 9 months old . I was at a lot of dog -shows in the past, but only as visitor, not as competitor. With my new dog may be i will compete also.) Thanks to all advices for präsentation in this thread , especially to Margo and saschia !! Greetings to everyone, Silvester |
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#8 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Margo, I know it's a lot to ask, but would it be possible to do diagrams like that, showing correct and various incorrect structures, for other elements of the standard? This is SUCH a great visual aid for me, it would be a huge help for me to understand the standard correctly! I've seen similar diagrams with other breeds (the most in-depth being for German Shepherd Dogs) and it has helped me so much in the past to develop an eye for correct structure.
Also, thank you SO much for posting all of this, and to everyone else contributing to the thread! It's been helping me greatly to get more of an understanding of how the dogs should be structured and shown. |
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#9 | |
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VIP Member
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Believe me - I saw club winner choosed by one of the "experts". For giving such dog "excellent" note the judging rights for our breed should be taken away from this person for such verdict On the other hand - one time I was in Lithiania there was a woman from Russia judging one of the dog shows... I was not happy about it because at that time there were no wolfdogs in RU and in most cases judgement of judges from "no-wolfdog-country" was really funny... It is really better to ask for good judges and to go to them (even of they judge "normal" dog shows). Sure they judge different as every person has an own imagination about typical CzW. Breed standard is pretty precise but still there is a place for own preferences (shape of the head, strenght of the bones, colour, size, format of the body, aso)... But a good judge is one who keeps to it...
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#10 | |
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ir Brukne
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P.S. Cho! Mikael posted it |
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#11 | |
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Scandinavian Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Stockholm
Posts: 1,089
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Hmmmm... It´s a Wolfdog.org file... Best regards / Mikael
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_________________________________________________ *Hronec, Rasty, Zilja * Kennel, Wolfdog of Sweden* http://kennelwolfdogofsweden.vpsite.se/Home.html
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#12 | |
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VIP Member
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Sona gave it to as to spread it among the judges to shows them how a typical CzW should look like. The copies were given to several judges and it would be nice if more will receive it. In Poland I made a copy with two versions (the oryginal) and VERY close translation. Some judges already use it and it works ... GREAT!
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#13 | |
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Member
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Anyway, I don't like shows exactly because of this - it is a good occasion to meet people and see their dogs, and make a good name for the breed among general public, but that's it. The show results should not be taken as the indicators of the stud value.
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Saschia (Sasa Zahradnikova) http://www.chiens-loup-tchecoslovaqu...ei-et-damon.ws |
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