by Fred Lanting
Copyright June,
2004 -
2008
Quo Vadis,
Pastor Canem
Germanus?
This article
which appeared
in the July 16,
1999 issue of
DogNews magazine
is reprinted by
permission of
the author, Fred
Lanting.
All right, for
those of you who
failed (or
failed to take)
high school
Latin, that
means, "Where is
the German
Shepherd Dog
headed?" This
year, 1999, is
the 100th
anniversary of
the Schäferhund
Verein (SV), the
heart of all GSD
clubs in the
world, located
in the
motherland (used
to be called "der
Vaterland" by
everyone until a
crazy Austrian
applied unsavory
connotations to
that term)of the
breed. What has
happened to this
noble dog in the
ensuing century,
especially in
the United
States?
Before the end
of the previous
century, several
dog fanciers,
but especially a
cavalry master
named Max von
Stephanitz,
organized what
was to become
the world's
largest dog
breed
association,
with what became
and remained the
most populous
and popular
breed in most
countries.
Captain von
Stephanitz had
the advantage
through his
privileged
office and
service to have
traveled over
almost all of
Europe and some
of other
countries, and
the voracious
seeker of canine
knowledge
collected photos
and meticulously
accurate reports
from others who
had gone further
and seen more in
the further
reaches of the
world. He proved
what I was later
to learn, that
one gains a
fuller
appreciation for
a favorite breed
when he delves
into the depths
of all breeds -
indeed, even
comparing the
dog to other
animals. This is
why my college
buddies heading
for medical
school took
Comparative
Anatomy; they
weren't going to
operate on cats,
but it helped
them understand
the human body
and various
systems better.
Max built up a
wealth of
knowledge and
shared much of
it in his
monumental work,
which every dog
owner should
read, "The
German Shepherd
Dog in Word and
Picture".
They started
with utility,
and von
Stephanitz kept
stressing that
concept. Even
today, the
president of the
SV echoes him by
re-stating it:
The German
Shepherd Dog is
first and
foremost a
working dog! The
founder said
that the true
mark of beauty
was utility,
preached that
form follows
function, and
discarded any
bitch that was
not above all an
ideal mother
(from whelping
through
weaning). Where
did we go wrong,
since today in
America and some
other countries
that drifted
away from
friendly
relations with
Germany during
WW-2, we find
people using
artificial
insemination,
heroic efforts
to save the
weakest whelps,
and below-grade
animals for
breeding? Why
are "we" in
America, Canada,
and to a lesser
extent some in
the UK, breeding
dogs that are
even
disqualified
under the world
Standard because
of size,
dentition, coat,
color,
character, or
general
conformational
defects? The old
argument that
Americans are
uniquely or
especially of an
independent mind
is increasingly
just so much
baloney to this
peripatetic and
nearly geriatric
observer! I am
at least as
"independent" as
anyone, and I
still feel there
are bounds to
license, and
that there is
good reason for
consensus in
such matters as
breed type and
judging.
The FCI has
recently decided
to break up the
Akita breed into
the Akita of
country-of-origin,
and the modified
Akita, and the
nomenclature are
yet to be
determined. When
AKC slammed shut
the studbook
door almost as
fast as it had
been opened,
because they
didn't like the
JKC or Japanese
breed clubs'
studbooks, all
the gene pool
contributors we
had here were
the ones that a
few servicemen
and travelers
had brought
over, and did
not accurately
reflect the
breed as
developed in
Japan. They did
the same to the
Shiba, until the
JKC records were
finally
accepted.
Isolationism may
be OK in
politics, but
most of us who
think do not
want that
applied to dogs.
It may turn out
that the FCI
will someday
soon require
such a split in
the GSD breed
because of the
tremendous
differences
(downplayed by
the
anything-goes
crowd, but
obvious to most
people) between
the American
type and the
International
type. Perhaps
FCI or the World
Union of GSD
Clubs (WUSV)
will require a
different name
be used for the
breed in those
countries that
refuse to adhere
to the Standard
(such as the
U.S.).
How is the
American
Shepherd
different? In
many ways, for
most individual
dogs, and
imperceptibly
for some others.
But all over the
rest of the
world, the
typical
American-Canadian
(and the
Alsatian half of
the UK) GSD
looks strikingly
different from
its brothers,
and fanciers
around the globe
do not even
consider it the
same breed. Why
do police forces
and military in
this country,
and GSD buyers
in the rest of
the world
studiously avoid
buying American
Shepherds? Why
do four or five
times the number
of ads in Dog
World (which
reaches most of
the pet buyers)
mention
schutzhund
titles or use
words like
"import lines"
or "working" or
"character" than
the number that
aim at the
American
Shepherd market?
Because the
breed here is
different. Ask
John Q. Public,
and he will tell
you he doesn't
want one of
those "slinky",
low,
narrow-headed
animals that
wobble as if
their hocks were
about to fall
off, and dart
under the couch
when the door
opens for a
stranger. There
is no doubt that
the market for
this type of dog
is shrinking,
and for good
reasons.
But in what
specific ways
are the dogs
different, and
how did the
breed get that
way? The picture
that
unfortunately
comes to mind
for most people
may be something
like the large,
plush, GSDCA
Grand Victor
who, Capt.
Arthur Haggerty
once described
in his report on
Westminster,
cowered behind
his handler in
the Group ring
(which means he
got Best of
Breed!). Or the
picture may be
that of a
straight-fronted,
long mid-piece,
long-in-second-thigh
animal that
looks like it
can eat peanuts
out of a Coke
bottle, as we
say in the
South. One thing
that saved the
American
Shepherd from
total oblivion
in the minds of
multi-breed
judges and other
observers was
the elevation of
Manhattan
("Hatter") to
the first GSD
ever to win BIS
at Westminster.
Despite lacking
somewhat in
masculinity, and
having horrible
pasterns and a
very short upper
arm that made
him run at you
with legs in the
shape of the
letter "A",
there was a
richly-pigmented,
short-coupled,
nicely-proportioned
dog with a
personality that
could charm the
pants off an
old-maid
schoolteacher.
His almost human
sense of
"show-biz" made
friends among
people who had
totally given up
on the GSD as a
real dog, worthy
of any
consideration in
the show ring.
Meanwhile, the
specialty judges
were going
merrily along
the path to
destruction,
having neither
any education in
proper breed
type or
direction from
the
laissez-faire
parent club as
to what to look
for or how to
recognize it.
The ills that
the founder
warned against
proliferated:
"hyena dogs"
with high fronts
and
sharply-sloping
backs to a
much-lower
hindquarter, a
stance that was
too "backwards",
by which he
meant the hocks
were too far
behind the torso
for any useful
work, and the
spookiness that
now indelibly
marks the
"American"
branch of the
breed.
Proportions
range all over
the map, but
mostly very
low-stationed
(short-legged)
dogs, chests too
deep (not
supposed to be
over half the
withers height),
and bodies so
narrow they
disappear when
facing you
head-on. The
kind I call Dick
Tracy dogs -
remember you
would only see
him in profile?
Two-dimensional,
that's why! But
these dogs,
including the
ones with
pasterns so weak
they look like
they are running
around with
floppy socks too
long for their
feet, and knees
that are
actually below
the hocks when
posed with the
metatarsus
vertical, are
winning.
Perhaps it isn't
fair to call
them "American
Shepherds",
since there are
many good
examples of the
breed in this
country. Maybe "AKC-Shepherd"
may be a better
tag to hang on
them, and we can
allow the better
examples to be
dual-registered
in an
organization
that conforms to
the breed
Standard and the
judging styles
and decisions
used around the
globe. There are
good American
Shepherds, but
they either get
lost in the
crowd, or look
too different
for judges to
realize what
stands before
them, or
(mostly) they
stay home and
guard the kids
and property
instead of
wasting their
owners' money on
shows.
Is there
anywhere else
for the
international-style,
more correct GSD
to go? Yes,
where the AKC
wants to keep as
a big secret,
but there is
another home for
some, another
breed club. The
organization
known as USA
(which stands
for United
Schutzhund Clubs
of America) got
a big boost from
AKC's letters to
clubs in the
late 1980s and
early '90s,
telling people
they would be in
deep doo-doo if
they held any
events in which
any biting or
aggression was
evidenced.
Before that, the
GSDCA was
beginning to
hold schutzhund
events at their
National
Specialty, then
after one
letter, held it
across the
street, and
after the final
letter dropped
the idea and
replaced it with
a clever idea.
By this time,
personalities
and politics
prevented any
further
cooperation with
USA, so the
"working-dog"
contingent that
remained in
GSDCA but didn't
like USA
leadership
formed their own
committee, the
WDA (official
name: German
Shepherd Dog
Club of America
- Working Dog
Association),
and soon had
their own
constitution and
by-laws in order
to present an
"independent"
face to the AKC.
However, they
are not
recognized as a
member club by
the WUSV (the
GSDCA is, having
beat USA to the
application to
join back when
only one club
per country was
eligible) nor by
anybody else.
However, when
talking to the
SV and WUSV, the
WDA puts on its
"affiliate hat"
and says "We are
an integral part
of the GSDCA";
when talking to
or facing toward
AKC, it waves
its constitution
and says, "No,
don't punish
GSDCA, because
we are a
separate
organization".
Makes one wonder
what the meaning
of "is" is! But
it works, so
what the hey!
Meanwhile, the
USA
organization, a
non-voting
member of WUSV,
holds its few
breed shows with
SV judges
officiating, and
continues
numerous
schutzhund
trials around
the country. It
should be
explained here
for the
uninitiated that
schutzhund is a
three-part sport
(each of equal
importance and
number of points
required)
consisting of
tracking,
obedience, and
protection, the
last of these
the most
exciting to
watch. In the
annual "Sieger
Shows" of both
USA and WDA,
there is a
mandatory
character test
for dogs over 24
months, which is
an exercise from
the protection
routine of the
schutzhund
trial: a 'bad
guy" comes from
behind a blind
and threatens
the dog's
handler with a
stick, and the
dog is supposed
to vigorously
and surely
prevent him from
attacking the
team. Since this
fits into the
proscripted
"aggression" of
the AKC letters,
such
organizations
are supposed to
suffer loss of
AKC privileges
if they had any
to begin with.
So far, the ruse
has worked for
WDA, and we
should all
applaud their
ability to dance
around the
Madison Avenue
Mastodon.
The WDA and USA
operate
similarly in
other respects,
so there is
someplace for
the non-AKC-American
Shepherd to go
for training and
competition in
breed and
performance.
Trouble is, USA
clubs are few
and far between,
and WDA clubs
are worse, being
more rare than a
helping of
Lebanese kibbe
or steak tartare.
To top it off,
it recently
became a matter
of general
awareness that
the USA "papers"
were not worth
anything on
their own except
for the
particular dog
itself. A
USA-"registered"
dog could not
produce
registrable
offspring
recognized as
such by AKC or
foreign
countries, and
if born in
America, such
dogs would need
to have both
parents
registered with
AKC in order for
such
recognition. The
USA had merely
been stamping
their own number
on the certified
pedigree -
owner's papers
supplied with an
imported dog,
and different
numbers on the
puppies'
pedigree papers.
No more nor less
than the AKC's
selling of
numbers, but at
least the AKC
numbers are
accepted by
other
registries. WDA
show entries can
be registered
with any AKC-recognized
club, so most of
their shows'
dogs are either
SV or AKC or
both. USA has
recently
rectified the
problem for
future offspring
by admitting
that all dogs
born or
producing here
should be AKC-registered
as well, just as
required by FCI-member
countries
including
Germany.
While it rightly
belongs to
subject matter
in a separate
article, I must
mention this
before hearing a
roar of
disapproval
about "German
toplines".
During the
couple of
decades before
the present
administration
of the SV and
WUSV, so much
emphasis was
placed on
powerful drives
in the rear,
that the outline
of the West
German dogs (and
therefore in
much of the
world buying
them) had too
many "boomerang"
or "banana
backs". This
resulted not
only from "the
push for push",
but also from
the attempt to
get the
appearance of a
long croup.
Thankfully, this
trend has been
stopped and is
in process of
reverting to the
more normal
topline without
sacrificing
strength, power,
and the long
croup needed for
both. If you
still have a
hang-up over the
overline, at
least consider
its functional
purpose in
comparison with
much worse
problems in a
trotting breed,
such as short
legs, heavy
bodies,
upright/short
upper arms, and
steep/short
croups. Judges,
please don't put
up a
question-mark
temperament over
a comma-shaped
topline.
In the UK,
primarily
England, there
are also two
camps: the
"Alsatian" and
the "Germanic"
styles. The
former is mostly
shorter on leg,
very heavy in
torso, and soft
in coat and
temperament.
They derive
philosophically
(their
nick-name) and
via heritage
from some
WW-1-era dogs of
light color and
smaller gene
pool than found
elsewhere in the
world. Isolation
because of
quarantine was
added to
prejudice
against all
things related
to the Kaiser at
first and
Hitler's Germany
to a much
greater extent
later. It wasn't
until much later
(late 1950s and
early 1960s)
that good German
dogs were
brought in, and
the rift began.
The
international
type, though
initially
smaller in
numbers, is now
the predominant
style in the UK.
At Crufts, the
super-large show
in England, the
GSD judge choice
alternates
between
"Germanic" and
"Alsatian"
preference:
every other year
the "other" camp
gets their shot.
Where is the GSD
going, and what
kind of body is
carrying it
there? Anybody
who has any
interest in
seeing what the
breed can offer
in the way of
uniformity,
soundness,
consensus-type
adherence, and
proven character
owes it to
himself to look
outside the AKC
yard to the
greener grass of
the WDA and USA
Sieger Shows, to
actually see
that body, that
style, that
truer-to-type
dog. There are
far more AKC
shows to go to,
but you'll have
to look longer
and harder,
because the
tendency is for
American
Shepherds to
keep going to
shows until they
win enough
points, no
matter how
undeserving they
are. Judges who
pick the truly
normal,
closer-to-Standard
dog may get
fewer
assignments, but
what you see in
their rings will
be fewer of the
extreme
caricatures, and
more of the
right picture of
the dog of the
future.
A big current
difficulty for
GSD fanciers is
that the WUSV
has announced
that membership
can and might be
denied clubs
that do not
accept and cause
judges to abide
by the world
Standard.
Despite warnings
a couple of
years ago, the
GSDCA is only
now sluggishly
beginning to
take the edict
seriously. AKC
is a big
stumbling block
because while
they say that
the Standards
are the property
of the breed
clubs, they
really don't
mean it, and
want to keep
control over
these
themselves. So
any deadline is
made doubly
violated when
AKC must be
appeased by the
GSDCA. If GSDCA
refuses to go
along with the
rest of the
world, as it has
in the past, it
could lose WUSV
membership. That
would put an end
to the
masquerade of
WDA legitimacy,
and that group
would probably
lose the
privilege of
holding
recognized breed
shows, and
probably would
be unable to get
SV judges
anymore. If all
this happens,
USA will move
into the
voting-member
chair, and some
more desertions
from GSDCA will
occur. USA has
already long
since surpassed
GSDCA in
membership; USA
people are
practically all
active and
really have to
want to join,
while a great
proportion of
GSDCA folks are
members only to
get the magazine
or because they
feel they are
supposed to
belong because
they own a GSD.
My predictions
or answers to
the question of
"quo vadis?" are
that the WDA and
USA will
eventually get
their
differences
straightened
out, the GSDCA
will have at
least a 60-40
chance of losing
or dropping WUSV
membership, and
the breed itself
will have a
respectably
large enough
chance of being
split and
renamed. The AKC-type
extreme dog will
continue, but
owned by a
smaller group of
show-only and
win-at-any-cost
people who breed
to and "put up"
each others'
dogs, blithely
going down their
own slippery
path. If
registration is
not disrupted,
there will
continue to be
some cross-over,
but it will all
be AKC-American
Shepherd bitches
going to
international/German
studs, almost
never
German-style
bitches going to
American
Shepherd studs.
Just as in any
futurist's
prognostications,
this view can
change
considerably in
reaction to a
change of heart
or decisions on
the part of one
or a few key
people. Jim
Crowley as late
as February said
that AKC's
position re
schutzhund has
not changed and
that any
violations would
be investigated,
but they've
known all along
about the
GSDCA-WDA, so
they will
probably
continue to
dance the
Clintonesque
around that bush
of thorns. The
president of the
WUSV may soften
and decide to
let the American
club retain its
membership and
just de facto
ignore its
presence instead
of requiring
GSDCA to march
in proper
Teutonic time.
And if the
courts do get
involved with
the name of the
breed, they may
find "German
Shepherd Dog" to
be non-copyright
protected. But
one thing is
almost certain:
there will
continue in
America a
high-profile
(although
insignificant on
the world scale)
coterie of
canines with a
wide variety of
type, all called
GSD but actually
identified by
the label that
one long-time
pro handler has
called them,
"Pretenders".
Fred Lanting is
an
internationally
respected show
judge, approved
by many
registries as an
all-breed judge,
has judged
numerous
countries’
Sieger Shows and
Landesgruppen
events, and has
many years
experience with
SV. He presents
seminars and
consults
worldwide on
such topics as
Gait-&-Structure,
HD and Other
Orthopedic
Disorders,
Anatomy,
Training
Techniques, and
The GSD. He
conducts annual
non-profit
sightseeing
tours of Europe,
centered on the
Sieger Show
(biggest breed
show in the
world) and BSP.
All Things
Canine
-- consulting
division, Willow
Wood Services
Phone:
256-498-3319
Fax:
256-498-3311
E-mail
mr.gsd@netscape.com
Canine HD and
Other Orthopedic
Disorders
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It covers all
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The Total German
Shepherd Dog
by
Fred Lanting
This is the
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Chapters
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Shows, Showing,
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The Winners,
Nutrition and
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Care and
Information,
Health and First
Aid, Parasites
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Diseases and
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Whelping, The
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