General Appearance
The
first impression of a good
German Shepherd Dog is that
of a strong, agile,
well-muscled animal, alert
and full of life. It should
both be and appear to be
well balanced, with
harmonious development of
the forequarter and
hindquarter. The dog should
appear to the eye, and
actually be, longer than
tall, deep bodied, and
present an outline of smooth
curves rather than corners.
It should look substantial
and not spindly, giving the
impression both at rest and
in motion of muscular
fitness and nimbleness
without any look of
clumsiness or soft living.
The
Shepherd should be stamped
with a look of quality and
nobility, difficult to
define but unmistakable when
present. The good German
Shepherd Dog never looks
common.
Secondary sex
characteristics should be
strongly marked, and every
animal should give a
definite impression of
masculinity or femininity,
according to its sex. Dogs
should be definitely
masculine in appearance and
deportment; bitches,
unmistakably feminine,
without weakness of
structure or apparent
softness of temperament.
The
condition of the dog should
be that of an athlete in
good condition, the muscles
and flesh firm and the coat
lustrous.
Temperament
The
breed has a distinct
personality marked by a
direct and fearless, but not
hostile, expression, and
self-confidence and a
certain aloofness which does
not lend itself to immediate
and indiscriminate
friendships. The Shepherd
Dog is not one that fawns
upon every new acquaintance.
At the same time, it should
be approachable, quietly
standing its ground and
showing confidence and a
willingness to meet
overtures without itself
making them. It should be
poised, but when the
occasion demands, eager and
alert, both fit and willing
to serve in any capacity as
companion, watch dog, blind
leader, herding dog or
guardian; whichever the
circumstances may demand.
The
Shepherd Dog must not be
timid, shrinking behind its
master or handler, nervous,
looking about or upward with
anxious expression or
showing nervous reactions to
strange sounds or sights, or
lackadaisical, sluggish, or
manifestly disinterested in
what goes on about him. Lack
of confidence under any
surroundings is not typical
of good character. Cases of
extreme timidity and nervous
unbalance sometimes give the
dog an apparent, but totally
unreal, courage and it
becomes a ?fear biter,?
snapping not for any
justifiable reason but
because it is apprehensive
of the approach of a
stranger. This is a serious
fault subject to heavy
penalty.
Size
The
ideal height for dogs is 25
inches (64 cm), and for
bitches, 23 inches (58 cm)
at the shoulder. This height
is established by taking a
perpendicular line from the
top of the shoulder blade to
the ground with the coat
parted or so pushed down
that this measurement will
show the only actual height
of the frame or structure of
the dog. The working value
of dogs above or below the
indicated height is
proportionately lessened,
although variations of an
inch (3 cm) above or below
the ideal height are
acceptable, while greater
variations must be
considered as faults.
Weights of dogs of desirable
size in proper flesh and
condition average between 75
and 85 lb. (34 and 39 kg);
and of bitches, between 60
and 70 lb. (27 and 32 kg).
Coat
The
Shepherd is normally a dog
with a double coat, the
amount of undercoat varying
with the season of the year
and the proportion of the
time the dog spends out of
doors. It should, however,
always be present to a
sufficient degree to keep
out water, to insulate
against temperature
extremes, and as a
protection against insects.
The outer coat should be as
dense as possible, hair
straight, harsh and lying
close to the body. A
slightly wavy outer coat,
often of wiry texture, is
equally permissible. The
head, including the inner
ear, foreface, and legs and
paws are covered with short
hair, and the neck with
longer and thicker hair. The
rear of forelegs and hind
legs has somewhat longer
hair extending to the
pastern and hock
respectively. Faults in coat
include complete lack of any
undercoat, soft, silky or
too long outer coat and
curly or open coat.
Colour
The
German Shepherd Dog differs
widely in colour. Generally
speaking, strong, rich
colours are to be preferred,
with definite pigmentation,
and without appearance of a
washed-out colour. White
dogs are to be disqualified.
Head
Clean-cut and strong, the
head of the Shepherd is
characterized by nobility.
It should seem in proportion
to the body and should not
be clumsy, although a degree
of coarseness of head,
especially in dogs, is less
of a fault than
over-refinement. A round or
domey skull is a fault. The
muzzle is long and strong
with the lips firmly fitted,
and its topline is usually
parallel with an imaginary
elongation of the line of
the forehead. Seen from the
front, the forehead is only
moderately arched and the
skull slopes into the long
wedge-shaped muzzle without
abrupt stop. Jaws are
strongly developed. Weak and
too narrow underjaws, snipey
muzzles, and no stop are
faults Teeth: The strong
teeth, 42 in number (20
upper and 22 lower) are
strongly developed and meet
in a scissors grip in which
part of the inner surface of
the upper teeth meets and
engages part of the outer
surface of the lower teeth.
This type of bite gives a
more powerful grip than one
in which the edges of the
teeth meet directly, and is
subject to less wear. The
dog is overshot when the
lower teeth fail to engage
the inner surfaces of the
upper teeth. This is a
serious fault. The reverse
condition - an undershot jaw
- is a very serious fault.
While missing premolars are
frequently observed,
complete dentition is
decidedly to be preferred.
So-called distemper teeth
and discoloured teeth are
faults whose seriousness
varies with the degree of
departure from the desired
white, sound colouring.
Teeth broken by accident
should not be severely
penalized but worn teeth,
especially the incisors, are
often indicative of the lack
of a proper scissors bite,
although some allowance
should be made for age.
Eyes
of medium size, almond
shaped, set a little
obliquely and not
protruding. The colour as
dark as possible. Eyes of
lighter colour are sometimes
found and are not a serious
fault if they harmonize with
the general colouration, but
a dark brown eye is always
to be preferred. The
expression should be keen,
intelligent, and composed.
The ears should be
moderately pointed, open
towards the front, and are
carried erect when at
attention, the ideal
carriage being one in which
the centre lines of the
ears, viewed from the front,
are parallel to each other
and perpendicular to the
ground. Puppies usually do
not permanently raise their
ears until the fourth or
sixth month, and sometimes
not until later. Cropped and
hanging ears are to be
discarded. The well-placed
and well-carried ear of a
size in proportion to the
skull materially adds to the
general appearance of the
Shepherd. Neither too large
nor too small ears are
desirable. Too much stress,
however, should not be laid
on perfection of carriage if
the ears are fully erect.
Neck
The
neck is strong and muscular,
clean-cut and relatively
long, proportionate in size
to the head and without
loose folds of skin. When
the dog is at attention or
excited, the head is raised
and the neck carried high,
otherwise typical carriage
of the head is forward
rather than up and but
little higher than the top
of the shoulder,
particularly in motion.
Body
The
whole structure of the body
gives an impression of depth
and solidity without
bulkiness. Forechest,
commencing at the prosternum,
should be well filled and
carried well down between
the legs with no sense of
hollowness. Chest should be
deep and capacious with
ample room for lungs and
heart. Well carried forward,
with the prosternum, or
process of the breastbone,
showing ahead of the
shoulder when the dog is
viewed from the side. Ribs
should be well sprung and
long, neither barrel shaped
nor too flat, and carried
down to a breastbone which
reaches to the elbow.
Correct ribbing allows the
elbow to move back freely
when the dog is at a trot,
while too round a rib causes
interference and throws the
elbow out. Ribbing should be
carried well back so that
loin and flank are
relatively short. Abdomen
firmly held and not paunchy.
The bottom line of the
Shepherd is only moderately
tucked up in flank, never
like that of a Greyhound.
Legs
The
bone of the legs should be
straight, oval rather than
round or flat, and free from
sponginess. Its development
should be in proportion to
the size of the dog and
contribute to the overall
impression of substance
without grossness. Crooked
leg bones and any
malformation such as, for
example, that caused by
rickets, should be
penalized. Pastern should be
of medium length, strong and
springy. Much more spring of
pastern is desirable in the
Shepherd Dog than in any
other breeds, as it
contributes to the ease and
elasticity of the trotting
gait. The upright terrier
pastern is definitely
undesirable.
Metatarsus (the so-called
?hock?): short, clean,
sharply defined, and of
great strength. This is the
fulcrum upon which much of
the forward movement of the
dog depends. Cow-hocks are a
decided fault, but before
penalizing for Cow-hocks, it
should be definitely
determined, with the animal
in motion, that the dog has
this fault, since many dogs
with exceptionally good
hindquarter angulation
occasionally stand so as to
give the appearance of cow-hockedness
which is not actually
present.
Feet
Rather
short, compact, with toes
well arched, pads thick and
hard, nails short and
strong. The feet are
important to the working
qualities of the dog. The
ideal foot is extremely
strong with good gripping
power and plenty of depth of
pad. The so-called cat-foot,
or terrier foot, is not
desirable. The thin, spread
or hare-foot is, however,
still more undesirable.
Topline
The
withers should be higher
than, and sloping into, the
level back to enable a
proper attachment of the
shoulder blades. The back
should be straight and very
strongly developed without
sag or roach, the section
from the wither to the croup
being relatively short. (The
desirable long proportion of
the Shepherd Dog is not
derived from a long back but
from overall length with
relation to height, which is
achieved by breadth of
forequarter and hindquarter
viewed from the side.)
Loin:
viewed from the top, broad
and strong, blending
smoothly into the back
without undue length between
the last rib and the thigh,
when viewed from the side.
Croup should be long and
gradually sloping. Too level
or flat a croup prevents
proper functioning of the
hindquarter, which must be
able to reach well under the
body. A steep croup also
limits the action of the
hindquarter.
Structure
A
German Shepherd is a
trotting dog and his
structure has been developed
to best meet the
requirements of his work in
herding. That is to say, a
long, effortless trot which
shall cover the maximum
amount of ground with the
minimum number of steps,
consistent with the size of
the animal. The proper body
proportion, firmness of back
and muscles and the proper
angulation of the
forequarters and
hindquarters serve this end.
They enable the dog to
propel itself forward by a
long step of the hindquarter
and to compensate for this
stride by a long step of the
forequarter. The high
withers, the firm back, the
strong loin, the properly
formed croup, even the tail
as balance and rudder, all
contribute to this same end.
Proportion
The
German Shepherd Dog is
properly longer than tall
with the most desirable
proportion as 10 is to
8-1/2. We have seen how the
height is ascertained; the
length is established by a
dog standing naturally and
four-square, measured on a
horizontal line from the
point of the prosternum, or
breastbone, to the rear edge
of the pelvis, the ischium
tuberosity, commonly called
the sitting bone.
Angulation
Forequarter: the shoulder
blade should be long, laid
on flat against the body
with its rounded upper end
in a vertical line above the
elbow, and sloping well
forward to the point where
it joins the upper arm. The
withers should be high, with
shoulder blades meeting
closely at the top, and the
upper arm set on at an angle
approaching as nearly as
possible a right angle. Such
an angulation permits the
maximum forward extension of
the foreleg without binding
or effort. Shoulder faults
include too steep or
straight a position of
either blade or upper arm,
too short a blade or upper
arm, lack of sufficient
angle between these two
members, looseness through
lack of firm ligamentation,
and loaded shoulder with
prominent pads of flesh or
muscles on the outer side.
Construction in which the
whole shoulder assembly is
pushed too far forward also
restricts the stride and is
faulty.
Hindquarters
The
angulation of the
hindquarter also consists
ideally of a series of sharp
angles as far as the
relation of the bones to
each other is concerned, and
the thigh bone should
parallel the shoulder blade
while the stifle bone
parallels the upper arm. The
whole assembly of the thigh,
viewed from the side, should
be broad, with both thigh
and stifle well muscled and
of proportionate length,
forming as nearly as
possible a right angle. The
metatarsus (the unit between
the hock joint and the foot
commonly and erroneously
called the hock) is strong,
clean and short, the hock
joint clean-cut and sharply
defined.
Tail
Bushy,
with the last vertebra
extended at least to the
hock joint, and usually
below. Set smoothly into the
croup and low rather than
high, at rest the tail hangs
in a slight curve like a
sabre. A slight hook -
sometimes carried to one
side - is faulty only to the
extent that it mars general
appearance. When the dog is
excited or in motion, the
curve is accentuated and the
tail raised, but it should
never be lifted beyond a
line at right angles with
the line of the back. Docked
tails, or those which have
been operated upon to
prevent curling, disqualify.
Tails too short, or with
clumpy end due to the
ankylosis or the growing
together of the vertebrae,
are serious faults.
Gait
General Impression: The gait
of the German Shepherd Dog
is
outreaching, elastic,
seemingly without effort,
smooth and rhythmic. At a
walk it covers a great deal
of ground, with long step of
both hind leg and foreleg.
At a trot, the dog covers
still more ground and moves
powerfully but easily with a
beautiful co-ordination of
back and limbs so that, in
the best examples, the gait
appears to be the steady
motion of a well-lubricated
machine. The feet travel
close to the ground, and
neither fore nor hind feet
should lift high on either
forward reach or backward
push.
The
hindquarter delivers,
through the back, a powerful
forward thrust which
slightly lifts the whole
animal and drives the body
forward. Reaching far under,
and passing the imprint left
by the front foot, the
strong arched hind foot
takes hold of the ground;
then hock, stifle, and upper
thigh come into play and
sweep back, the stroke of
the hind leg finishing with
the foot still close to the
ground in a smooth
follow-through. The
overreach of the hindquarter
usually necessitates one
hind foot passing outside
and the other hind foot
passing inside the track of
the forefeet and such action
is not faulty unless the
locomotion is crabwise with
the dog?s body sideways out
of the normal straight line.
In order to achieve ideal
movement of this kind, there
must be full muscular
co-ordination throughout the
structure with the action of
muscles and ligaments
positive, regular and
accurate.
Back
Transmission
The
typical smooth, flowing gait
of the Shepherd Dog cannot
be maintained without great
strength and firmness (which
does not mean stiffness) of
back. The whole effort of
the hindquarter is
transmitted to the
forequarter through the
muscular and bony structure
of the loin, back, and
withers. At full trot, the
back must remain firm and
level without sway, roll,
whip or roach. To compensate
for the forward motion
imparted by the hindquarter,
the shoulder should open to
its full extent - the
desirability of good
shoulder angulation now
becomes apparent - and the
forelegs should reach out in
a stride balancing that of
the hindquarter. A steep
shoulder will cause the dog
either to stumble or to
raise the forelegs very high
in an effort to co-ordinate
with the hindquarter, which
is impossible when shoulder
structure is faulty. A
serious gait fault results
when a dog moves too low in
front, presenting an
unleveled topline with the
wither lower than the hips.
The
Shepherd Dog does not track
on widely separated parallel
lines as does the terrier,
but brings the feet inward
toward the middle line of
the body when at trot in
order to maintain balance.
For this reason a dog viewed
from the front or rear when
in motion will often seem to
travel close. This is not a
fault if the feet do not
strike or cross, or if the
knees or shoulders are not
thrown out, but the feet and
hocks should be parallel
even if close together. The
excellence of gait must also
be evaluated by viewing from
the side the effortless,
properly coordinated
covering of ground.
Summary
It
should never be forgotten
that the ideal Shepherd is a
working animal which must
have an incorruptible
character combined with body
and gait suitable for the
arduous work which
constitutes its primary
purpose. All its qualities
should be weighed in respect
to their contribution to
such work, and while no
compromise should be
permitted with regard to its
working potentiality, the
dog must nevertheless
possess a high degree of
beauty and nobility.
Evaluation of Faults
Note:
Faults are important in the
order of their group, as per
group headings, irrespective
of their position in each
group.
Very
Serious Faults
Major
faults of temperament;
undershot lower jaw.
Serious Faults
Faults
of balance and proportion;
poor gait, viewed either
from front, rear or side;
marked deficiency of
substance (bone or body);
bitchy male dogs; faulty
backs; too level or too
short croup; long and weak
loin; very bad feet; ring
tails; tails much too short;
rickety condition; more than
four missing premolars or
any other missing teeth,
unless due to accident; lack
of nobility; badly
washed-out colour; badly
overshot bite.
Faults
Doggy
bitches; poorly carried
ears; too-fine in head; weak
muzzles; improper muscular
condition; faulty coat,
other than temporary
condition; badly affected
teeth.
Minor
Faults
Too
coarse head; hooked tails;
too light, round or
protruding eyes; discoloured
teeth; condition of coat,
due to season or keeping.
Disqualifications
Albino
characteristics; cropped
ears; hanging ears (as in a
hound); docked tails; male
dogs having one or both
testacles undescended (monorchids
or cryptorchids); white dogs