Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On the sidelines of a dog show in Karlsruhe in April 1899, Max von Stephanitz, Arthur Meyer, and a number of others decided to form a club for the German Shepherd Dog. On 22 April 1899, the Verein für deutsche Schäferhunde was formally established with its first headquarters in Stuttgart.
The East-European Shepherd is a variety of the German Shepherd bred in the former Soviet Union with the purpose of creating a larger, more cold-resistant version of the German Shepherd. It lacks the physical deformities bred into western show lines of German Shepherds and has become one of Russia's most popular dog types.
Georgian Shepherd; German Hound; German Longhaired Pointer [153] German Pinscher [3] German Roughhaired Pointer [154] German Shepherd [155] German Shorthaired Pointer [153] German Spaniel [111] German Spitz [156] German Wirehaired Pointer [153] Giant Schnauzer [157] Glen of Imaal Terrier [158] Golden Retriever [159] Gończy Polski [160] Gordon ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... History of the German Shepherd Dog (6 P) R. Rin Tin Tin (53 P) Pages in category "German shepherds"
Schutzhund (/'ʃʊtshʊnt/, German for "protection dog" [c]), currently known competitively as IGP [b] and previously as IPO, [a] is a dog sport that tests a dog's tracking, obedience, and protection skills, and evaluates if a dog has the appropriate traits and characteristics of a good working dog. [1]
State Dog breed Image Year of designation Ref. Alaska: Alaskan Malamute: 2010 [29]Connecticut: Siberian Husky: 2024 [30]Delaware: Golden Retriever: 2016 (expired on August 31, 2017, pursuant to 80 Del. Laws, c. 365, § 3).
He is also approved to judge for the KC (UK) German shepherds, Rottweilers, Boxers, Whippets, Greyhounds, and Shibas as well as a UKC all-breed judge. Fred is currently an internationally licensed judge with the Dog Club of China and an internationally licensed all breed conformation judge for several other registries.
In the 1980s an eight-year-old German Shepherd, Gabi, was adopted by the zoo and became an informal security guard. [1] On the night of 22 June 1987, she was patrolling the zoo with guard Stanimir Stanić [2] and a male German shepherd. In the darkness Stanić failed to notice a jaguar that had escaped from its cage.