enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of dog sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dog_sports

    Agility: Dogs are guided through an obstacle course to compete for speed and accuracy [47] Dog show: Purebred dogs are judged for conformity to breed standards [48] Dog skateboarding: Dogs ride skateboards [49] Disc dog: Dogs compete to catch frisbees [50] Flyball: Teams of dogs race over hurdles to retrieve a ball [51] Junior showmanship

  3. Category:Dog sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Dog_sports

    This is an automatically accumulated list of articles about sports involving dogs. The main article for this category is Dog sports . Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dog sports .

  4. Border Collie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_Collie

    He was bred by Adam Telfer from Roy, a black and tan dog, and Meg, a black-coated, strong-eyed dog. Hemp was a quiet, powerful dog to which sheep responded easily. Many shepherds used him for stud and Hemp's working style became the Border Collie style. All purebred Border Collies alive today can trace an ancestral line back to Old Hemp. [7]

  5. Dog agility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_agility

    Dog agility is a dog sport in which a handler directs a dog through an obstacle course in a race for both time and accuracy. Dogs run off leash with no food or toys as incentives, and the handler can touch neither dog nor obstacles.

  6. Piebald - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piebald

    A piebald mare. In British English piebald (black and white) and skewbald (white and any colour other than black) are together known as coloured.In North American English, the term for this colouring pattern is pinto, with the specialized term "paint" referring specifically to a breed of horse with American Quarter Horse or Thoroughbred bloodlines in addition to being spotted, whereas pinto ...

  7. Flyball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flyball

    A dog jumps on a box releasing a tennis ball. Flyball started as a dog sport in the late 1960s and early 1970s in Southern California. Some dog trainers combined scent hurdle racing with the dogs bringing back a tennis ball to the finish line. Then a tennis ball-launching apparatus was added, and the first flyball box was born.

  8. A Ball for Daisy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Ball_for_Daisy

    Author and illustrator Chris Raschka first thought about the idea for A Ball for Daisy 10 years before writing it, after seeing how upset his son got after he lost a ball thanks to a dog. [1] Prior to creating the book he sketched various combinations of balls and dogs. [2] Raschka described the process of creating the book as a difficult one.

  9. Landseer dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landseer_dog

    The Landseer's black and white coloration arises from the recessive piebald color allele found in Newfoundlands; the piebald coloration is a recessive trait so a single litter can have both Landseer and solid-colored puppies, depending on the genotype of the parents. [4]