วันเสาร์ที่ 13 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Cocker Spaniels - A Guide to the Breed

Initially spaniels in England were divided among land and water spaniels; The English Cocker is one of the oldest types of land spaniel and can be traced back to 14th century Spain. Spaniel type dogs have been found in art and literature for around 500 years and prior to 1600 all types of spaniel were categorised together, the larger ones were used to spring game and the smaller ones to flush out woodcock. This is where the name Springer and Cocker came from when the differentiation among spaniels occurred in the mid 1800's. The rural sports encyclopaedia states that cockers were between 12 and 20 lb and it was not unusual for Cockers and Springers to come from the same litter. In the 1930's the cocker spaniel was the most popular breed in Britain and stayed there for nearly 20 years.

In America a different kind of Cocker was being bred from the English breeding stock which led the kennel club to separate the English and American breeds in 1946. There have also been records of Welsh and Devonshire Cockers. When showing, Cockers and Springers were in the same class until breed standards for the two variants were established in 1885 and since then enthusiasts have bred the individual traits which today differ in more ways than weight alone.

Cocker Spaniel Puppies

The Cocker breed has some genetic lines which focus on working dogs and others which produce show dogs. After World War II the show bred Cocker became the most popular registered breed but it became popular opinion that they were all useless as working dogs. Of course this was not true and today the Cocker is a popular hunting and working dog, they are highly intelligent and are easily trained and eager to learn. Cuban authorities train and use English Cocker Spaniels as sniffer dogs to check for drugs or food products in passengers' baggage at Cuban airports.

Cocker Spaniels - A Guide to the Breed

The dogs bred for working have shorter coats and ears which are not desirable for show dogs and although they are registered as the same breed the two strains are rarely crossed due to the significant differences. The working dogs would not win in the show ring and the long coat and ears of the show dog would impede a working dog. The working dogs tails is usually docked at about 4 of 5 inches but a show dogs is docked much closer to the body. Show dogs are restricted to certain colours and white is restricted only to the chest, but workers are a wide variety of colours and some hunters prefer white in the coat to make the dog more visible to the gunners.

A working Cocker Spaniel is a flushing dog and must learn certain skills to do this job efficiently:

Hup is the command to sit and stay and the dog must comply with this command absolutely. The dog can be given a direction or called to heel. This allows a handler to keep up without running Retrieve to Hand The ability to deliver a bird to the gunner. Quarter Dogs must work in a pattern and stay within gun range to avoid flushing a bird outside of shooting distance. Follow Hand Signals The dog must be responsive to hand signals in order for the hunter to be able to direct the dog into specific areas in silence. Steady A dog must sit when a bird rises or a gun is fired in order to mark the fall and to avoid flushing other birds when pursuing a missed bird.

Cockers are excellent family dogs and do need lots of exercise, they love swimming and being allowed to run off the lead. They are very happy and friendly and thrive on human companionship and like nothing more than pleasing their owners. They get on well with children and other animals. In fact in a 2002 survey only 1% were aggressive to people and 2% to other dogs. English Cockers live to about 11 to 12 years which is on average about a year longer than the American breed. Some health issues that can affect Cockers are bite problems, skin allergies, shyness, cataracts, deafness and benign tumors.

Cocker Spaniels - A Guide to the Breed

ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:

แสดงความคิดเห็น