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Caucasian Shepherd Dog - A Miracle of Nature
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Caucasian Shepherd Dog - A Miracle of Nature kate
10 Sep : 10:06 Reply to this
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Comments: 9 Registered: 08 Aug : 00:00 |
I think this is a meticulisly written article. The reason Iknew my dog had spent her earl puppyhood with small children was the way she cried when I walked her and would look at their faces. it would break my heart. Eventually she got over that but was always good with children. That was one socialization I didn't have to go into. The only thing she never got over was the was the sound of the diesel engine, delivery trucks, mail, etc. She would only get a little nutty, welive in semi woods so the deliver people who knew her would just stay in one gear. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 10.0![]() |
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Name, surname, year of birth, race. And an uncomfortable term: race. On the other hand, in America you cannot do without describing the color of the skin of somebody who is wanted. This is why when one speaks about the black scoundrel the efficient police officer digits on the computer, as we would expect, the term "black", while when it is a white criminal to be involved the definition is not simply "white" but "Caucasian". Needless to say it is not a question of a Georgian wrongdoer or an Armenian throat-slasher, but of a more banal Irish wrangler, an Anglo-Saxon braggart, or even the Italian American accused as usual of being connected with Mafia. All go under the name of "Caucasians", according to the conventions of American lexicon. We do not know precisely how this odd term developed, but it does not seem difficult to trace its history. Even before the word black took on its intolerably derogatory nature, the term "white" – or, worse, "Arian" - had started to assume a sinister taste because of the Nazis’ exaltation with it. The matter was to say the least embarrassing and a better synonym was needed as soon as possible. Thus, having searched among thousands of anthropological theories of the epoch, experts found a more modern one. According to it all Indo-European breeds traced their ancestry to a primitive stock born in the vast and fertile Caucasian highland. Today, very few believe that the Europeans’ progenitors actually originated from those mountainous regions; yet, the adjective "Caucasian" keeps proliferating in American judicial reports with its attendant aura of "politically correct".
It is even too evident that this breed originated from and has developed on the basis of the well-built Molossian hound from Tibet. Other genetic patrimony is likely to have contributed to the creation of the Caucasian Shepherd, but centuries and centuries of endogamy as well have undoubtedly favored a fixation of the peculiarities of this dog the history of which is mostly unknown. It is easy to identify the cases in which the Caucasian Shepherd has influenced the formation of new dog breeds (as it has occurred with the Leonberger or the St. Bernard), but such identification is not so easy the other way around. Some experts have formulated the hypothesis that in the XVII century some breeders of German origin performed a surgery on the dog to the aim of enlarging its size. These breeders may have utilized a St. Bernard to the creation of which also contributed, as we have affirmed, the genetic patrimony of the Caucasian Shepherd. This fact, however, cannot be asserted with absolute certainty even because this dog has developed in regions remote from the researchers’ typical areas of study.
ITS IDENTIKIT
Intermediate: the fur is long but it forms neither a mane, nor fringes, nor "pants", nor a bush on the tail.
The English zoologist Desmond Morris, author of the world-famous "The Naked Ape" (1968), affirms: "We see animals not as such, but rather as a reflection of ourselves". This important concept can be borrowed to explain those feelings of "love at first sight" which at first make a dog expert fall in love with a breed and then turn him into a breeder. The inspirer of this passion is generally the outward aspect of a breed; somehow or other this element triggers ancestral desires which then find their concrete outlet. Some years ago I was fascinated by the photos of some Caucasian Shepherds published in a magazine. I then made acquaintance with a lady who had already been breeding them for a number or years. I found myself literally dazzled by a male which I would define as "terribly gorgeous" and which was to father the first subject (this, too, a male) of my own farm. To see this breed and choose it, in conclusion, have been for me all the same".
The length of the fur is not, however, the only point of reference for the recognition of different varieties within the general breed. As already mentioned, some experts even talk about four separate types of Caucasian Shepherd, each of them being related to a different area of origin. One is the Gergetski, which originated in the mountainous Dagestan and is characterized by a large size, a long fur and muzzle, and a gray or reddish coat with white dots around the mouth. Opposed to this is the Kazbek, which comes from the mountains of northern Georgia, has a coat that is often striped and is as large as but more elegant than the first. The Garbanski, which comes from the barren lands of Azerbaijan and Georgia, is instead a hybrid created by crossing the Owcharka with the Turkish Shepherd. Finally, there is the Akhalt from Dagestan. This dog, which is characterized by a coat of every possible chromatic tonality and often by yellow eyes, can be said to have been obtained by crossbreeding the other types. Some experts would like these varieties to come to be recognized as real breeds, but such recognition is still very far from coming. After all, the Caucasian Shepherd has not yet spread widely through western countries. Only starting from 1979 have some subjects started to be displayed in European shows, while as for the Italian dogs the first Owtcharka, the very beautiful Riuslan von der Alten Ybbs, was officially presented in the International show of Bellagio in 1986. Yet, to learn more about a dog that is so simple and pure in its primitive rusticity would really be worth the effort. This animal is strong but balanced, fierce but not quarrelsome. Its most peculiar behavioral trait consists in the extremely strong sense of property, which it views as a real and primary point of reference of its behavior. Nothing can frighten it or place it in a state of inferiority. Even when attacked by larger or numerous enemies the Caucasian Shepherd is always ready to reveal all of its prowess to protect the life of its master and of his sheep.
Caucasian Shepherd Dog - A Miracle of Nature 