The Great Dane - Embodying a Full Exposition of the History, Breeding Principles , Education, and Present State of the Breed (A Vintage Dog Books Breed Classic)
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78 pages
English

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THE GREAT DANE EMBODYING A FULL EXPOSITION OF THE HISTORY, BREEDING PRINCIPLES, EDUCATION, AND PRESENT STATE OF THE BREED. BY FREDERICK BECKER A VINTAGE DOG BOOKS BREED CLASSIC. Originally published in 1933, this extremely rare early work on the Great Dane is both expensive and hard to find in its first edition. VINTAGE DOG BOOKS have republished it, using the original text and photographs, as part of their CLASSIC BREED BOOKS series. The author was a highly respected breeder of the day. The book's 134 pages cover all aspects of the Great Dane. Beginning with the history of the breed, it moves on to discuss buying, breeding, feeding and showing amongst many other topics. The book is lavishly illustrated and features over 30 full page photographs of champion Great Danes of the day, a full descriptive write-up of each dog and their pedigrees. This is a fascinating read for any Great Dane enthusiast or historian of the breed but also contains much information that is still useful and practical today. Many of the earliest breed books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s, are now extremely scarce and very expensive. VINTAGE DOG BOOKS are reprinting these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions. These editions are republished using the original text and artwork CHAPTERS: I: - HISTORY II: - BREEDING PRINCIPLES III: - BREEDING POINTS IV: - REARING AND FEEDING V: - EXERCISING VI: - STANDARD OF POINTS VII: - DEFECTS VIII. - THE CLUBS AND THE PRESS

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Publié par
Date de parution 06 août 2020
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781528769815
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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The Great Dane
EMBODYING A FULL EXPOSITION OF THE HISTORY, BREEDING PRINCIPLES, EDUCATION, AND PRESENT STATE OF THE BREED.
by Frederick Becker
Vintage Dog Books
Home Farm
44 Evesham Road
Cookhill, Alcester
Warwickshire
B49 5LJ
vintagedogbooks.com
Read Books 2005
This book is copyright and may not be reproduced or copied in any way without the express permission of the publisher in writing.
ISBN No. 1-905124-43-0
Published by Vintage Dog Books 2005
Vintage Dog books is an imprint of Read Books
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Vintage Dog Books
Home Farm
44 Evesham Road
Cookhill, Alcester
Warwickshire
B49 5LJ
THE
GREAT DANE.
(DEUTSCHE DOGGE.)
EMBODYING A FULL EXPOSITION OF THE HISTORY, BREEDING PRINCIPLES, EDUCATION, AND PRESENT STATE OF THE BREED.
BY
FREDERICK BECKER.
INDEX OF ILLUSTRATIONS.


BRINDLE DOGS- Champion Viceroy of Redgrave 1 Champion Thor of Redgrave 2 Count Bruce 3 Count Minshuli 4 Merlin of Stapleton 5 The Flamingo 6 Colonel Baden 7 Lord Topper 8 Young Tyras de Grace 9
BRINDLE BITCHES- Champion Vendetta 10 Vrola of Redgrave 11 Champion Venesta of Redgrave 12 Lorna Doone 13 Champion Lady Topper 14
FAWN DOGS- Champion Vanguard of Redgrave 15 Colonia Bosco 16 Krishna 17 Tyras de Grace 18 Count de Grace 19 Champion Count Fritz 20
FAWN BITCHES- Champion Emma of Redgrave 21 Champion Valentine of Redgrave 22 Lady Volcano 23
HARLEQUIN DOGS- Figaro of St. Austell 24 Champion Loris of Stapleton and 25 Champion Superba of Stapleton 26
HARLEQUIN BITCHES- Champion Senta Valeria II. 27 Champion Superba of Stapleton 26
BLUE DOGS- Bluebeard of St. Austell 28 Bluebeard of Eskdale 29
BLUE BITCHES- Blue Pansy 30 Countess de Grace 31
BLACK DOGS- Sir Hector of Oldbury 32
BLACK BITCHES- Leonore of St. Austell 33
Nero I., 1876 34 Rolf I., 1888 35
INDEX.
Introduction I. - History II. - Breeding Principles III. - Breeding Points IV. - Rearing and Feeding V. - Exercising VI. - Standard of Points VII. - Defects VIII. - The Clubs and the Press Prefixes and Affixes
INTRODUCTION.

A single grain of solid fact is worth ten tons of theory.
ANY attempt to write an exclusively scientific work on a certain breed, its peculiarities, breeding principles, etc., must result in failure. By learning and adopting the theory of a science we become faithful slaves of its rules, and are not allowed to go our own way contradicting these rules without giving evidence that by virtue of a discovery we are entitled to do so. Even in the attempt to breed for the same type by following the same principles of breeding, two breeders might produce quite different results, because each individual dog has his own peculiarities, with a more or less pronounced power of transmission, and, on this, the results depend. Our aim should be to study thoroughly these peculiarities in the different strains of our breed, and learn how to make practical use of the knowledge thus obtained. And if we succeed in doing this, and can boast of having become learned breeders, we must not attribute this to science alone, but also to experience. Science is comparatively useless without experience, and all that I have learned from personal experience, and also from the experience of older breeders, I reproduce in this book, which is not written with a view to giving advice to our old fanciers, who mostly have a wider and far longer experience than myself, but for the benefit of those breeders who are novices, many of whom, refusing to admit this, go their own way, threatening to ruin what the cleverness and experience of our learned breeders has built up.
It is quite useless to breed a dog possessing qualities of appearance which cannot be made use of, and if we would try to do so, we should not succeed because, while mental quality produce eventually a certain peculiarity in appearance, certain qualities of appearance will never bring about a mental peculiarity; I mean to say, that we should never try to modulate the formation of a Non-Sporting dog at the expense of his particular points of beauty with the idea of making, for instance, out of a Great Dane something besides a companion, perhaps a dog fit to compete successfully in the Waterloo Cup. The fact is that the appropriation of a Great Dane as a faithful and affectionate companion was synonymous with the ennoblement of the appearance of this breed which was, in the good old time, a coarse-built hunting race, and this is the only reason for its wonderful change towards an unsurpassable elegance, noble appearance and affectionateness. The Great Dane breeder s aim, therefore, must be to produce specimens solely with a striking appearance and nothing else besides; he must, however, watch the mental development as well, especially in a puppy, in order to prevent in time any outburst of ferocity which, if existing in adult dogs, is solely due to the negligence or irrational method of education.
I must mention, in order to show that this breed is predisposed to become ferocious, that Great Danes are sometimes brought up abroad by fostering an innate tendency to ferocity to become reliable watchdogs, and when I saw last summer in Austria such a specimen, I saw plainly that this mental quality had had an enormous influence upon his appearance-he was a coarse, tall and obese looking specimen, although an offspring from the best known champion strain of Austria.
From this point of view the mode of education of a Great Dane is of great importance. Our Great Dane, with his inborn activity and sometimes dangerous temperament, must not have all the freedom he wants, but the freedom we are willing to give him-in other words, obedience is the chief thing in the education of a Great Dane. Fortunately the Dane is, as a rule, very sensible when punished, and he must learn in time to understand and obey if we reprove him without using the whip. And this we should aim at, viz., to get a Dane to obey promptly. This method of education is also essential for showing a Dane-many of us have been pleased when a whistle from outside made certain dogs standing in the ring like statues. This is what I call education, but not the throwing of toys, rubber balls, calling of all possible and impossible pet names to make a dog show himself, to get the right carriage of the ears, and so on. A whip can be used to make a Great Dane obey promptly without making him by any means less affectionate; on the contrary, they learn the better to understand their masters who, on the other hand, must never leave good behaviour unacknowledged. The natural effect of this method is that a Dane rationally educated always tries to please his master, while badly brought up specimens find just pleasure in what they should not do, and these sort grow worse and become sometimes a nuisance when full grown, instead of affectionate and obedient companions.
The show records give a wonderful illustration of the enormous advance our noble breed has made during the last decades. England took a fancy, in this breed because she missed a tall, active and noble looking companion before the Great Dane was introduced into this country. Apart from a few old breeders who have given up dog breeding altogether there exists, I suppose, not a single deserter of the younger generation who has deserted this fancy to start breeding another race. I think the majority will agree with me: Once bred a Great Dane and never another breed! The attraction which a Great Dane offers gains him every year many new friends, and if beginners only possess some patience and a genuine love for this breed, taking, furthermore, dog-breeding as an ideal sport in addition to its material usefulness, they should in time succeed in what they aim. Breeding champions is by no means the privilege or the monopoly of our noted fanciers; he who has started with such a prejudice had really better retire. We should look forward, of course, to breeding a champion dog a day, and we must be ambitious to play an equally leading r le as our prominent fanciers do, and for this reason we should follow and keep to their ways of breeding a first-rate Great Dane, and must not believe that we can do so on our own. Always pleased if an inferior dog is beaten, patient under disappointment, and never over-rating one s own stock-these are the main factors in bringing about healthy and productive competition. Exhibitors should always bear in mind: as many judges, so many opinions-they should never throw stones at old, experienced judges if these gentlemen or ladies don t award their dogs one of the much-desired three figures: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, but instead one of the much-hated three letters: c., h.c., v.h.c.,-patience, courage, indulgence and keenness -in hoc signum vinces , Great Dane fancier!
FREDERICK BECKER.
October , 1905.
CHAPTER I.

HISTORY.
A Great Dane which is not a Dane -Age of the breed-Origin-The hunting Boarhound called Hatzruede - Ennoblement-Period of building up the present type-The first Special Club-The Deutsche Dogge -Naming of the breed in modern times- Ulmer Dogge - Dogue d Ulm - Grosse Dogge - Daenische Dogge -Grand Danois - Great Dane - German Boarhound -The eternal Great Dane-A thoroughbred breed-Much discussed relation with English breeds-Supposed crossing with Greyhounds-Actual crossing with Mastiffs-Crossing with Deerhounds - Continental influences-Two hard blows-Quarantine Act-Cropping rule-Consequence of the cropping rule -Transitive state to the uncropped era-Success of the advocates of the longears - Honour to whom honour is due.


IN naming our handsome bre

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