Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Westminster 2014, Day One Results


EverythingDogBlog #130: Westminster Winners, Day 1 
Last night on TV, the following dogs won their Groups:
For the Hounds, GCH Flessner's International S'Cess "Nathan." 
In the Toy Group, Classie, a Min Pin (Miniature Pinscher), the top Min Pin of all time.
Among the Non-Sporting breeds, the winner was Ally, a Standard Poodle, in her last show.
And for the Herding Group, Coco, a Cardigan Welsh Corgi. This is the first time a CWC has won Best of Group.
Congratulations, all.
And now, for today!
There are seven groups at dog shows. The first day at Westminster focuses on four groups while today will 'show' the other three groups, breed by breed during the day. In the evening, the breed winners compete for Best in Group (7) and then Best in Show (BIS) of the seven Group winners.
Tune in tonight from 8-11 pm ET on the USA Network for the Group finals of the Sporting Dogs, the Terriers and Working Group. The finals for the junior handlers will be at 7:30 (91 youngsters were entered) and if you turn on your TV around 10 pm, you will see the Final Seven, one of whom will be judged Best in Show!
Aren't these Facebook 'posters' fantastic! 
(This article first appeared in ColumbiaPatch.com on 11 February 2014.)

Monday, February 10, 2014

A Dog, by Any Other Name (or, Dogs by the Numbers)


EverythingDogBlog #111: Westminster - What Do All Those Letters Mean? And What About the Numbers?
Sensation, Logo of the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show


The world of dog shows is a mystery to many. Here are a few clues to help you “enjoy the show.” Below is a typical entry in the program at Westmister (I have taken liberties and fabricated this dog.)

   7     GCH Sweet Polly Purebread
   Breed: Rottweiler
   Sex: Bitch
   AKC: DN 20141948
   Date of 

Birth: May 24, 2010
   Breeder: Jane Doe
   Sire: Ch Sweet President Buckeye
   Dam: Bo Peep
   Owner: John Smith
   Photos: Breed Judging

Letters Before, Letters After
Letters before a dog’s name can be CH or GCH for champion or grand champion.  You (the dog, that is) have to be a champion to be shown at Westminster in conformation.
After a dog’s name you might see CGC – Canine Good Citizen. The dog has passed a test indicating his owner is a responsible pet owner and the dog is calm in crowds, is neither afraid of nor aggressive to people, can be petted, groomed and examined at the vet clinic, is not easily startled – and has passed other similar skill tests. For some dogs, the CGC may appear before the name, depending on when the CGC was obtained. There are also letters indicating obedience and rally skill, among others.
What’s in a Name Anyway?
The first part of the name is generally the name of the breeder’s kennel (LazyRiver or Hobarra or Sweetwater) while the remainder of the name belongs to that particular dog. So a dog might be named Bramver’s Royal Tuxedo (perhaps Roy or Tux for short) or Harbor’s Sky-Blue Pink (perhaps Sky for short, the ‘call name’).
Sometimes the order is reversed, giving us Stingray of Derryabah who may be called Ray or Derry or something else entirely (but never late for dinner!)
It is becoming common for a litter to have puppies’ names following a theme or all starting with the same letter. You might have a baseball theme with Batter, Babe, Catcher, Ruth and Jackie or an S-litter with Shayla, Skylar, Sandy, Simon and Sparky.
There is also a letter-limit imposed by the American Kennel Club (AKC) so you won’t be seeing a dog named “Blue Harbor’s Eye in the Sky Above Beautiful Downtown Manhattan in Winter”!
Thank goodness!
And Now, for the Numbers!
Handlers, the people on the ‘other end of the leash’ wear a number on their upper left arm, held on by a rubber band. This is the number of the dog. You will hear David Frei, the Voice of Westminster, referring to Cavalier King Charles Spaniel number 4 or Labrador Retriever number 9.
The first few single-digit numbers are reserved for the ‘top dogs’ – the five or so dogs in the breed who won so many shows during the year that they received an automatic invitation to Westmister, if they choose to attend. Other dogs in each breed, champions all, get to Westminster either by lottery or first-come, first-served status.
Judging
A judge will spend about two minutes on each dog (or bitch if it is a female – really!) He will count teeth, determine if the animal has been spayed or neutered (not!), feel bone structure and musculature, and watch the dog move from the front, the back and the side.
There, You Have
it! Now, Enjoy the show!

(This first appeared in ColumbiaPatch.com on 10 February 2014.) (Logo credit Westminster Kennel Club)

Westminster 101: Your Guide to America's Dog Show


EverythingDogBlog #128: Everything You Always Wanted to Know about America’s Dog Show – Westminster
In Color and In Person!
The colors of the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show are luscious grape-purple and sparkly gold on a backdrop of a rich green carpet. Westminster is a TV staple, a seemingly out-of-reach dog show where, yes! you can walk in off the street and, luck permitting, sit in a chair on the floor and theoretically even reach out and touch the competing dogs in the ring (a faux pas – but you CAN go ‘backstage’ and meet them with their owners’ permission – champions all!)
And did you know that the lights of the Empire State Building shine Westminster purple and gold during America’s Dog Show?
You’ve watched it on TV. This year is the year to attend in person. It’s nearby – in New York City, so you have no excuse! Here is all the information you need to have a grand time at America’s Dog Show! I take the train because Penn Station allows me to walk to the evening dog show at Madison Square Garden without even going outside!
Facts and Facts from Before
Last year, Banana Joe, an Affenpinscher (a rare breed represented by 7 entries this year) was declared America’s Dog, winning over 2500 dogs in two days in New York City and on TV. The excitement was electric. The 2500 dogs competed in 7 rings, 7 groups, breed by breed. Group Finals were held each evening with winners from the day shows, and the final final was composed of one representative of each of the seven groups of dogs (Toy, Terrier, Working, Sporting, Non-Sporting, Herding and Hound).
Dogs are judged, not against each other, but against the written standard for their breed.
Who: All the dogs entered are champions as of 31 October. The top five dogs of each breed receive an automatic ‘pre-invite invitation’ if their people choose to enter them. Other champions vie for the remaining of the approximately 2500 places by submitting an application during November and December of the previous year.
Highly populated (and popular) breed classes this year include 76 Labs, 58 Goldens, 44 Aussies (Australian Shepherds), 52 Frenchies (French Bulldogs), 46 Rhodesian Ridgebacks, and 39 Vizslas, just to mention a few. The entry fee for dogs is very affordable and no fee is required for this year’s 91 junior handlers to compete although they must accumulate a certain number of wins prior to the show and be under a certain age.
Most of the dogs are American but this year you will also see champions competing from 49 states, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Canada, Thailand, and 11 other countries.
What: The 138th annual Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, the second longest continuously held sporting event in this country, just one year behind the Kentucky Derby (since 1877 – before even I was born!). A two-day event in New York City that is televised every year.
Where: Madison Square Garden, New York City (Penn Plaza, 7th and 8th Avenues, 31st to 33rd Streets), across from the Hotel Pennsylvania. Day tickets at The Piers are less than $30 and evening tickets are $40 or $55. You may even see someone famous (Bill Cosby has attended in the past.) Some years the event sells out.
When: February 10 and 11, 2014 (always the week of Valentine’s Day), 8 am to 11 pm. Hounds, Toys, Non-Sporting and Herding dogs (and junior showmanship) will be shown Monday with their group finals Monday night at 8. There are 4 rings on the floor with dogs being shown simultaneously in each during the day.
Sporting, Working, and Terriers are shown Tuesday with their groups Tuesday night as well as the finals for Best in Show on Tuesday night beginning at 8, preceded by the Junior Handling Finals from the afternoon sessions.
Make a week of it! There are related events starting the previous Friday and dog shows the weekend before, a reception at the AKC (American Kennel Club) Office Sunday afternoon, awards banquets galore, seminars, and celebration breakfasts the day after, as well as champion tours of the morning TV shows. And this year – the first Westminster Agility competition was Saturday.
Watch live streaming video on the Westminster Kennel Club website (http://www.westminsterkennelclub.org/), on the Westminster App, and on social media.
Why: Why not? It’s close by and an event you will always remember. You’ve seen it on TV, now catch it in person.
How:  Take the train for a comfortable, elegant, quiet, unrushed, scenic ride into yesteryear and arrive relaxed. Come just for the day or the week. Call Amtrak at 1-800-AMTRAK or visit www.amtrak.com for rates and schedules. If your train stops at Penn Station (trains from the south), where Westminster is located, you don’t even have to venture outside!
Details: General admission tickets will cost less than 30$ for one day or at little as $40 for an evening session (see www.westminsterkennelclub.org for much more information). And fortunately there is a huge TV-type screen that can be easily seen way up in the rafters during the evening shows. Since the event is sold out some years, you should plan ahead.
Breeds, Colors, Sizes, Varieties, . . . . 187 Breeds and Varieties in 2014
Some breeds have specialized classes for each variety. For example, black cocker spaniels are shown in a different class than parti-colored ones with a third cocker class, my favorite, being ASCOB (Any Solid Color Other than Black). On the other hand, black labs and yellow labs and chocolate labs all compete together.
So, a lab would compete against all colors of labs but a cocker competes only against cockers of the same color. Hmmmmm. . . . And I often wonder why our country’s favorite dog for years, the lab, has never won Best in Show. . . .
Benching
Westminster is one of the last benched dog shows in America. That means that dogs showing on Monday are required to be there all day, in the back, even when not competing. You can go ‘backstage’ and speak with the owners, breeders, and handlers, watch the dogs being groomed, and shop, shop, shop. However, it is very crowded and similar to the crowds during the holiday shopping season, winter coats and all.
Shopping
Ah, shopping! Backstage at Westminster you can find leashes, books, jewelry, new gadgets galore. In the Hotel Pennsylvania and next door are even more vendors with canine first aid kits, T-shirts, artwork and demonstrations of Search and Rescue and agility. Plenty to do across the street! You can even mingle in the lobby as ‘dogs and their people’ check in Sunday afternoon at 3 and meet the hotel’s doggy concierge.
The required Westminster souvenir is the guidebook which you can’t do without (for only $20) but you can also pick up a poster, notecards, a print and DVD to watch over and over again. The catalog is $25 and allows you to keep score.
Judging
Word has it that the Best in Show (BIS) (the champion of champions) judge is selected a couple of years in advance and sworn to secrecy, his or her name revealed only six months before the show. During the preliminary two days of judging, this judge is sequestered backstage so when the finals begin, the BIS judge is as unbiased as possible. This year, that person is breeder-owner-handler, professional handler, judge, teacher and author Ms. Betty Regina Leininger of Frisco, Texas, who heads a roster of 43 other judges from 20 states and 2 foreign countries.
Uno, Best in Show, 2008
‘Sensation’ – A Sensation!
Sensation, a Pointer, is the mascot of the Westminster Dog Show and appeared on the cover of the show catalog from 1936 through 1979. From 1980-1982, a head study of Sensation was selected for the cover, but in 1983 a foil embossed version of the full body engraving appeared on the cover and has been there ever since.
Charities
Veterinary school scholarships are presented Tuesday night and other charities are supported by the Westminster Kennel Club, including the AKC Museum of the DogTake The Lead, theAnimal Medical Center of NYC, the ASPCAAngel On A Leash,Greyhound Friends, and Guide Dog Foundation For The Blind.
New Breeds
Three newly recognized dog breeds will be shown for the first time this year: read EverythingDogBlog about the breeds here.
There is only one Westminster! Be there in person this year!
(photos from Westminster Kennel Club)
(This article first appeared on ColumbiaPatch.com on 10 February 2014.)

Sunday, February 9, 2014

EverythingDogBlog - Westminster Begins!


EverythingDogBlog #127: Border Collie from Maine wins First Agility Competition at Westminster
Masters Agility Champion
Kelso (see photos), a 7 year old Border Collie, was half of the winning team at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show last night in the first-ever Westminster Agility* competition. Kelso won on TV, displaying great flexibility in the weave pole part of the course as well as great accuracy and speed overall.
Kelso showing great flexibiity
The human half of Kelso’s team was Delaney Ratner.
Kelso Boder Collie First Agility Winner at Westminster

Best All-American (mixed breed) Dog
The best All-American dog winner was Husky mix Roo!, a 6 year old from San Francisco, with Stacey Campbell. (See photo for an example of grace in motion.)
Roo! Grace in Motion
This was the first time agility was part of the Westminster dog show and also the first time that mixed breed dogs could compete at Westminster.
Agility
225 dogs and handlers competed in two qualifying rounds. For more information and a look at the course diagram itself, check out this Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show Agility webpage.
*From yesterday’s EverythingDogBlog: Agility is similar to an obstacle course for dogs and is the fastest growing of all dog sports. The dog’s person tells or otherwise indicates which obstacles for the dog to take in which order. Dogs run for best times and ‘clean runs’ (no missed obstacles and none taken out of order).
Agility obstacles may include hoops to jump through, tunnels to run through, poles to weave through, broad jumps and high jumps to jump over, an A-frame to run up and down, a teeter-totter to navigate and a ‘table’ to pause on, among others. Each competition has a different course order that the humans can walk through at the last moment but the dogs never see until their turn to run.
Next Up
Tonight is the Dog Writers Association of America's (DWAA's) annual awards banquet (DWAA.org) in NYC and tomorrow and Tuesday is the dog show itself.
The next EverythingDogBlog will be Westminster 101!
Stay tuned here or follow the fun yourself on TV (for more information). Finals are televised each evening. In addition, results will be posted on the Westminster website, as well as breed result videos throughout both days as they occur.   
(This article first appeared on ColumbiaPatch.com. Photos from Westminster Kennel Club.)

Friday, February 7, 2014

EverythingDogBlog #126:The "Other" Westminster


EverythingDogBlog #126: The Other Westminster (not the town in Maryland)
The First-Ever-at-Westminster Agility Competition

Will you be watching the first Agility Dog Competition associated with the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on Saturday? From 7-9 pm ET on FOX Sports 1, the best of the 225 dogs entered in agility will compete with their handlers. (Agility is actually a team sport with teams composed of one dog and one person). This year Westminster opens its doors to the All-American dog, too.
Agility is like an obstacle course for dogs and is the fastest growing of all dog sports. The dog’s person tells or indicates which obstacles to take in which order and dogs run for best times and ‘clean runs’ (no missed obstacles and none taken out of order).
Agility obstacles include hoops to jump through, tunnels to run through, poles to weave through, broad jumps and high jumps to jump over, an A-frame to run up and down, a teeter-totter to navigate and a ‘table’ to pause on, among others. Each competition has a different course order that the humans can walk through at the last moment but the dogs never see until their turn to run.
If you are in New York, the day’s competition can be seen in person for $20.
Fun Facts about Westminster
This year sports 2845 dog entries among 187 breeds from all states except Arkansas. Dogs also come from Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, and 127 dogs hail from 13 foreign countries.
The ever-popular Labrador Retriever winner will have to surpass 75 other labs while goldens number 58. Rarer breeds like the Dandie Dinmont Terrier, the English Fox Hound and the Finnish Spitz will have only one dog each (competing against the breed standard, of course), outnumbered by two entries of the breeds Komondorok, Kuvaszok, Swedish Valhund, Harrier and the breed that won Best in Show in 2006 – the Colored Bull Terrier.
And, hopefully again this year, the Empire State Building will be lit with gold and purple lights!
Important Information about Westminster
Tune in Monday night from 8-11 pm ET on CNBC for the finals of the Toy, Non-Sporting, Hound and Herding Groups and Tuesday evening for the finals of the Sporting, Working and Terrier Groups as well as the coveted Best in Show. Each of these days can be experienced in person for $27.50 while the evening competitions can be seen for $40 or $55 plus.
I, for one, will be glued to my television screen!
Read more about itNew Breeds This Year At Westminster, in a previous EverythingDogBlog
(This first appeared in ColumbiaPatch.com on 7 February 2014.) (Photos credit Westminster Kennel Club)

EverythingDogBlog #125: Dogs Debut at Westminster!

Does the Rat Terrier sound familiar? How about the Portuguese Podengo Pequeno? If you are from New Hampshire, surely you have seen some Chinooks.
What do these three breeds have in common?
They are dogs that will be shown in the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show next week for the first time (see photos courtesy of the Westminster Kennel Club). The 138th Westminster Dog Show will air on TV Monday and Tuesday evenings.
The Rat Terrier
In the Terrier Group, 20 Rat Terrier champions will be shown next week in New York. Learn about their 18 different colors and 9 different markings on the website of the Rat Terrier Club of America here. They hunt rodents both on the ground and below. Rat terriers also enjoy canine sports such as terrier racing, lure coursing, barn hunt and earthdog.

The Portuguese Podengo Pequeno (gotta love that name!)
A member of the Hound Group, the Portuguese Podengo Pequeno hails from Portugal and is an avid rabbit hunter. The breed comes in either smooth or wire coat varieties. The Pequeno is the smallest of three Podengos and I venture to guess that many pre-teen girls will fall in love with these 8 dogs at Westminster. For more information, check out this webpage.

The Chinook
Also the name of a warm winter wind from the south (but in the west) that melts snow, the Chinook has been the state dog of New Hampshire since 2009 (the breed was developed in the state nearly a hundred years ago). You will be able to see 4 of these Working Group dogs at Westminster. They like tracking, therapy, sledding, skijoring, scootering and carting. The Chinook Club of America’s webpage can be found here and has a section on genetics. This rare breed of sled dog was used in the first Byrd Antarctic Expedition of 1927.

The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show
Watch all the action on TV Monday and Tuesday night or visit thewebsite for live streaming all day.
I will also be posting my article, Westminster 101. Look for it!
(Photos credit: Westminster Kennel Club. This article first appeared on ColumbiaPatch.com on 6 February 2014.)

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Best Darn Dog Books (of 2013) for Children and Youngsters (and some classics!)


EverythingDogBlog # 117: Worth Reading!
Here it is! EverythingDogBlog’s Best Darn Dog Books of 2013! (Part One – Books for Children and Youngsters)
I have been sweating writing this post since November. I haven’t read as many dog books this year – spent more time posting here on EverythingDogBlog or on my webpage (www.EverythingDogBlog.BlogSpot.com) - about four times more than last year. Plus I read more non-dog best sellers this year. And, just like in the movies, too many books come out in December, for gift-giving, I suppose (and rapid reading by reviewers).
You might also be interested in reading my series on EverythingDogBlog titled “The Twelve Dog Days of Christmas.” Each day I selected “a few of my favorite things” – best dog collars, best food puzzles, best dog artists, best dog leashes, best (new) dog toys, best treat toys (including stuffables), etc. Day Two can be read here.
However, I did manage to scrape together a few of my favorite books, after consulting the DWAA (Dog Writer’s Association of America) list of finalists, Barnes and Noble’s list, GoodRead’s list, and BARk’s books reviewed during the year. Again, I give you the A-List, the B-List, a Promising List (that I didn’t get around to reading), and my Others List. My lists also include a few titles that are so noteworthy from previous years that I just had to include them. For last year’s list, see this post from January 4, 2012.
Earlier this year (2014), I wrote about the Best Darn Dog Stuff for 2012 here:  I combined the Stuff list and the Book list but this year, they are separate. So, without further ado. . . .
The A-List (click on the links to take you to my review of the book)
Children: In chronological order, the first five books all tie for first place in my mind (only one was published in 2013). More children’s books will appear in Part Two which includes the rest of my A-List, my B-List, the Promising List, An ‘Other’ List, and more.
A Vacation for Pooch, by Maryann Cocca-Leffler, Henry Holt, 2013, $16.99, 32 pages, children 4-7, preschool – grade 2. Separation. Love. Dogs and their kids. With a surprise ending. 
The Bedtime Book for Dogs by Bruce Littlefield (Grand Central Publishing, 2011, $15.95, 28 pages, ages 4 and up) A bedtime book for dogs and kids and adults. Lovely. Good dogs. Watch author Littlefield read part of The Bedtime Book to his own good dog, Westminster, here: http://bedtimebookfordogs.com/?page_id=83 
The Blue House Dog, by Deborah Blumenthal, Peachtree Publishing, 2010, $15.95, children 4-8. Bones becomes the neighborhood stray when a little boy tries to befriend him. How he succeeds is worth a discussion. 
City Dog, Country Frog by Mo Willems (Simon and Schuster, 2010, 64 pages, $17.00, ages 3-6) The beauty and sadness of the passing seasons in the country as a dog makes friends who leave all too soon. Reminiscent of Charlotte’s Web. 
A Home for Dakota by Jan Grover (Gryphon, 2008, 24 pages, $15.95, ages 5 and up, in the Sit! Stay! Read! series) A lovely kid’s book for grown-ups that we all need to read. The lesson is about puppy mills. Probably the best book in many years! 
Muddypaws and the Birthday PartyA Story about Birthdays, Balloons and Best Friends, by Deborah Chancellor, Parragon, 2009, 7.99$, 32 pages. (The sequel to Muddy Paws, by Moira Butterfield, Parragon, 2008, 5$, ages 4-8) Muddypaws Goes to School, by Peter Bently, Parragon, 2011, 7.99$, 32 pages. Lovely books about a golden retriever puppy and his boy. Of course, MuddyPaws is a good name for this pup! These are just plain fun.

Bailey by Harry Bliss (the New Yorker magazine’s cover artist and cartoonist), Scholastic Press, 2011, 32 pages, $16.99, ages 3 and up) My kind of dog – loves school, especially lunch and recess. Always late for the morning school bus because he can’t decide to wear the red collar or the blue one. Just plain fun.
Older Youngsters: Sheep, by Valerie Hobbs (Scholastic, 2006, $5.99 [PB], 115 pages, ages 8 - 12) A classic. Constantly Seeking Sheep. In the style of Black Beauty.
Stay! Keeper’s Story, by Lois Lowry, 1997, Houghton Mifflin, 128 pp, $5.50 ($15 when first published as a hardback), ages 9-12. I have to include this Lois Lowry book! A very good dog story, too. Keeper searches for a child of his own and makes good along the way. For adults, too.
Remember: You are never too old to read a children's book, especially to a child.
Caveat: These reviews appear on EverythingDogBlog here or at www.DogEvals.BlogSpot.com. Books were either checked out from a public library or purchased for review with the exceptio of The Blue House Dog which was sent to me for review.
(This article first appeared on ColumbiaPatch.com on 17 January 2014.)