Dogs and All about Them eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Dogs and All about Them.

Dogs and All about Them eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Dogs and All about Them.
the name of Drake, Bang, or Garnet were like household words.  People talked of the great Pointers.  They were spoken of in club chat or gossip; written about; and the prospects of the moors were much associated with the up-to-date characters of the Pointers and Setters.  There is very little of this sort of talk now-a-days.  Guns are more critically spoken of.  There is, however, a wide enough world to supply with first-class Pointers.  In England’s numerous colonies it may be much more fitting to shoot over dogs.  It has been tried in South Africa with marvellous results.  Descendants of Bang have delighted the lone colonist on Cape partridge and quails, and Pointers suit the climate, whereas Setters do not.  The Pointer is a noble breed to take up, as those still in middle life have seen its extraordinary merit whenever bred in the right way.  As to the essential points of the breed, they may be set down as follows:—­

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HEAD—­Should be wide from ear to ear, long and slanting from the top of the skull to the setting on of the nose; cheek bones prominent; ears set low and thin in texture, soft and velvety; nose broad at the base; mouth large and jaws level.  NECK—­The neck should be very strong, but long and slightly arched, meeting shoulders well knit into the back, which should be straight and joining a wide loin.  There should be great depth of heart room, very deep brisket, narrow chest rather than otherwise, shoulders long and slanting.  LEGS AND FEET—­Should be as nearly like the Foxhound’s as possible.  There should be really no difference, as they must be straight, the knees big, and the bone should be of goodly size down to the toes, and the feet should be very round and cat-shaped.  HIND-QUARTERS—­A great feature in the Pointer is his hind-quarters.  He cannot well be too long in the haunch or strong in the stifle, which should be well bent, and the muscles in the second thigh of a good Pointer are always remarkable.  The hocks may be straighter than even in a Foxhound, as, in pulling up sharp on his point, he in a great measure throws his weight on them; the shank bones below the hock should be short.  COLOUR—­There have been good ones of all colours.  The Derby colours were always liver and whites for their Pointers and black breasted reds for their game-cocks.  The Seftons were liver and whites also, and so were the Edges of Strelly, but mostly heavily ticked.  Brockton’s Bounce was so, and so were Ch.  Bang, Mike, and Young Bang.  Drake was more of the Derby colour; dark liver and white.  Mr. Whitehouse’s were mostly lemon and whites, after Hamlet of that colour, and notable ones of the same hue were Squire, Bang Bang, and Mr. Whitehouse’s Pax and Priam, all winners of field trials.  There have been several very good black and whites.  Mr. Francis’s, afterwards Mr. Salter’s, Chang was a field trial winner of this colour.  A still better one was Mr. S. Becket’s Rector, a somewhat mean little

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Dogs and All about Them from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.