Golden Retriever
Origin : United Kingdom
Utilization: Gundog
Classification FCI : Group 8 flushing dog, water dog, section 1 retrievers, with working trial
General appearance: Symmetrical, balance, active, powerful, level mover, soud, with kinldy expression
Head and skull: Balanced and well-chiselled, skull broad without coarseness; well set on nek, muzzele powerful, wide and deep. Length of foreface approximately equals length from well-defined stop to occiput. Nose preferably black.
Mouth : Jaws strong, with a perfect, regular and complete scissor bite, i.e. upper teeth closely overlapping lower teeth and set square to the jaws.
Eyes : Dark brown, set well apart, dark rims.
Neck: Good length, clean and muscular.
Body : Balanced, short coupled, deep through heart. Ribs deep, well sprung. Level topline.
Forequarters : Forelegs straight with good bone, shoulders well laid back, long in blade with upper arm of equal length placing legs well under body. Elbows close fitting.
Hindquarters : Loin and legs strong and muscular, good second thighs, well bent stifles. Hocks well let down, straight when viewed from rear, neither turning in nor out. Cow-hocks highly undesirable
Feet : Round and cat-like.
Tail : Set on and carried level with back, reaching to hocks, without curl at tip.
Gait / Movement : Powerful with good drive. Straight and true in front and rear. Stride long and free with no sign of hackney action in front.
Coat : Flat or wavy with good feathering, dense water-resisting undercoat
Colour : Any shade of gold or cream, neither red nor mahogany. A few white hairs on chest only permissible. From 2000, only Cream, Gold or Golden will be accepted by the KC on registrations
Size : Height at withers: dogs; 56-61 cms (22-24ins) bitches: 51-56cms (20-22ins).
Faults :Any departure from the foregoing points should be considered a fault and the seriousness with which the fault should be regarded should be in exact proportion to its degree and its effect upon the health and welfare of the dog and on the dog's ability to perform its traditional work.
Note : Male animals should have two apparently normal testicles fully descended into the scrotum
The History of the Golden Retriever

Unlike many breeds, the development of the Golden Retriever in historical terms is fairly recent, and thanks to the painstaking research carried out by breed historians, firstly the late Elma Stonex, and latterly Val Foss and Frank and Anne Weekes, the history is quite defined and documented. The breed originated from a series of matings carried out by Lord Tweedmouth from 1864 onwards. The starting point was his acquisition of a good looking yellow coloured Flat Coated Retriever which he took to his estate at Guisechan, near Inverness in Scotland. He mated this dog to a Tweed Water Spaniel, a breed now long extinct, and then bred on from the offspring of this mating using the occasional outcross to an Irish Setter, a second Tweed Water Spaniel and a black Flat Coated Retriever. The dogs produced proved to be grand workers, biddable and attractive. Puppies from the matings were given to friends and family, notably his nephew, Lord Ilchester, who also bred them. The dogs bred true to type, and so the forerunners of the breed we know today were established. It was not until 1908 that the breed came into the public eye. Lord Harcourt had formed a great liking for the breed, and had gathered on to his estate at Nuneham Park, Oxford, a collection of the dogs descended from the original matings. He decided to exhibit them at the Kennel Club Show in 1908, where they created great interest. They were entered in a class for Any Variety Retriever, and described as Yellow Flatcoated Retrievers. The term 'Golden Retriever' was first coined around this time, and has been attributed to Lord Harcourt. Once they had been seen by the general public, there were many people that wanted to own one for them selves, and the breeds popularity was assured. One of the people that saw them and acquired one for herself was Mrs Charlesworth, who became the greatest enthusiast the breed has ever had. From 1910 when she acquired her first Golden, until her death in 1954, she championed the cause of the breed against allcomers, and nagged her fellow enthusiasts remorselessly to keep the breed as a true dual purpose dog. She, it was who organised her fellow enthusiasts into forming a Golden Retriever Club in 1911, writing a breed standard, and campaigning for the breed to be registered with the Kennel Club as a separate breed. (The Kennel Club had previously registered them as Flatcoated Retrievers). The breed was accepted by the Kennel Club in 1913, and an allocation of Challenge Certificates was made the same year. The race had already been on to see who could win the first Field Trial award with a Golden, and the honour had fallen in 1912 to Captain Hardy with his bitch Vixie, who went on to become an influential dam in the breed. The honour of winning the first C.C.'s on offer proved to be an anti-climax. One enthusiast, Col Le Poer Trench, insisted that the Golden had developed from a breed found in Russia, and had persuaded the Kennel Club to register his dogs as Yellow Russian Retrievers. At Crufts Dog show in 1913, there were classes for Goldens and for Russian Retrievers, but only one set of C.c.'s The best Goldens had to challenge the best Russians for the C.c.'s, and the Russians won both of them! At the next show, however, there were Challenge Certificates exclusively for Goldens, and the honour of being the first to win a C.C. went to Mrs Charlesworth's dog Normanby Sandy and Mr F. W. Herbert's bitch Coquette. The race was then on to win 3 C.c.'s and a Field Trial award and thus become the first Golden Champion, an honour achieved by Mrs Charlesworth with her dog Noranby Campfire. All canine activities came to a halt as the First World War grew in intensity, but the Golden Retriever had done enough to establish itself in the canine world, and the hearts of the dog owning public.
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