English Foxhound

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English Foxhound aresociable, affectionate, gentle

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English Foxhound are
sociable, affectionate, gentle.
They are in the hound group.
LIFE EXPECTANCY:
10-13 years.

Head: Should be of full size, but by no means heavy. Brow pronounced, but not high or sharp. There should be a good length and breadth, sufficient to give in a dog hound a girth in front of the ears of fully 16 inches. The nose should be long (41⁄2 inches) and wide, with open nostrils. Ears set on low and lying close to the cheeks. Most English hounds are "rounded" which means that about 11⁄2 inches is taken off the end of the ear. The teeth must meet squarely, either a pig- mouth (overshot) or undershot being a disqualification.
Neck: Must be long and clean, without the slightest throatiness, not less than 10 inches from cranium to shoulder. It should taper nicely from shoulders to head, and the upper outline should be slightly convex.
The Shoulders should be long and well clothed with muscle, without being heavy, especially at the points. They must be well sloped, and the true arm between the front and the elbow must be long and muscular, but free from fat or lumber. Chest and Back Ribs - The chest should girth over 31 inches in a 24-inch hound, and the back ribs must be very deep.
Back and Loin: Must both be very muscular, running into each other without any contraction between them. The couples must be wide, even to raggedness, and the topline of the back should be absolutely level, the stern well set on and carried gaily but not in any case curved over the back like a squirrel's tail. The end should taper to a point and there should be a fringe of hair below. The hindquarters or propellers are required to be very strong, and as endurance is of even greater consequence than speed, straight stifles are preferred to those much bent as in a Greyhound. Elbows set quite straight, and neither turned in nor out are a sine qua non. They must be well let down by means of the long true arm above mentioned.
Legs and Feet: Every Master of Foxhounds insists on legs as straight as a post, and as strong; size of bone at the ankle being especially regarded as all important. The desire for straightness had a tendency to produce knuckling-over, which at one time was countenanced, but in recent years this defect has been eradicated by careful breeding and intelligent adjudication, and one sees very little of this trouble in the best modern Foxhounds. The bone cannot be too large, and the feet in all cases should be round and catlike, with well-developed knuckles and strong horn, which last is of the greatest importance.
Color and Coat: Not regarded as very important, so long as the former is a good "hound color," and the latter is short, dense, hard, and glossy. Hound colors are black, tan, and white, or any combination of these three, also the various "pies" compounded of white and the color of the hare and badger, or yellow, or tan. The symmetry of the Foxhound is of the greatest importance, and what is known as "quality" is highly regarded by all good judges

Scale of Points
Head 5 Neck 10 Shoulders 10 Chest and back ribs 10 Back and loin 15 Hindquarters 10 Elbows 5

Legs and feet 20 Color and coat 5 Stern 5 Symmetry 5 Total 100
Disqualification: Pig-mouth (overshot) or undershot.

About the Breed:
The English Foxhound is a substantial galloping hound of great stamina. His long legs are straight as a gatepost, and just as sturdy. The back is perfectly level. And the chest is very deep, 'girthing' as much as 31 inches on a hound measuring 24 inches at the shoulder, ensuring plenty of lung power for a grueling day's hunt. These pack-oriented, scent-driven hounds are gentle and sociable, but rarely seen as house pets. They can be so driven by a primal instinct for pursuit that not much else, including training, matters to them. Owning these noble creatures is best left to huntsmen who kennel packs of hounds or to those experienced in meeting the special challenges of life with swift, powerful hounds hardwired for the chase. The English Foxhound is the epitome of what serious dog breeders strive for: beauty, balance, and utility. The long legs are straight as a gatepost, and just as sturdy. The back is perfectly level. And the chest is very deep, 'girthing' as much as 31 inches on a hound measuring 24 inches at the shoulder, ensuring plenty of lung power for a grueling day's hunt. 'Next to an old Greek statue,' a poet wrote, 'there are few such combinations of grace and strength as in a fine Foxhound.'

History:
In medieval England, aristocrats and their hounds hunted stag in the vast forests that had overtaken Britain during the Dark Ages that followed the fall of the Roman Empire. The killing of foxes, those wily henhouse poachers, was considered merely a chore for lowly farmers and groundskeepers.
This changed with the waning of the Middle Ages, as the population grew, the forests receded, and the deer population dwindled. The British gentry, wishing to continue their ritualized horses-and-hounds pastime, slowly phased out stag hunting in favor of a new type of quarry: the red fox.
The traditional British foxhunt, with packs of bawling hounds and mounted hunters thundering over rolling acres of lawn and hedge, began in the 1600s. 'Masters of hounds' developed a dog for this lordly pastime by breeding big stag-hunting hounds (for nose and endurance) to leggy Greyhound-type hounds (for speed and agility). The result was the English Foxhound, whose form and demeanor remain remarkably unchanged today.
By the 1700s, foxhunts were all the rage among the English upper crust. Colonial American sportsmen, including George Washington and his wealthy Virginia neighbors, re-created a bit of their mother country by staging English-style foxhunts on their plantations. Washington was a key figure in creating the American Foxhound, a slimmer, taller hound developed by crosses of English Foxhounds to imported French hounds from the kennels of the Marquis de Lafayette. It is likely also that English Foxhound blood courses through the veins of coonhound breeds developed by American frontiersmen.

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