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Show Me!
-By: D. Caroline Coile Ph.D.
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Raising a Champion: A Beginner's Guide to Showing Dogs
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The Joy of Breeding Your Own Show Dog (Howell Dog Book of Distinction)
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The Absolute Beginner's Guide to Showing Your Dog (Absolute Beginner's Guide Series)
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The Dog Show: 125 Years of Westminster
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The Mystery at the Dog Show (Boxcar Children Mysteries)
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Dog Showing for Beginners (Howell reference books)
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American Kennel Club Dog Shows Article

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This is a selection made from among articles on American Kennel Club Dog Shows. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

What To Do During The Judging

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Do not talk to the judge, or attempt to talk to him, while you are waiting for the dog show class to begin. Even if you have met the judge socially this is no time for a cozy chat. Don't strike up a conversation with the steward or with anyone sitting on the ringside - be ready to start.

While waiting in the ring for the class to begin it is a good idea not to let your dog get in a sloppy position. Frequently a judge's eye will roam over the waiting entries, and it is to your dog's advantage if he looks well at this moment. However, it is not necessary that your dog be in a show pose, unless the judge is actually making an attempt to judge the dogs while he is waiting.

This is important. It doesn't matter which of the breeds you may be showing, never hold your show lead with two hands. The lead should always be held completely in the left hand, either looped, crumpled up, or folded. There is nothing in showing a dog that points out inexperience so quickly and looks less graceful in the ring than a lead stretched between the left hand and the right hand in front of the handler's body. It looks as though the handler expected the dog to run away and he was prepared to "hold on with both hands" - a bad impression to give. Actually, the right hand is not doing a thing except holding on to the end of the lead, and with the lead in this poor grasp the handler's arms are in an ungraceful position; he does not have complete freedom of wrist movement without which he cannot as easily control the direction in which the dog is traveling nor the proper gait of the dog.

The correct way is very simple; try it. Put the lead on your dog. Hold your left arm at right angle to your body and ball up in your left hand all the excess lead necessary to make the lead taut between the dog and your hand. The lead will be longer for a small dog, shorter for a tall dog.


Other American Kennel Club Dog Shows related Articles

Choosing The Right Show Dog Breed For You
The True Definition Of A Female Dog
Tips To Prevent Disqualification Of Your Dog
Equipment That You Will Need For The Show
Purchasing A Show Dog Puppy

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American Kennel Club Dog Shows News

Two Inland teens making their way in world of dog showmanship - Riverside Press Enterprise

Emalia Williams, of Anza, and Lauren Texter, of Redlands, are well-rounded scholar athletes, but they also excel in an extracurricular activity that consumes much of their time. The 15-year-olds are following in their mothers' footsteps in the dog ...

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What Is the Most Disloyal Dog Breed? An answer to the Explainer's 2008 ... - Slate

Three weeks ago, the Explainer released the annual list of questions we were either unable or unwilling to answer in 2008 . Among this year's entries were brainteasers like "Why do women like soup?" and "If someone with DNA from the Stone Age were ...

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Elburn 9-year-old living dream of showing dogs - Elburn Herald

When Corinne Kolzow was a toddler, she loved watching dog shows on TV. Since then, taking her own dog into the ring was the Elburn girl's dream. “She was in a stroller, wanting to do this,” Corinne's mother Hannah Kozlow said. When Corinne was ...

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A dogged quest - Baltimore Sun

There are 75 million dog stories in America. This is one of them. It's not about a hero dog, or a movie dog, or a dog show-winning dog, or a rescue dog, or a therapy dog - just a plain old dog of unknown parentage that happens to be mine. He came ...

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VIDEO EXTRA: In dogged pursuit - Las Cruces Sun-News

Eight teams, made of one canine and one person, participated Sunday in the American Kennel Club-certified Variable Surface Tracking Test sponsored by the Tracking Phoebe, a 9-year-old Labrador retriever, leads her owner, Nancy Chanover, of Las Cruces ...

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