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| Dog shows Our show successes, how to prepare a CzW, how to show him... |
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#6 | |
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Quote:
I fully agree with you with one exception: IF the dog will have the right angulation than the hock joint will EXACTLY under the "ischium". Usually it is not with the right angle because USUALLY the dogs have wrong angulation (in the most cases they are overangulated - with the angulation more or less similar to these of German Shepherd Dogs). I wrote these articles a VERY long time ago Now I plan to reedit all of them and not only post better photos but fix some parts which are not clear enough.... To see the angulation of the dog it must be standing in the show position which I showed - the legs MUST be vertical to the ground. Of course a judge will be able to judge the legs even if the dog is not standing in the right possition because you always can see if the angulation is OK or not. Here you have two examples: FIRST (the photo is not perfect because it is also almost a puppy ![]() Here you can see the right (show) position of the legs & the right (standard) angulation. As written in the standard: "An imaginary vertical line drawn from the point of the ischium, would run midway through the hock joint." ) SECOND: ![]() Here you have also the case that the line comming from the ischum goes through the hock joint BUT the legs are not vertical to the ground. WHY? Because of bad angulation - if you would move the legs to the "show possion" you will have to move them very far to the back. What you will get would be an angulation of a German Shepherd Dog. Really bad angulation of a Wolfdog. Simply said: if the legs of a dog are standing so that the line comming from the ischum goes through the hock joint BUT the legs are NOT vertical to the ground it means only one: the angulation is wrong. Now all people will for sure check their dogs And for the end - two photos of the wolves with a nice angulation and (almost) show position.... ![]()
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