Sep 302011
 

Part of the reason why it is so intringing to read up on the history of the Russian Mennonites is because they were largely agricultural and the Anabaptist influences can be found almost everywhere in Canada. To the East, the Swiss-German settled down, which we now know them as Amish, Old OrderOld German. On the Prairies, the Mennonites of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union immigrated alongside the Hutterites; and to the West, the Dutch of the lowlands took up residence in the valleys. Most of them took up Canadian citizenship during the land rush from mid- to late-1800s.

On the Prairies, there is a joke going around about how everyone has a Russian grandmother due to the widely-accepted practice of pairing pierogi [trans. "dumplings"] and kelbassa [trans. "sausages"] for dinner. However the jab is a bit of a misnomer as most of the settlement blocks are either Swedish, Norwegian, Ukrainian or Polish at the very base of their foundation. The Russian exodus didn’t come until after the Second World War; and the bulk of it stems from the fall of the Soviet Union. So, most people are of mixed ancestry of German, Polish, Ukrainian and several others.

When people move, they tend to bring their dogs with them. For this reason, it is not unusual to find Jindos in the classifieds with the onset of Koreans immigrating to Vancouver. Whether or not the imported dogs have any staying power remains to be seen.

One of such effect is the German Shepherd Dog. They are fairly popular among chicken farmers as yard-dogs. However it is not plausible the early immigrants brought the dogs with them since the German Shepherd is a recently contrived breed at the turn of the 20th century. It is more reasonable to assume the dogs were imported sometimes in the late ’20s, early ’30s; and later caught on among the German farmers simply out of ethnic pride.

On the other hand, if one goes through the archives at Glenbow Museum in Calgary, Alberta, they will see numerous photos of collie-types from the late 1800s and early 1900s predating the formalization of the Border Collies as a trial breed. What these photographs have to tell us have vast implications.

Click to view date and information attributed to the photographs.

If there were any dogs from central and eastern Europe, they were absorbed by collies and farm shepherds as those are the only ones left standing today. For practicality, we can refer to these dogs as American Collies or American Farm Shepherds as many strains were not recognized as individual breed until about the 1940s-1950s  and afterward. It is from this genetic admixture stewed since the 16th century onward with gradual infusion of dogs from all corners of the world, came fore the English Shepherd, the Scotch Collie, the McNab and the Australian Shepherds in the mid-20th century. Since it was not uncommon for dogs to free-roam and to be unfixed, we can then infer this admixture as a new landrace as the morphology and personality of the dog were maintained through selection by their owners.

In fact, if one talks to the elders, the collies were the mainstay for hunting cougars and bears in British Columbia in 19th and early 20th century. The farm dogs were also expected to retrieve ducks and grouses or run rabbits, as well as guard the homestead, hold the hog and herd livestock. They were the go-to dogs prior to the rise of materialist culture and strong sense of individualism. The Labrador Retrievers were newly imported at the turn of the century, and the Canadian kennels did not procure a litter until around 1930s-1940s. Similarly, Coonhounds weren’t imported into the western provinces until about 1920s. Since farm shepherds persist as gundogs into the 1950s, it is clear what is now popular in dog sports of this decade were once strains only the affluent kept and bred. The strong emphasis on the value of pedigree papers from both trial and show breeders threw these working dogs into obscurity; but the Farm Shepherds are all but extinct as an all-purpose dog as one can still find the occasional rare Treeing Shepherds in the Appalachias. So it is best to be wary of claims a particular breed is best for a particular function.

If there were any dogs kept by the immigrants to the New World, it would had been collie-like in appearance with the working quality of a shepherd. Likewise, if there were any brought along with them from the heartland of Prussian and Russian Empires, they were cannibalized. Resistance is futile.

This is where the journey ends. If one wishes to learn more about the farm shepherds of North America and their faucets, there is a resourceful blog maintained by Andy Ward at Old-Time Farm Shepherd weblog. There are also oodles of resources added by owners and associations with a focus on Australian and English Shepherds.

Jun 242011
 

Found this amusing photograph of the Formakin Kennel owned by a famous dog trainer, John Holmes; also one of the founders of the British Welsh Corgi League. He had quite a menagerie. It is interesting to note while Holmes was interested in showing dogs in the 1930s and 1940s, his interest in the ring waned in the ’50s and focused more on working trials and performance sports instead.


via welshcorgi-news.ch [Image: Unknown, 1950s]

May 272011
 

Smithfield Collies are said to be one of the founding compositions of Australian Cattle Dogs. There is a bit of a debate about what a Smithfield Collie actually was, whether it’s an English or Australian type, since there were numerous places in the English-speaking world named Smithfield.

One has to keep in mind, on the British Isles, the Smithfield Collies originally refer the working type of the Old English Sheepdog; rumoured to drive livestocks to the Smithfield meat markets in London. Of course, inspired by the extinct Smithfield Collies of England, several people, including Brian Plummer, set out to recreate the breed. Ironically enough, if they had bothered looking in Tasmania, they would had found something resembling the original Smithfields.

Here is Jack, exhibited as a cattle dog, at the Metropolitan Intercolonial Exhibition held in Sydney in 1898. Breed historians claim he is a Smithfield-type:

via http://stockdogsavvy.wordpress.com [Image: Unknown, 1898]

Smithfield Collies during the time of colonial Australia were said to be only useful as yard work with cattle as their shaggy long coat proved to be wrong for the climate and vegetations of the country. Something else was needed to transform these collies into dogs well-adapted to mustering livestocks from stations to stations over long distance in northern Australia. Unfortunately, the Smithfield-type survives only in the cooler, temperate parts of Australia resembling akin to the climates of the Isles they once hailed from.

Apr 082011
 

Recently, an erroneous comment was made. See, last week, I accounted a quote about Icelandic Sheepdogs imported into the British Empire in the 18th or 19th century, my mistake; however the account I was referring to was this:

In 1650, Sir Thomas Brown wrote: “To England there are sometimes exported from Iceland… a type of dog resembling a fox…. Shepherds in England are eager to acquire them!”

One can find this quote on any website detailing about Icelandic Sheepdogs. Problem is: no one actually fact-checked! Not only the year is wrong and the author’s surname mispelled, people were creative in their interpretations and translations.

The original account came from a correspondence dated in 1663:

Beside shocks and little hairy dogs, they bring another sort over, headed like a fox, which they say are bred betwixt dogs and foxes; these are desired by the shepherds of this country.

For those who wishes to read the letter in its entirety, taken from The Works of Sir Thomas Browne:

Great store of drift-wood, or float-wood, is every year cast up on their shores, brought down by the northern winds, which serveth them for fuel and other uses, the greatest part whereof is fir.

Of bears there are none in the country, but sometimes they are brought down from the north upon ice, while they follow seals, and so are carried away. Two in this manner came over and landed in the north of Island, this last year, 1662.

No conies or hares, but of foxes great plenty, whose white skins are much desired, and brought over into this country.

The last winter, 1662, so cold and lasting with us in England, was the mildest they have had for many years in Island.

Two new eruptions, with slime and smoke, were observed the last year in some mountains about Mount Hecla.

Some hot mineral springs they have, and very effectual, but they make but rude use thereof.

The rivers are large, swift, and rapid, but have many falls, which render them less commodious; they chiefly abound with salmons.

They sow no corn, but receive it from abroad.

They have a kind of large lichen, which dried, becometh hard and sticky, growing very plentifully in many places; whereof they make use for food, either in decoction or powder, some whereof I have by me, different from any with us.

In one part of the country, and not near the sea, there is a large black rock, which, polished, resembleth touchstone, as I have seen in pieces thereof, of various figures.

There is also a rock, whereof I received one fragment, which seems to make it one kind of pisolithes or rather orobites, as made up of small pebbles, in the bigness and shape of the seeds of ervum or orobus.

They have some large well-grained white pebbles, and some kind of white cornelian or agath pebbles, on the shore, which polish well. Old Sir Edmund Bacon, of these parts, made use thereof in his peculiar art of tinging and colouring of stones.

Eor shells found on the sea shore, such as have been brought unto me are but coarse, nor of many kinds, as ordinary turbines, chamas, aspers, laeves, &c.

I have received divers kinds of teeth and bones of cetaceous fishes, unto which they could assign no name.

An exceeding fine russet down is sometimes brought unto us, which their great number of fowls afford, and sometimes store of feathers, consisting of the feathers of small birds.

Beside shocks and little hairy dogs, they bring another sort over, headed like a fox, which they say are bred betwixt dogs and foxes; these are desired by the shepherds of this country.

Green plovers, which are plentiful here in the winter, are found to breed there in the beginning of summer.

Some sheep have been brought over, but of coarse wool, and some horses of mean stature, but strong and hardy; one whereof, kept in the pastures by Yarmouth, in the summer, would often take the sea, swimming a great way, a mile or two, and return the same : when its provision failed in the ship wherein it was brought, for many days fed upon hoops and cask ; nor at the land would, for many months, be brought to feed upon oats.

These accounts I received from a native of Island, who comes yearly into England; and by reason of my long acquaintance and directions I send unto some of his friends against the elephantiasis (leprosy), constantly visits me before his return; and is ready to perform for me what I shall desire in his country; wherein, as in other ways, I shall be very ambitious to serve the noble society, whose most honouring servant I am.

Thomas Browne. ]

Norwich, January 15, 1663.

While the breedist tripe is not entirely off-base since Thomas discussed in details about the trade relations between Iceland and England, nevertheless it is crucial to cite properly; otherwise, there is no credibility. Whither or not the Icelandic Sheepdog is the ancestor of the collie landrace on the British Isles is entirely up to the researcher, however deceptions must be dispelled and the ambiguous cleared.

With this blunder amended, it’s time to go back to regular programming!

Mar 182011
 

via chestofbooks.com [Image: W. E. Mason's Dogs of all Nations in 1915]

I prefer these dogs: such intelligent and expressive eyes with head cocked waiting for instruction or puzzle-solving– I can never figure out which is which. The latter is preferred: the puzzle-solving mindset.

Some people in the border collie world speculates the Icelandic Sheepdog is the ancestor of the collie landrace based on anthropological deductions of human migrations and language flows. Such a proposal is quite possible because before the fanciers got ahold of the Shetland Sheepdogs, they resembled more closely to the Icelandic Sheepdogs. Of course, Buhund fanciers like to claim their breed is the origin of the Icelandic Sheepdog and all of the Scandinavian spitzes. Do the math.

The theory is plausible. It’s easy to see where the Border Collie gets their traits from within the Icelandic Sheepdog; even the stereotypical coat pattern is shown in the old photograph above. All one has to do is just lengthen the hair and select for the strong eyes.

The Buhund thing? Hate to burst the romantic bubble here, not saying it’s false: if the claims are based on dog burials in Viking graves and tomb sites predating the Vikings, how can anyone ensure the dogs remained static over thousands of years? Look at how much conformation has changed in the field, in trials and show rings within the last fifty years!

However, it’s still a bliss to ponder about: the origin of border collies that is.

Mar 112011
 

via en.wikipedia.org (circa 1930s) [Image: National Library of Australia]

Changing it up a bit. And yes, Australia gets snow. This picture was taken on Snowy Mountains in New South Wales. Note the difference between the Hall’s strain used in Australia and the McDiven’s strain exported to the States in the 1950s which we still observe nowadays on our side of the pond.

I still love the mottled coat on the heelers.

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