The Australian Cattle Dog (ACD or Cattle Dog), is a breed of herding dog originally developed
in Australia for driving cattle over long distances across rough terrain. In the 19th century,
New South Wales cattle farmer Thomas Hall crossed the dogs used by drovers in his parents' home
county, Northumberland, with dingoes he had tamed. The resulting dogs were known as Halls
Heelers. After Hall's death in 1870, the dogs became available beyond the Hall family and their
associates, and were subsequently developed into two modern breeds, the Australian Cattle Dog and
the Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog. Robert Kaleski was influential in the Cattle Dog's early
development, and wrote the first standard for the breed.
in Australia for driving cattle over long distances across rough terrain. In the 19th century,
New South Wales cattle farmer Thomas Hall crossed the dogs used by drovers in his parents' home
county, Northumberland, with dingoes he had tamed. The resulting dogs were known as Halls
Heelers. After Hall's death in 1870, the dogs became available beyond the Hall family and their
associates, and were subsequently developed into two modern breeds, the Australian Cattle Dog and
the Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog. Robert Kaleski was influential in the Cattle Dog's early
development, and wrote the first standard for the breed.
Breed Standard
General Appearance
The general appearance is that of a strong compact, symmetrically built working dog, with the ability and willingness to carry out his allotted task however arduous. Its combination of substance, power, balance and hard muscular condition must convey the impression of great agility, strength and endurance. Any tendency to grossness or weediness is a serious fault.
Characteristics
As the name implies the dog's prime function, and one in which he has no peer, is the control and movement of cattle in both wide open and confined areas. Always alert, extremely intelligent, watchful, courageous and trustworthy, with an implicit devotion to duty making it an ideal dog.
Head and Skull
The head is strong and must be in balance with other proportions of the dog and in keeping with its general conformation. The broad skull is slightly curved between the ears, flattening to a slight but definite stop. The cheeks muscular, neither coarse nor prominent with the underjaw strong, deep and well developed. The foreface is broad and well filled in under the eyes, tapering gradually to form a medium length, deep, powerful muzzle with the skull and muzzle on parallel planes. The lips are tight and clean. Nose black. Eyes-- The eyes should be of oval shape and medium size, neither prominent nor sunken and must express alertness and intelligence. A warning or suspicious glint is characteristic when approached by strangers. Eye color, dark brown. Ears-- The ears should be of moderate size, preferably small rather than large, broad at the base, muscular, pricked and moderately pointed neither spoon nor bat eared. The ears are set wide apart on the skull, inclining outwards, sensitive in their use and pricked when alert, the leather should be thick in texture and the inside of the ear fairly well furnished with hair. Mouth-- The teeth, sound, strong and evenly spaced, gripping with a scissor-bite, the lower incisors close behind and just touching the upper. As the dog is required to move difficult cattle by heeling or biting, teeth which are sound and strong are very important.
Neck
The neck is extremely strong, muscular, and of medium length broadening to blend into the body and free from throatiness.
Forequarters
The shoulders are strong, sloping, muscular and well angulated to the upper arm and should not be
too closely set at the point of the withers. The forelegs have strong, round bone, extending to the feet and should be straight and parallel when viewed from the front, but the pasterns should show flexibility with a slight angle to the forearm when viewed from the side. Although the shoulders are muscular and the bone is strong, loaded shoulders and heavy fronts will hamper correct movement and limit working ability.
Body
The length of the body from the point of the breast bone, in a straight line to the buttocks, is greater than the height at the withers, as 10 is to 9. The topline is level, back strong with ribs well sprung and carried well back not barrel ribbed. The chest is deep, muscular and moderately broad with the loins broad, strong and muscular and the flanks deep. The dog is strongly coupled.
Hindquarters
The hindquarters are broad, strong and muscular. The croup is rather long and sloping, thighs long, broad and well developed, the stifles well turned and the hocks strong and well let down. When viewed from behind, the hind legs, from the hocks to the feet, are straight and placed parallel, neither close nor too wide apart.
Feet
The feet should be round and the toes short, strong, well arched and held close together. The pads are hard and deep, and the nails must be short and strong.
Tail
The set on of tail is moderately low, following the contours of the sloping croup and of length to reach approximately to the hock. At rest it should hang in a very slight curve. During movement or excitement the tail may be raised, but under no circumstances should any part of the tail be carried past a vertical line drawn through the root. The tail should carry a good brush.
Gait/Movement
The action is true, free, supple and tireless and the movement of the shoulders and forelegs is in unison with the powerful thrust of the hindquarters. The capability of quick and sudden movement is essential. Soundness is of paramount importance and stiltiness, loaded or slack shoulders, straight shoulder placement, weakness at elbows, pasterns or feet, straight stifles, cow or bow hocks, must be regarded as serious faults. When trotting the feet tend to come closer together at ground level as speed increases, but when the dog comes to rest he should stand four square.
Coat
The coat is smooth, a double coat with a short dense undercoat. The outer-coat is close, each hair straight, hard, and lying flat, so that it is rain-resisting. Under the body, to behind the legs, the coat is longer and forms near the thigh a mild form of breeching. On the head (including the inside of the ears), to the front of the legs and feet, the hair is short. Along the neck it is longer and thicker. A coat either too long or too short is a fault. As an average, the hairs on the body should be from 2.5 to 4 cms (approx. 1-1.5 ins) in length.
Color (Blue)
The color should be blue, blue-mottled or blue speckled with or without other markings.
The permissible markings are black, blue or tan markings on the head, evenly distributed for preference. The forelegs tan midway up the legs and extending up the front to breast and throat, with tan on jaws; the hindquarters tan on inside of hindlegs, and inside of thighs, showing down the front of the stifles and broadening out to the outside of the hindlegs from hock to toes. Tan undercoat is permissible on the body providing it does not show through the blue outer coat. Black markings on the body are not desirable.
Color (Red Speckle)
The color should be of good even red speckle all over, including the undercoat, (neither white nor cream), with or without darker red markings on the head. Even head markings are desirable. Red markings on the body are permissible but not desirable.
Size
Height:
Dogs 46-51 cms (approx. 18-20 ins) at withers
Bitches 43-48 cms (approx. 17-19 ins) at withers
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.
Temperament
The Cattle Dog's loyalty and protective instincts make it a self-appointed guardian to the Stockman, his herd and his property. Whilst naturally suspicious of strangers, must be amenable to handling, particularly in the Show ring. Any feature of temperament or structure foreign to a working dog must be regarded as a serious fault.
Australian Cattle Dog, Dogs 101 Video
I have two Australian Cattle Dogs, one of which I adopted through PetFinder.com. He is a beautiful dog that was brought down from Portland to us sight unseen by a series of dedicated rescue volunteers. I wish there were more adoptive homes for these dogs than there are those dogs up for adoption. There's no need to go to a breeder when there are so many available on petfinder.com. My cattle dogs are great companions, smart, beautiful, funny (!), loyal, protective and ready to go at the drop of a hat.
ReplyDeleteYou have pictures of australian shepherds on here which are different from Australian Cattle Dogs in which you are describing. Australian Shepherds (Aussies) and Australian Cattle Dogs (ACD or Cattle dogs) are both highly intelligent breeds in the herding class and quite possibly cousins from the same origin down the lines somewhere but they are none-the-less different breeds of AKC.
ReplyDeleteIn my experience, ACD which are from and bred in Australian origin are much more effective in herding of massive and outstanding sizes of livestock. They are short-haired and low maintenance-appearance-wise and vigorous, forceful, and extremely fierce when it comes to their tactics in herding. Aussies or Australian Shepherds which actually have an American origin (hence the name that does not imply) tend to have more elegant look to them-some of which require a bit of upkeep-brushing and maintaining regularly and more graceful-stride, however they are extremely dynamic, diverse, agile and vigilant.
Both breeds are extremely intelligent, energetic and require owners who have educated and a very thorough understanding and have a purpose for these amazing audacious working breeds