MOLE265 792 Posted July 27, 2017 Report Share Posted July 27, 2017 A wee article I came across I thought it was worth a read. Terriers eager for the fray are a familiar sight to anyone whos hunted with the fell foot packs in the steep and spectacularly beautiful Lake District, where foxes are the age-old enemy of Lakeland sheep farmers. Often broken-coated and always long in the leg, these tough little workers were bred for the stamina to run all day with hounds in all weathers and the courage to destroy foxes in rocky fortresses deep underground. Their work and unconditional loyalty are celebrated in hunting verses still sung today: Always remember your terriers/protect them from wet and from cold/for the love of a tyke for his master/can never be measured in gold. lakeland terrier Tommy Dobson founded the Eskdale and Ennerdale hunt in the mid 18th century with light-framed fell hounds famed for their independence and ability to traverse slopes that would spell certain death to their lowland cousins. At the same time, he began developing a suitable stamp of terrier to work alongside his pack by deploying a potent mix of racy Bedlington blood, lines from across the Irish Sea and other game strains of terrier. The result was a leggy, narrow-chested black-and-tan dog that was able to withstand the harsh Lake District weather thanks to a thick weatherproof coat. The description was agreed at a meeting in Whitehaven in 1921, after which the celebrated Yellow Earl (Hugh Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale) became the first president of the Lakeland Terrier Association. The Association is now defunct, but other organisations including the Lakeland Terrier Club (founded in 1932) are still going strong. lakeland terrier In 1928, the breed was officially recognised by the Kennel Club (KC); working and show strands of the Lakeland terrier have taken divergent courses ever since, with a representative of the showing side, Stingray of Derrybah, triumphing in 1967 as champion at both Crufts and the American equivalent. Although the breeding of KC-registered Lakelands is subject to official scrutiny, other working strains have been judiciously refined over the past century. With little public transport and a slow rural pace of life, many areas of the Lakes boasted their own stamp of terrier, based on the sound principle that every outstanding worker was bred from. lakeland terrier Fell breeds are still evolving, claims Barry Todhunter, who has spent the past 45 years either whipping-in to or hunting the famous Blencathra foot pack. The typical Lakeland terrier was black and tan, wire-haired and quite a tidy size to get about in rocks. Then, the Patterdale appeared, but, nowadays, any fell terrier thats black tends to go by that name. In the old days, we used to devote a whole week to hunting the remotest valleys, where farmers were given first chance to try their own terriers if we had a fox to ground. Mr Todhunter points out there are separate classes for Borders, crossbreds, Jack Russells and Lakelands at Cumbrian terrier shows, including Rydal, where a working-terrier certificate used to be a condition of entry. The Blencathras own sporting-dog show is held in May each year at Threlkeld and offers the silver Squire Crozier Cup as the supreme best-in-show trophy. This was won in 2016 by George Normans black-and-tan Lakeland terrier bitch Taz. lakeland terrier My terriers are all workers, confirms retired decorator Mr Norman, who walks hound puppies for the Melbreak foxhounds and Blackcombe beagles at his home on the Cumbrian coast. Lots of folk mistakenly claim to have a true Lakeland line, but mine go back to the old school. A Lakeland must be long in the leg and have a narrow front to fit between cracks in the rocks; your thumbs should meet when you span the body above the shoulder terriers with heavy shoulders are non-starters after a fox in a borran. They need a warm jacket, too. Thats a wiry black-and-tan or red top coat with a dense undercoat beneath. A thin-skinned dog would perish up in the fells. Mr Norman isnt a fan of what he terms pedigree Lakies. Once the KC recognises a breed, its gone out of the window, he believes. Pedigree Lakies have poor coats, long, weak heads and over-exaggerated conformation. They were still workable dogs in the 1950s and 1960s, but not anymore. lakeland terrier Mrs Campbell with Ted on the steps of her treehouse office Pete Smith keeps working Lakeland terriers at his hill farm in North Yorkshire, where he assists the Sinnington with legal fox control, although his dogs also have Patterdale blood. Fell terrier is a loose term used when nobody is sure what they are, he jokes, but all fell terriers are long on the leg, narrow and hard as nails. My favourite, Kim, is out of a red bitch owned by the Ullswater huntsman John Harrison. She wont look at any quarry except fox and I can call her out of an earth, which is unusual for a Lakeland breed most stay with their fox until its dead. Kim sleeps in the house and is good as gold, but she has a brother called Asbo that I wouldnt trust out of my sight. Having owned generations of fell terriers, Dorset fish smoker Mark Firth is only too familiar with the breeds unruly traits. As soon as a bitch gave birth, she became an absolute head banger, he remembers. We now have a Lakeland-labrador cross called Marmite thats perfect shes fast enough to get there, but too gentle to know what to do when she does. lakeland terrier Treble trouble: George Norman with his trio of working terriers on the Cumbrian shores Mr Firth points out that fell and Lakeland types are usually the countrymans first choice for a working terrier. Unlike other breeds, they havent become gentrified, he observes. Said to be mad on quad bikes and pigs, a broken-coated black Patterdale named Porter is an exception to this generalisation. Porter happily attacks the wheels of my quad bike, nips the heels of our pedigree shorthorns and accompanies me when I go running on the fell, admits the Yellow Earls great-great-nephew Charles Lowther, who believes Porters rough coat is a legacy from Lakeland descent. I got him from John Harrison when I succeeded my father as president of the Patterdale show. Jack Russells were a bit yappy for my liking and, although fell terriers have a reputation for being aggressive, Porter is a regular visitor to my pub near Penrith and is very good with people. Hes never been to ground, but is utterly fearless. Charlotte Campbell owns a Lakeland-Border cross that she obtained after putting her hand into a nest box and picking up a rat instead of an egg. Ted was the first small dog Ive ever owned, she explains. When he arrived, I carried him around in my coat like a baby. He grew up to be absolutely brilliant and killed all the rats I was so excited that I kept the body of the first one for a week. lakeland terrier Long on the leg, narrow and hard as nails: Pete Smiths Lakeland terrier Bertie, with his father Charlie and mother Kim The only trouble was, as soon as hed polished off the rats, he started on the hens, Mrs Campbell confesses. He now concentrates on moles and bunnies, but sleeps in my bed at night and regularly runs off. The local gamekeeper is always letting Ted out of snares, but I love him to bits. Its probably just as well that the Campbells smallholding adjoins thousands of acres of open Lancashire fell. All the locals know me as the woman with the little dog, she concludes. I couldnt recommend a fell terrier more highly but they can be hard work and need lots of exercise. You have been warned. 8 Quote Link to post
Haiddheliwr 1,911 Posted July 27, 2017 Report Share Posted July 27, 2017 Good read that! Thanks for sharing mate! Quote Link to post
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