AMERICAN COCKER SPANIEL
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DESCRIPTION
The Cocker
Spaniel is a medium sized sturdy dog. The head is rounded with a pronounced
stop. The muzzle is broad and deep with square even jaws. The teeth meet in a
scissors bite. The eyeballs are dark, very round with slight almond shaped eye
rims. Merle Cocker Spaniels can have blue eyes. The long, low-set ears are well
feathered. The topline slopes slightly from the front of the dog to the back and
the legs are straight. The tail is docked. Note: docking tails is illegal in
most parts of Europe. The dewclaws may be removed. The silky coat is flat or
slightly wavy. The hairs are medium length on the body but short and fine on the
head. There is feathering on the ears, chest, abdomen and legs. The coat comes
in any solid color, black with tan points, merle, solid color with tan points,
and parti-color. Examples of Parti color combinations are white with buff or
red, white with black, or white with black and tan points. Field lines have
shorter coats than show lines.
TEMPERAMENT
Bold and keen to
work, the American Cocker Spaniel is equally suited to life as a gundog or as a
household pet. Cheerful, gentle and sweet. This breed is of average
intelligence, and is respectful of its master's authority. Amusing, trustworthy
and charming with an ever-wagging tail. They are active, playful and devoted,
but should be socialized well when they are young to avoid a tendency for
shyness. Cockers who understand their place is under humans, are good with
children. They love everyone and need firm, loving leadership and daily exercise
to be happy. They can be difficult to housebreak. They are mostly easy to train
and get along well with other animals. Do not allow this dog to develop Small
Dog Syndrome, human induced behaviors where the dog believes he is pack leader
to all humans. This can cause a varying degree of behavior issues and is where a
lot of owners go wrong. The goal with all dogs is to achieve a pack leader
status. It is a natural instinct for a dog to have an order in their pack. When
we humans live with dogs, we become their pack. The entire pack
cooperates under a single leader. Lines are clearly defined, and rules are set.
You and all other humans MUST be higher up in the order than the dog. Owners who
allow their dogs to believe they are higher up in the order and/or who do not
provide daily mental and physical exercise will experience a whole different
temperament than the one described above. The dog may
develop shy-sharpness, which is a combination of fear and dominance that can
cause viciousness. Submissive urinating; usually caused by overexcitement, a
lack of daily mental and physical exercise, where they are wound up and their
minds are not given the chance to calm down on a daily basis. Also aggressive
guarding of objects, people and places, obsessive barking, hyper activity and
roaming, among other negative behaviors. There are two types, field lines and
show lines. Field lines are bred for working and have better hunting instincts,
and shorter coats, which is more practical for working in the woods. Both types
make good pets when the owners meet their needs as a canine
animal.
HEIGHT, WEIGHT
Height: Dogs 15 ½
inches (38cm.) Bitches 14 ½ inches (36.8cm.)
Weight: 15-30 pounds (7-14 kg.)
Weight: 15-30 pounds (7-14 kg.)
Living
Conditions
Cockers will do okay
in an apartment if they are adequately exercised, and are fairly active indoors.
A small yard is sufficient. Not suited to live outside alone in a kennel.
Exercise
American Cockers have
plenty of stamina and need regular exercise. They should be taken on daily, long walks. When walking, avoid brushy
thickets that can tangle the coat. Be sure to have the dog heeling beside or
behind the person holding the lead, as in a dog's mind, the leader leads the
way, and that leader needs to be the humans, not the dog.
Life
Expectancy
About 12-15 years.
Litter
Size
1 - 7 puppies -
Average of 5
Origin
GROOMING
Wipe under the eyes
often as they tend to tear. Some owners prefer to leave the coat long, brushing
daily and shampooing frequently with quarterly scissoring and clipping. Others
prefer to clip the coat to medium length to be more functional. Either way, the
dog will need regular trimming. When brushing, be careful not to pull out the
silky hair. This breed is an average shedder.
GROUP
Gun
Dog, AKC Sporting
TRAINING
The Alaskan Malamute is
harder to train than most other dog breeds.
He learns new commands more slowly than the majority of other breeds. You will
need to be extra patient when Training him.
ADOPT
American
Cocker Spaniel adoption
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