| Kelpies are very active, medium
sized, intelligent, loyal Australian working dogs. I would not have any other breed and
recommend them to someone with time to spend exercising and training their dog. You will
have a loyal companion in return.
I do not recommend kelpies for someone who does not
have time to spend with their dog, or for someone that will not treat their dog kindly.
Kelpies respond to kindness, and will willingly work (whether stock work, obedience,
tracking or agility) for someone who rewards their efforts.
Kelpies are loyal dogs to the point of being
jealous. Occasionally fights or squabbles break out at my home due to jealousy of another
dog being near me. Awareness of this problem will help manage it.
My kelpies do not receive huge amounts of exercise
or stimulation - I am sure they would benefit from more, but they are kept happy with the
following exercise and outings:
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they run together all day in my back yard (40m x 30m) - occasionally some
are separated from the others (bitches in season, puppies etc, in which case they may get
more individual exercise such as bike rides) |
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they get about
15 minutes per day free running and swimming (supervised)
in the paddocks - whilst I am feeding my horses |
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they get obedience trained for 10 - 15 minutes a couple of times a week |
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they each get taken out to show training, puppy preschool or obedience
class once per week |
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they get taken out running beside my bike for 15 - 30 mins,
about once a week, once they are 9 months old ( I use a "WalkyDog" on my bike
to keep them safe). |
I don't think this is a huge amount of exercise to
have to give a dog, but they will surely become problem dogs if kept in a suburban
backyard without exercise. I believe that the mental stimulation of being taken out, or
given obedience training contributes to their exercise and tires them out just as physical
work does.
The kelpie standard - Australian
National Kennel Council 1994
FCI Standard 293
Country of Origin - Australia
General Appearance - The
general appearance shall be that of a lithe, active dog of great quality, showing hard
muscular condition combined with great suppleness of limb and conveying the capability of
untiring work. It must be free from any suggestion of weediness.
Characteristics - The kelpie
is extremely alert, eager and highly intelligent, with a mild tractable disposition and an
almost inexhaustible energy, with marked loyalty and devotion to duty. It has a natural
instinct and aptitude in the working of sheep, both in open country and in the yard. Any
defect of structure or temperament foreign to a working dog must be regarded as
uncharacteristic.
Temperament - (See under
characteristics)
Head and Skull - The head is
in proportion to the size of the dog, the skull slightly rounded, and broad between the
ears. The forehead running in a straight profile towards a pronounced stop. The cheeks are
neither coarse nor prominent, but round to the foreface, which is cleanly chiselled and
defined. The muzzle, preferably slightly shorter in length than the skull. Lips tight and
clean and free from looseness. The nose colouring conforms to that of the body coat. The
overall shape and contours produce a rather fox-like expression, which is softened by the
almond shaped eyes.
Eyes - The eyes are almond
shaped, of medium size, clearly defined at the corners, and show an intelligent and eager
expression. The colour of the eyes to be brown, harmonising with the colour of the coat.
In the case of blue dogs a lighter coloured eye is permissible.
Ears - The ears are pricked
and running to a fine point at the tips, the leather fine but strong at the base, set wide
apart on the skull and inclining outwards, slightly curved on the outer edge and of
moderate size. The inside of the ears is well furnished with hair.
Mouth - The teeth should be
sound, strong and evenly spaced, the lower incisors just behind, but touching the upper,
that is a scissor bite.
Neck - The neck is of
moderate length, strong, slightly arched, gradually moulding in to the shoulders, free
from throatiness and showing a fair amount of ruff.
Forequarters - The shoulders
should be clean, muscular, well sloping with the shoulder blades close set at the withers.
The upper arm should be at a right angle with the shoulder blade. Elbows neither in nor
out. The forelegs should be muscular with strong but refined bone, straight and parallel
when viewed from the front. When viewed from the side the pasterns should show a slight
slope to ensure flexibility of movement and the ability to turn quickly.
Body - The ribs are well
sprung, and the chest must be deep rather than wide, with a firm, level topline, strong
and well muscled loins and good depth of flank. The length of the dog from the forechest
in a straight line to the buttocks, is greater than the height at the withers as 10 is to
9.
Hindquarters - The
hindquarters should show breadth and strength, with the croup rather long and sloping, the
stifles well turned and the hocks fairly 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, strong, deep in pads, with close knit, well arched toes and strong short nails.
Tail - The tail during rest
should hang in a very slight curve. During movement or excitement it may be raised but
under no circumstances should the tail be carried past a vertical line drawn through the
root. It should be furnished with a good brush. Set on position to blend with sloping
croup, and it should reach approximately to the hock.
Gait/Movement - To produce
the almost limitless stamina demanded of a working sheepdog in wide open spaces the Kelpie
must be perfectly sound, both in construction and movement. Any tendency to cow hocks, bow
hocks, stiltiness, loose shoulders or restricted movement, weaving or plaiting is a serious
fault. Movement should be free and tireless and the dog must have the ability to turn
suddenly at speed. When trotting the feet tend to come closer together at ground level as
speed increases but when the dog comes to rest it stands four square.
Coat - The coat is a double
coat with a short dense undercoat. The outercoat 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 forming a ruff. The tail should be furnished with a good brush. A
coat either too long or too short is a fault. As an average, the hairs on the body should
be from 2 to 3 cms (approx. 0.75 - 1.25 ins) in length.
Colour - Black, black and
tan, red, red and tan, fawn, chocolate and smoke blue.
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.
Note - Male animals should
have two apparently normal testicles fully descended into the scrotum.
Many people ask me
what a fawn kelpie looks like - here's a picture of one
-
Callicoma Wakiti Gem
and here's two
blues as some people get the blues and the fawns mixed up:
Ch Oatland
Pipistrelle CD and Ch Oatland Vespadelus
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