German Shepherd Dog
This is the breed standard for the German Shepherd Dog
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Contact Information
| German Shepherd Dog Club of America | |
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Secretary Corresponding : |
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Address: 2448 Johnstown Rd, |
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Website: www.gsdca.org |
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Email: LauraEG@aol.com |
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Essentials
ESSENTIALS OF THE GERMAN SHEPHERD DOG: Active and enlivened,
the German Shepherd Dog immediately impresses with strength, agility, and form
in a medium-sized, deep bodied, smooth and substantial animal. The ideal dog
denotes at once noble bearing and quality performance. The cleanly chiseled
head carries moderately pointed well-proportioned ears, held erect when alert;
medium-sized almond-shaped eyes, as dark as possible; and a powerful jaw,
set in a scissors bite. The neck too is clean-cut, strong and muscular. The
body is deep and solid, never bulky or lanky. Shoulder blades are long and
obliquely angled; they are laid on flat and not placed forward. Chest is deep
and capacious; ribs are well sprung and long. Moderate tuck up. The withers are
higher than and slope into the level back. The back is straight, very strongly
developed and relatively short. (The desired overall length is derived not from
a long back but from the relation of length to height: the sum of the
forequarters, back, and hindquarters to the length from ground to wither.)
Weight: 75-95 pounds (34-43 kg). Height: 22-26 inches (56-66 cm). The tail is
bushy and hangs in a slight saber curl. The dog has a medium-length double coat.
The outer coat is harsh, straight, and dense; it lies close to the body. The
head, legs, and paws are covered with short hair, the neck with longer, thicker
hair. Color varies in black and tan, with most variations being acceptable.
Strong rich colors are in preference.
Historical Summary
The German Shepherd dog breed has its origin in the late 1800s when Max von Stephanitz from Germany began developing a breed that would later become the dog we know today as the German Shepherd.Von Stephanitz desired to produce a dog breed that could be utilized as an all-around working dog.Developed from various farm and herding dogs of his time, von Stephanitz's original German Shepherd was derived from a herding dog he acquired in 1899, and he and his friend Artur Meyer formed the Verein fur Deutsche Schaferhunde which was the first club in the German Shepherd dog breed history. This club and von Stephanitz kept tight control over the breed until his death in 1936.
He determined which dogs would be used to breed based on how well they did in various shows and trials that were the precursor to the Schutzhund tests still performed today. His main criteria for judging a dog's success were both its usefulness coupled with its intelligence. Von Stephanitz also promoted the utility of the breed to the German government for work in both the police and the military as well as other all-purpose uses as a working dog breed.
General Appearance
The first impression of a good German Shepherd Dog is that of a strong, agile,
well muscled animal, alert and full of life. It is well balanced, with
harmonious development of the forequarter and hindquarter. The dog is longer
than tall, deep-bodied, and presents an outline of smooth curves rather than
angles. It looks substantial and not spindly, giving the impression, both at
rest and in motion, of muscular fitness and nimbleness without any look of
clumsiness or soft living. The ideal dog is stamped with a look of quality and
nobility--difficult to define, but unmistakable when present. Secondary sex
characteristics are strongly marked, and every animal gives a definite
impression of masculinity or femininity, according to its sex.
Temperament
The breed has a distinct personality marked by direct and fearless, but not
hostile, expression, self-confidence and a certain aloofness that does not lend
itself to immediate and indiscriminate friendships. The dog must be
approachable, quietly standing its ground and showing confidence and willingness
to meet overtures without itself making them. It is poised, but when the
occasion demands, eager and alert; both fit and willing to serve in its capacity
as companion, watchdog, blind leader, herding dog, or guardian, whichever the
circumstances may demand. The dog must not be timid, shrinking behind its master
or handler; it should not be nervous, looking about or upward with anxious
expression or showing nervous reactions, such as tucking of tail, to strange
sounds or sights. Lack of confidence under any surroundings is not typical of
good character. Any of the above deficiencies in character which indicate
shyness must be penalized as very serious faults and any dog exhibiting
pronounced indications of these must be excused from the ring. It must be
possible for the judge to observe the teeth and to determine that both testicles
are descended. Any dog that attempts to bite the judge must be disqualified.
The ideal dog is a working animal with an incorruptible character combined with
body and gait suitable for the arduous work that constitutes its primary
purpose.
Size, Proportion,
Substance
The desired height for males at the top of the highest point of the
shoulder blade is 24 to 26 inches; and for bitches, 22 to 24 inches.
The German Shepherd Dog is longer than tall, with
the most desirable proportion as 10 to 8½. The length is measured from
the point of the prosternum or breastbone to the rear edge of the pelvis, the
ischial tuberosity. The desirable long proportion is not derived from a long
back, but from overall length with relation to height, which is achieved by
length of forequarter and length of withers and hindquarter, viewed from the
side.
Head
The head is noble, cleanly chiseled, strong without coarseness, but above
all not fine, and in proportion to the body. The head of the male is distinctly
masculine, and that of the bitch distinctly feminine.
The expression keen, intelligent and
composed. Eyes of medium size, almond shaped, set a little obliquely and
not protruding. The color is as dark as possible. Ears are moderately
pointed, in proportion to the skull, open toward the front, and carried erect
when at attention, the ideal carriage being one in which the center lines of the
ears, viewed from the front, are parallel to each other and perpendicular to the
ground. A dog with cropped or hanging ears must be disqualified.
Seen from the front the forehead is only moderately
arched, and the skull slopes into the long, wedge-shaped muzzle without abrupt
stop. The muzzle is long and strong, and its topline is parallel to the
topline of the skull. Nose black. A dog with a nose that is not
predominantly black must be disqualified. The lips are firmly
fitted. Jaws are strongly developed. Teeth --42 in number--20 upper and
22 lower--are strongly developed and meet in a scissors bite in which part of
the inner surface of the upper incisors meet and engage part of the outer
surface of the lower incisors. An overshot jaw or a level bite is undesirable.
An undershot jaw is a disqualifying fault. Complete dentition is to be
preferred. Any missing teeth other than first premolars is a serious fault.
Neck, Topline, Body
The neck is strong and muscular, clean-cut and relatively long,
proportionate in size to the head and without loose folds of skin. When the dog
is at attention or excited, the head is raised and the neck carried high;
otherwise typical carriage of the head is forward rather than up and but little
higher than the top of the shoulders, particularly in motion.
Topline-- The withers
are higher than and sloping into the level back. The back is straight,
very strongly developed without sag or roach, and relatively short.
The whole structure of the body gives an
impression of depth and solidity without bulkiness.
Chest--Commencing at the
prosternum, it is well filled and carried well down between the legs. It is deep
and capacious, never shallow, with ample room for lungs and heart, carried well
forward, with the prosternum showing ahead of the shoulder in profile. Ribs
well sprung and long, neither barrel-shaped nor too flat, and carried down to a
sternum which reaches to the elbows. Correct ribbing allows the elbows to move
back freely when the dog is at a trot. Too round causes interference and throws
the elbows out; too flat or short causes pinched elbows. Ribbing is carried well
back so that the loin is relatively short. Abdomen firmly held and not
paunchy. The bottom line is only moderately tucked up in the loin.
Loin Viewed from the top,
broad and strong. Undue length between the last rib and the thigh, when viewed
from the side, is undesirable. Croup long and gradually sloping.
Tail bushy, with the last
vertebra extended at least to the hock joint. It is set smoothly into the croup
and low rather than high. At rest, the tail hangs in a slight curve like a
saber. A slight hook- sometimes carried to one side-is faulty only to the extent
that it mars general appearance. When the dog is excited or in motion, the curve
is accentuated and the tail raised, but it should never be curled forward beyond
a vertical line. Tails too short, or with clumpy ends due to ankylosis, are
serious faults. A dog with a docked tail must be disqualified.
Forequarters
The shoulder blades are long and obliquely angled, laid on flat and not placed
forward. The upper arm joins the shoulder blade at about a right angle. Both the
upper arm and the shoulder blade are well muscled. The forelegs, viewed from all
sides, are straight and the bone oval rather than round. The pasterns are strong
and springy and angulated at approximately a 25-degree angle from the vertical.
Dewclaws on the forelegs may be removed, but are normally left on. The feet
are short, compact with toes well arched, pads thick and firm, nails short and
dark.
Hindquarters
The whole assembly of the thigh, viewed from the side, is broad, with both upper
and lower thigh well muscled, forming as nearly as possible a right angle. The
upper thigh bone parallels the shoulder blade while the lower thigh bone
parallels the upper arm. The metatarsus (the unit between the hock joint and the
foot) is short, strong and tightly articulated. The dewclaws, if any, should be
removed from the hind legs. Feet as in front.
Coat
The ideal dog has a double coat of medium length. The outer coat should be as
dense as possible, hair straight, harsh and lying close to the body. A slightly
wavy outer coat, often of wiry texture, is permissible. The head, including the
inner ear and foreface, and the legs and paws are covered with short hair, and
the neck with longer and thicker hair. The rear of the forelegs and hind legs
has somewhat longer hair extending to the pastern and hock, respectively.
Faults in coat include soft, silky, too long outer coat, woolly, curly, and
open coat.
Color
The German Shepherd Dog varies in color, and most colors are permissible. Strong
rich colors are preferred. Pale, washed-out colors and blues or livers are
serious faults. A white dog must be disqualified.
Gait
A German Shepherd Dog is a trotting dog, and its structure has been developed to
meet the requirements of its work. General Impression-- The gait is
outreaching, elastic, seemingly without effort, smooth and rhythmic, covering
the maximum amount of ground with the minimum number of steps. At a walk it
covers a great deal of ground, with long stride of both hind legs and forelegs.
At a trot the dog covers still more ground with even longer stride, and moves
powerfully but easily, with coordination and balance so that the gait appears to
be the steady motion of a well-lubricated machine. The feet travel close to the
ground on both forward reach and backward push. In order to achieve ideal
movement of this kind, there must be good muscular development and ligamentation.
The hindquarters deliver, through the back, a powerful forward thrust which
slightly lifts the whole animal and drives the body forward. Reaching far under,
and passing the imprint left by the front foot, the hind foot takes hold of the
ground; then hock, stifle and upper thigh come into play and sweep back, the
stroke of the hind leg finishing with the foot still close to the ground in a
smooth follow-through. The overreach of the hindquarter usually necessitates one
hind foot passing outside and the other hind foot passing inside the track of
the forefeet, and such action is not faulty unless the locomotion is crabwise
with the dog’s body sideways out of the normal straight line.
Transmission The typical smooth,
flowing gait is maintained with great strength and firmness of back. The whole
effort of the hindquarter is transmitted to the forequarter through the loin,
back and withers. At full trot, the back must remain firm and level without
sway, roll, whip or roach. Unlevel topline with withers lower than the hip is a
fault. To compensate for the forward motion imparted by the hindquarters,
the shoulder should open to its full extent. The forelegs should reach out close
to the ground in a long stride in harmony with that of the hindquarters. The dog
does not track on widely separated parallel lines, but brings the feet inward
toward the middle line of the body when trotting, in order to maintain balance.
The feet track closely but do not strike or cross over. Viewed from the front,
the front legs function from the shoulder joint to the pad in a straight line.
Viewed from the rear, the hind legs function from the hip joint to the pad in a
straight line. Faults of gait, whether from front, rear or side, are to be
considered very serious faults.
Disqualifications
Cropped or hanging ears.
Dogs with noses not predominantly black.
Undershot jaw.
Docked tail.
White dogs.
Any dog that attempts to bite the judge.
Approved February 11,
1978
Reformatted July 11, 1994






