Glen Of Imaal Terrier

This is the breed standard for the Glen Of Imaal Terrier

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Essentials

ESSENTIALS OF THE GLEN OF IMAAL TERRIER: The body is long, ensuring the image of great substance. The head should be of good width and fair length, with a foreface of power, and a pronounced stop that tapers to the nose. The ears can be rose or half pricked but not large. The neck muscular, of moderate length. Forequarters must be short but of great bone; chest wide and strong with front legs bowed. Body is deep and long, longer than high. The topline straight. Loins must be strong; the ribs well-sprung. Hindquarters strong and well muscled. Height: 14 inches (35.5 cm). Weight: 35 pounds (16 kg). A soft undercoat under­lies a rough-textured, medium-length coat, which is tidied to project a clean outline. The Imaal can be wheaten (from a light wheaten to a golden reddish), blue (not giving toward black), or brindle.

 

 

 

 

 

Historical Summary

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Like many dogs  in the Terrier group,  not really appreciated  by gentlemen  sportsmen before  the middle of  the 19th century, the Irish Glen of Imaal is an old breed which was simply ignored for  a  long  time, rather  than  the  result of  later  breed experiments.  He is  very much a local dog, confined to the bleak area of the Glen of  Imaal.  The farmers  of this area, who  were descended from soldiers given land in the 16th and 17th centuries as payment for service rendered  to the British Crown,  had to utilize their  natural cunning an  dexterity to  survive in this harsh  terrain.  A dog,  who could not  pull his  weight in  the day-to-day  struggle for  existence would not be tolerated.   So he had to spend long hours propelling dog wheels and was often pitted against other dogs in the dubious sport of dog fighting, customs now disappeared.  Before the Irish Glen of Imaal Terrier became known at  dog shows, he had evolved through generations of hard  work into the strong sturdy dog we  know today.  The  Irish Kennel Club gave official  recognition to the breed in 1934 and a club to promote its interests  was soon formed.

 

 

 

 

General Appearance
The Glen of Imaal Terrier, named for the region in the Wicklow Mountains of Ireland where it was developed long ago, is a medium sized working terrier. Longer than tall and sporting a double coat of medium length, the Glen possesses great strength and should always convey the impression of maximum substance for size of dog. Unrefined to this day, the breed still possesses "antique" features once common to many early terrier types; its distinctive head with rose or half-prick ears, its bowed forequarters with turned out feet, its unique outline and topline are hallmarks of the breed and essential to the breed type.

 

Size, Proportion Substance
Height - The maximum height is 14 inches with a minimum of 12½ inches, measured at the highest point of the shoulder blades. Weight - Weight is approximately 35 pounds, bitches somewhat less; however, no Glen in good condition and otherwise well-balanced shall be penalized for being slightly outside the suggested weight. Length – The length of body, measured from sternum to buttocks, and height measured from the highest point of the shoulder blades to ground, to be in a ratio of approximately 5 (length) to 3 (height). The overall balance is more important than any single specification.

 

Head
Head - The head must be powerful and strong with no suggestion of coarseness. Impressive in size yet in balance with, and in proportion to, the overall size and symmetry of the dog. Eyes - Brown, medium size, round and set well apart. Light eyes should be penalized. Ears - Small, rose or half pricked when alert, thrown back when in repose. Set wide apart and well back on the top outer edge of the skull. Full drop or prick ears undesirable. Skull - Broad and slightly domed; tapering slightly towards the brow. Of fair length, distance from stop to occiput being approximately equal to distance between ears. Muzzle - Foreface of power, strong and well filled below the eyes, tapering toward the nose. Ratio of length of muzzle to length of skull is approximately three (muzzle) to five (skull.) Bottlehead or narrow foreface undesirable. Stop - Pronounced. Nose - Black. Teeth - Set in a strong jaw, sound, regular, and of good size. Full dentition. Scissors bite preferred; level mouth accepted.

 

Neck, Topline and Body
Neck - Very muscular and of moderate length. Topline - Straight, slightly rising to a very strong well-muscled loin with no drop-off at the croup. Body - Deep, long and fully muscled. Longer than high with the ideal ratio of body length to shoulder height approximately five (length) to three (height). Chest - Wide, strong and deep, extending below the elbows. Ribs - Well sprung with neither a flat nor a barrel appearance. Loin - Strong and well muscled. Tail - Docked to approximately half-length, in balance with the overall dog and long enough to allow a good handhold. Strong at root, well set on and carried gaily. Dogs with undocked tails not to be penalized.

 

Forequarters
Shoulder - Well laid back, broad and muscular. Forelegs - Short, bowed and well boned. Forearm should curve slightly around the chest. Upper arm (humerus) nearly equal in length to the shoulder blades (scapula). Feet to turn out slightly but perceptibly from pasterns. Feet - Compact and strong with rounded pads.

 

Hindquarters
Strong and well muscled, with ample bone and in balance with forequarters. Good bend of stifle and a well-defined second thigh. Hocks turn neither in nor out, are short, well let down and perpendicular from hock to ground. Feet - As front, except they should point forward.

 

Coat
Medium length, of harsh texture with a soft undercoat. The coat may be tidied to present a neat outline characteristic of a rough-and-ready working terrier. Over trimming of dogs is undesirable.

 

Color
Wheaten, blue or brindle. Wheaten includes all shades from cream to red wheaten. Blue may range from silver to deepest slate, but not black. Brindle may be any shades but is most commonly seen as blue brindle, a mixture of dark blue, light blue, and tan hairs in any combination or proportion.

 

Gait
The action should be free and even, covering the ground effortlessly with good reach in front and good drive behind. This is a working terrier, which must have the agility, freedom of movement and endurance to do the work for which it was developed.

 

Temperament
Game and spirited with great courage when called upon, otherwise gentle and docile. Although generally less easily excited than other terriers, the Glen is always ready to give chase. When working they are active, agile, silent and dead game.

 

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.

 

Approved: June 11, 2001
Effective: September 1, 2001