Samoyed
This is the breed standard for the Samoyed
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Essentials
Historical Summary
Information to follow
Samoyed Breed Standard
General Conformation
(a) General Appearance - The Samoyed, being essentially a working
dog, should present a picture of beauty, alertness and strength, with
agility, dignity and grace. As his work lies in cold climates, his coat
should be heavy and weather-resistant, well groomed, and of good quality
rather then quantity. The male carries more of a "ruff" than the female.
He should not be long in the back as a weak back would make him
practically useless for his legitimate work, but at the same time, a
close-coupled body would also place him at a great disadvantage as a
draft dog. Breeders should aim for the happy medium, a body not long but
muscular, allowing liberty, with a deep chest and well-sprung ribs,
strong neck, straight front and especially strong loins. Males should be
masculine in appearance and deportment without unwarranted
aggressiveness; bitches feminine without weakness of structure or
apparent softness of temperament. Bitches may be slightly longer in back
than males. They should both give the appearance of being capable of
great endurance but be free from coarseness. Because of the depth of
chest required, the legs should be moderately long. A very short-legged
dog is to be deprecated. Hindquarters should be particularly well
developed, stifles well bent and any suggestion of unsound stifles or
cowhocks severely penalized. General appearance should include movement
and general conformation, indicating balance and good substance.
(b) Substance
- Substance is that sufficiency of bone and muscle which rounds out a
balance with the frame. The bone is heavier than would be expected in a
dog of this size but not so massive as to prevent the speed and agility
most desirable in a Samoyed. In all builds, bone should be in proportion
to body size. The Samoyed should never be so heavy as to appear clumsy
nor so light as to appear racy. The weight should be in proportion to
the height.
(c) Height
- Males--21 to 23½ inches; females--19 to 21 inches at the withers. An
oversized or undersized Samoyed is to be penalized according to the
extent of the deviation.
(d) Coat (Texture and Condition)
- The Samoyed is a doublecoated dog. The body should be well covered
with an undercoat of soft, short, thick, close wool with longer and
harsh hair growing through it to form the outer coat, which stands
straight out from the body and should be free from curl. The coat should
form a ruff around the neck and shoulders, framing the head (more on
males than on females). Quality of coat should be weather resistant and
considered more than quantity. A droopy coat is undesirable. The coat
should glisten with a silver sheen. The female does not usually carry as
long a coat as most males and it is softer in texture.
(e) Color
- Samoyeds should be pure white, white and biscuit, cream, or all
biscuit. Any other colors disqualify.
Movement
(a) Gait - The Samoyed should trot, not pace. He should move with
a quick agile stride that is well timed. The gait should be free,
balanced and vigorous, with good reach in the forequarters and good
driving power in the hindquarters. When trotting, there should be a
strong rear action drive. Moving at a slow walk or trot, they will not
single-track, but as speed increases the legs gradually angle inward
until the pads are finally falling on a line directly under the
longitudinal center of the body. As the pad marks converge the forelegs
and hind legs are carried straight forward in traveling, the stifles not
turned in nor out. The back should remain strong, firm and level. A
choppy or stilted gait should be penalized.
(b) Rear End
- Upper thighs should be well developed. Stifles well bent-approximately
45 degrees to the ground. Hocks should be well developed, sharply
defined and set at approximately 30 percent of hip height. The hind legs
should be parallel when viewed from the rear in a natural stance,
strong, well developed, turning neither in nor out. Straight stifles are
objectionable. Double-jointedness or cowhocks are a fault. Cowhocks
should only be determined if the dog has had an opportunity to move
properly.
(c) Front End
- Legs should be parallel and straight to the pasterns. The pasterns
should be strong, sturdy and straight, but flexible with some spring for
proper let-down of feet. Because of depth of chest, legs should be
moderately long. Length of leg from the ground to the elbow should be
approximately 55 per cent of the total height at the withers-a very
short-legged dog is to be deprecated. Shoulders should be long and
sloping, with a layback of 45 degrees and be firmly set. Out at the
shoulders or out at the elbows should be penalized. The withers
separation should be approximately 1-1½ inches.
(d) Feet
- Large, long, flattish-a hare-foot, slightly spread but not splayed;
toes arched; pads thick and tough, with protective growth of hair
between the toes. Feet should turn neither in nor out in a natural
stance but may turn in slightly in the act of pulling. Turning out,
pigeon-toed, round or cat-footed or splayed are faults. Feathers on feet
are not too essential but are more profuse on females than on males.
Head
(a) Conformation - Skull is wedge-shaped, broad, slightly
crowned, not round or apple-headed, and should form an equilateral
triangle on lines between the inner base of the ears and the central
point of the stop. Muzzle--Muzzle of medium length and medium
width, neither coarse nor snipy; should taper toward the nose and be in
proportion to the size of the dog and the width of skull. The muzzle
must have depth. Whiskers are not to be removed. Stop--Not too
abrupt, nevertheless well defined. Lips--Should be black for
preference and slightly curved up at the corners of the mouth, giving
the "Samoyed smile." Lip lines should not have the appearance of being
coarse nor should the flews drop predominately at corners of the mouth.
Ears--Strong and thick, erect, triangular and slightly rounded at
the tips; should not be large or pointed, nor should they be small and
"bear-eared." Ears should conform to head size and the size of the dog;
they should be set well apart but be within the border of the outer edge
of the head; they should be mobile and well covered inside with hair;
hair full and stand-off before the ears. Length of ear should be the
same measurement as the distance from inner base of ear to outer corner
of eye. Eyes--Should be dark for preference; should be placed
well apart and deep-set; almond shaped with lower lid slanting toward an
imaginary point approximately the base of ears. Dark eye rims for
preference. Round or protruding eyes penalized. Blue eyes
disqualifying. Nose--Black for preference but brown, liver,
or Dudley nose not penalized. Color of nose sometimes changes with age
and weather. Jaws and Teeth--Strong, well-set teeth, snugly
overlapping with scissors bite. Undershot or overshot should be
penalized.
(b) Expression
- The expression, referred to as "Samoyed expression," is very important
and is indicated by sparkle of the eyes, animation and lighting up of
the face when alert or intent on anything. Expression is made up of a
combination of eyes, ears and mouth. The ears should be erect when
alert; the mouth should be slightly curved up at the corners to form the
"Samoyed smile."
Torso
(a) Neck - Strong, well muscled, carried proudly erect, set on
sloping shoulders to carry head with dignity when at attention. Neck
should blend into shoulders with a graceful arch.
(b) Chest
- Should be deep, with ribs well sprung out from the spine and flattened
at the sides to allow proper movement of the shoulders and freedom for
the front legs. Should not be barrel-chested. Perfect depth of chest
approximates the point of elbows, and the deepest part of the chest
should be back of the forelegs-near the ninth rib. Heart and lung room
are secured more by body depth than width.
(c) Loin and Back
- The withers forms the highest part of the back. Loins strong and
slightly arched. The back should be straight to the loin, medium in
length, very muscular and neither long nor short-coupled. The dog should
be "just off square"--the length being approximately 5 per cent more
than the height. Females allowed to be slightly longer than males. The
belly should be well shaped and tightly muscled and, with the rear of
the thorax, should swing up in a pleasing curve (tuck-up). Croup must be
full, slightly sloping, and must continue imperceptibly to the tail
root.
Tail
- The tail should be moderately long with the tail bone terminating
approximately at the hock when down. It should be profusely covered with
long hair and carried forward over the back or side when alert, but
sometimes dropped when at rest. It should not be high or low set and
should be mobile and loose -- not tight over the back. A double hook is
a fault. A judge should see the tail over the back once when judging.
Disposition
- Intelligent, gentle, loyal, adaptable, alert, full of action, eager to
serve, friendly but conservative, not distrustful or shy, not overly
aggressive. Unprovoked aggressiveness is to be severely penalized.
Disqualification
Any color other than pure white, cream, biscuit, or white and
biscuit.
Blue eyes.
Approved August 10, 1993
Effective September 29, 1993






