Welsh Terrier
This is the breed standard for the Welsh Terrier
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Essentials
ESSENTIALS OF THE WELSH TERRIER: This is a medium-sized terrier with a
square body appearance. The skull is flat and appears wider between the ears
than does the Wire Fox Terrier. The jaw is clean-cut and punishing. Ears
V-shaped and small. Neck of moderate length and thickness, slightly arched.
Shoulders should be long and sloping, well-setback. The legs straight and
muscular. The back short and well ribbed, the loin strong. Thighs muscular,
hocks well-letdown. Ample bone. Feet small, round and catlike. Coat is
wire-textured and colored black and tan. He is long-legged for a terrier, the
topline is level, and he possesses excellent substance. Height: 14-15.5 inches
(35.5-38 cm). Weight: 20 pounds (9 kg). The jacket is double coated, close
fitting, with furnishings on muzzle, legs and quarters.
Historical Summary
Information coming soon.
General Appearance
The Welsh Terrier is a sturdy, compact, rugged dog of medium size with a coarse
wire-textured coat. The legs, underbody and head are tan; the jacket black (or
occasionally grizzle). The tail is docked to length meant to complete the image
of a "square dog" approximately as high as he is long. The movement is a terrier
trot typical of the long-legged terrier. It is effortless, with good reach and
drive. The Welsh Terrier is friendly, outgoing to people and other dogs, showing
spirit and courage. The "Welsh Terrier expression" comes from the set, color,
and position of the eyes combined with the use of the ears.
Size, Proportion,
Substance
Males are about 15 inches at the withers, with an acceptable range between 15
and 15½. Bitches may be proportionally smaller. Twenty pounds is considered an
average weight, varying a few pounds depending on the height of the dog and the
density of bone. Both dog and bitch appear solid and of good substance.
Head
The entire head is rectangular. The eyes are small, dark brown and
almond-shaped, well set in the skull. They are placed fairly far apart. The
size, shape, color and position of the eyes give the steady, confident but alert
expression that is typical of the Welsh Terrier. The ears are
V-shaped, small, but not too thin. The fold is just above the topline of the
skull. The ears are carried forward close to the cheek with the tips falling to,
or toward, the outside corners of the eyes when the dog is at rest. The ears
move slightly up and forward when at attention. Skull--The
foreface is strong with powerful, punishing jaws. It is only slightly narrower
than the backskull. There is a slight stop. The backskull is of equal length to
the foreface. They are on parallel planes in profile. The backskull is smooth
and flat (not domed) between the ears. There are no wrinkles between the ears.
The cheeks are flat and clean (not bulging). The muzzle is
one-half the length of the entire head from tip of nose to occiput. The foreface
in front of the eyes is well made up. The furnishings on the foreface are
trimmed to complete without exaggeration the total rectangular outline. The
muzzle is strong and squared off, never snipy. The nose is black and squared
off. The lips are black and tight. A scissors bite is preferred, but a level
bite is acceptable. Either one has complete dentition. The teeth are large and
strong, set in powerful, vise-like jaws.
Neck, Topline, Body
The neck is of moderate length and thickness, slightly arched and sloping
gracefully into the shoulders. The throat is clean with no excess of skin.
The topline is level.
The body shows good substance and is well ribbed up.
There is good depth of brisket and moderate width of chest. The loin is strong
and moderately short. The tail is docked to a length approximately level (on an
imaginary line) with the occiput, to complete the square image of the whole dog.
The root of the tail is set well up on the back. It is carried upright.
Forequarters
The front is straight. The shoulders are long, sloping and well laid back. The
legs are straight and muscular with upright and powerful pasterns. The feet are
small, round, and catlike. The pads are thick and black. The nails are strong
and black; any dewclaws are removed.
Hindquarters
The hindquarters are strong and muscular with well-developed second thighs and
the stifles well bent. The hocks are moderately straight, parallel and short
from joint to ground. The feet should be the same as in the forequarters.
Coat
The coat is hard, wiry, and dense with a close-fitting thick jacket. There is a
short, soft undercoat. Furnishings on muzzle, legs, and quarters are dense and
wiry.
Color
The jacket is black, spreading up onto the neck, down onto the tail and into the
upper thighs. The legs, quarters, and head are clear tan. The tan is a deep
reddish color, with slightly lighter shades acceptable. A grizzle jacket is also
acceptable.
Gait
The movement is straight, free and effortless, with good reach in front, strong
drive behind, with feet naturally tending to converge toward a median line of
travel as speed increases.
Temperament
The Welsh Terrier is a game dog-alert, aware, spirited-but at the same time, is
friendly and shows self control. Intelligence and desire to please are evident
in his attitude. A specimen exhibiting an overly aggressive attitude, or
shyness, should be penalized.
Faults
Any deviation from the foregoing should be considered a fault; the
seriousness of the fault depending upon the extent of the deviation.
Approved August 10, 1993
Effective September 29, 1993






