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There were no records kept by those fishermen to tell us of their dogs and there are no pictures to provide an image of them, but I think we can deduce what type of dog they would have needed. If you were working out of a small dory in rough ocean waters, you would not have wanted a large dog to haul over the gunwales, but he must have been strong enough to do the work. He would have needed a waterproof top coat to help keep him dry and a dense undercoat to insulate him from the cold waters of the North Atlantic. It would have been dangerous if he had been wild or rowdy, so he must have been calm and biddable, yet he must have been bold enough to be willing to brave the cold rough surf to do his job. He would have needed to be very intelligent, and eager to please his master, who was too busy working to be constantly training his dog. He must also have been a great companion to help pass the long winter months between fishing seasons. Therefore, I believe we can conclude that the original Lab would have been a moderately sized, strongly built, calm, intelligent, eager-to-please, companionable dog with a dense waterproof coat. Throw in a good measure of confidence and bravery and that must have been the essence of the original Lab.
In England, his task became that of a non-slip retriever for the hunter. He was also used in the uplands questing for game in the manner of a spaniel. These tasks required that he was calm, quiet, and attentive to his handler, able to mark and remember fallen game birds, and able to take direction from his handler to falls he did not see. He would need a good nose to find game fallen in thick cover, to trail wounded game, and find and flush game in gun range, and he must be a natural retriever with a soft mouth who was eager to return to his handler with his find. These traits further define the proper Labrador retriever.
In the past fifty or sixty years the form and temperament of many strains of the Labrador retriever have changed due to pressures from competitive endeavors in the field and on the bench. Fortunately, there are some old photographs of Labrador retrievers dating from as early as the 1850’s into the first few decades of the 1900’s that show what Labs looked like prior to the split between field and show types. Some of these pictures are of Labs that were dual champions, who were successful both in the show ring and in field trials. Studying these photos has helped me to define the look of the original Lab before “specialization” in competitive venues altered the appearance of many of our Labrador retrievers.
My goal is for Orion Labrador retrievers to conform to the physical and behavioral standards that were established during the first 400 years of the breed’s development before misguiding influences began to alter the breed’s form and temperament. |
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