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Greater Swiss Mountain Dog breed
 | The Greater Swiss Mountain Dog, or Großer
Schweizer Sennenhund, is the largest of the traditional Swiss herding
breeds, the Sennenhunds, a grouping in which the Bernese Mountain Dog is also
included. They are believed descended from large dogs brought to Switzerland
by the Romans in the first century B.C., although another theory states that
they arrived many centuries earlier with Phoenician traders. In any case, they
are almost certainly the result of the mating of indigenous dogs with large
mastiff-type dogs brought to Switzerland by foreign settlers. Greater Swiss
Mountain Dogs are believed to be in the ancestry of both the Saint Bernard Dog
and the Rottweiler. |
Photo of
Greater Swiss Mountain Dog breed

| Greater Swiss Mountain
Dog |
|
Greater Swiss Mountain Dog
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| Alternative names |
Großer Schweizer Sennenhund
Large Swiss Mountain Dog |
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| Country of origin |
| Switzerland |
| Common nicknames |
Swissie
GSMD |
| Classification and breed standards |
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FCI: |
Group 2 Section 3 #58 |
Stds |
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AKC: |
Working |
Stds |
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CKC: |
Miscellaneous Class |
[? Stds] |
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The CKC Miscellaneous group is for breeds working
towards full CKC recognition. |
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UKC: |
Guardian Dogs |
Stds |
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Information about
Greater Swiss Mountain Dog breed
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Appearance
The Greater Swiss Mountain Dog is a large, muscular, tricolour (black, rust, and
white; typically with a white blaze) dog. Males should weigh around 110 - 140
pounds the height is 25.5 - 28.5 inches at the shoulders. The females weigh 85 -
115 pounds and are 23.5 - 27 inches tall at the shoulders. The length to height
ratio is around ten to nine. This breed must have a double coat to be considered
show quality. There is black on top of the dog's back, ears, tail and the
majority of the legs. There should be rust on the cheeks, a thumb print above
the eyes and also rust should appear on the legs between the white and black.
There should be white on the muzzle, the feet, the tip of the tail, on the chest
down and some that comes up from the muzzle to pass between the eyes. The fur is
a double coat, the top coat being around two two inches long, the bottom coat
being thick and a type of gray which must be on the neck, but can be all over
the body.
Temperament
The Greater Swiss Mountain Dog has a reputation of combining protectiveness with
a gentle nature, particularly with respect to its love of its family, especially
children.
These dogs are strong, active, and remarkably agile for their size. A Greater
Swiss Mountain Dog can be trained for weight-pulling competitions and/or to pull
carts behind them carrying goods or even a person. Prospective owners need to be
prepared to give them lots of time and attention. Owners will often note that,
despite their large stature, they will often behave as if they are a lap dog.
History
The Greater Swiss Mountain Dog, a dog of great strength, was originally a
herding dog, but was later used for draft. It may have been the advent of
mechanized vehicles, combined with the rise in popularity of the Saint Bernard
Dog (the Greater Swiss Mountain Dog Helped produce the Saint Bernard Dog), that
led to the decline in popularity of the GSMD. However it happened, the breed was
believed to be extinct, or nearly so, by the turn of the 20th Century.
In 1908, an owner named Franz Schertenlieb entered his mountain dogs in the
Swiss Kennel Club (SKG) jubilee conformation dog show, knowing that they would
be seen by an expert in native Swiss dogs, Dr. Albert Heim. Dr. Heim, an avid
fancier, was apparently delighted to find a living example of the Großer
Schweizer Sennenhund, and exhorted the members of the Kennel Club to do all that
they could to safeguard the breed, including scour farms and villages for
healthy specimens for a breeding program.
His suggestion was acted upon, and a careful breeding program was begun. Due to
the meticulous nature of the selection process, the lack of worthy brood
bitches, and the requirement that all puppies be reexamined as adults for
conformation and temperament before being certified as suitable for breeding,
breed numbers grew slowly.
All-breed club recognition
The Greater Swiss Mountain Dog, now often known as the GSMD or ‘Swissy’, is an
example of an ancient, well-documented and established pure breed that was
nevertheless not recognized by large all-breed kennel clubs around the world.
The first GSMDs were introduced to the United States in 1968, and were
recognized provisionally by the AKC in 1985 and received full recognition in
1995, an ironically late date for such an old breed of dog. It was recognized by
the UKC in 1992.
~From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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