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A
General Appearance:
The Great Dane combines
in its distinguished appearance dignity,
strength and elegance with great size and a
powerful, well formed, smoothly-muscled body. he
is one of the giant breeds, but is unique in
that his general conformation must be so well
balanced that he never appears clumsy and is
always a unit - the apollo of dogs. He must be
spirited and courageous - never timid. He is
friendly and dependable. This physical and
mental combination is the characteristic which
gives the Great Dane the majesty possessed by no
other breed. It is particularly true of this
breed that there is an impression of great
masculinity in dogs as compared to an impression
of femininity in bitches. The male should appear
more massive throughout than the bitch, with
larger frame and heavier bone. In the ratio
between length and height, the Great Dane should
appear as square as possible. In bitches, a
somewhat longer body is permissable.
Faults:
Lack of unity; timidity; bitchy dogs; poor
musculature; poor bone development; out of
condition; rickets; doggy bitches.
B.
Colour and
Markings:
i) Brindle Danes
Base colour ranging
from light golden yellow to deep golden yellow
always brindled with strong black cross
stripes. The more intensive the base colour
and the more intensive the brindling, the more
attractive will be the colour. Small white
marks at the chest and toes are not desirable.
Faults:
Brindle with too dark a base colour; silver
blue and greyish-blue base colour; dull
(faded) brindling; white tail tip.
ii) Fawn Danes:
Golden yellow up to
deep golden yellow colour with a deep black
mask. the golden deep yellow colour must
always be given the preference. Small white
spots at the chest and toes are not desirable.
Faults: Yellowish-grey, bluish-yellow,
greyish-blue, dirty-yellow colour (drab colour),
lack of black mask.
iii) Blue Danes:
The colour must be
pure steel blue as far as possible without any
tinge of yellow, black or mouse grey.
Faults: Any deviation from a pure
steel-blue colouration.
iv) Black Danes:
Glossy black.
Faults: Yellow black, brown black or
blue-black. White markings, such as stripes on
the chest, speckeled chest and markings on the
paws are permitted but not desirable.
v)Harlequin Danes:
Base colour pure white
with black torn patches irregularly and well
distributed over the entire body; pure white
neck preferred. The black patches should never
be large enough to give the appearance of a
blanket or so small as to give a stippled or
dappled effect. (Eligible but less desirable
are a few grey spots, also pointings where
instead of a pure white base with black spots
there is a white base with single black hairs
showing through which tend to give a salt and
pepper or dirty effect).
Faults: White base colour with a few
large spots; bluish grey pointed background.
vi) Boston or
Black-Mantled Danes:
A black and white dog
witha black mantle extending over the body;
white blaze or muzzle or both; white chest;
white on part or whole of forelegs and
hindlegs; part or whole white collar; white
tipped tail; dark eyes; dark nose. Acceptable
but less desirable - lack of collar.
Faults: Any variation detracting from
the general appearance.
C.
Size
The male should not be less than 30 inches at
the shoulder, but it is preferable that he be 32
inches or more, providing he is well
proportioned to his height. The female should
not be less than 28 inches at the shoulders, but
it is preferable that she be 30 inches or more,
providing she is well proportioned to her
height.
D.
Substance
Substance is that sufficiency of bone and muscle
which rounds out a balance with the frame.
Faults: Lightweight whippety Danes;
coarse, ungainly proportioned Danes; always
there should be a balance.
E.
The coat should be very short and thick, smooth
and glossy.
Faults: Excessively long hair (stand-off
coat); dull hair (indicating malnutrition, worms
and negligent care).
A.
Gait
Long easy, springy
stride with no tossing or rolling of the body.
The back line should move smoothly, parallel to
the ground. The gait of the Great Dane should
denote strength and power. The rear legs should
have drive. The forelegs should track smoothly
and straight. The Dane should track in two
parallel lines.
Faults: Short steps. The rear quarters
should not pitch. The forelegs should not have a
hackney gait (forced or choppy stride). When
moving rapidly the Great Dane should not pace
for the reason that it causes excessive
side-to-side rolling of the body and thus
reduces endurance.
B.
Rear End (croup, legs, paws)
The croup must
be full, slightly drooping and must continue
imperceptibly to the tail root. Hind legs, the
first thighs (from hip joint to knee) are broad
and muscular. The second thighs (from knee to
hock joint) are strong and long. Seen from the
side, the angulation of the first thigh with the
body, of the second thigh with the first thigh,
and the pastern root with the second thigh
should be very moderate, neither too straight
nor too exaggerated. Seen from the rear, the
hock joints appeaer to be perfectly straight,
turned neither towards the inside nor towards
the outside. Paws, round and turned neither
towards the inside nor the outside. Toes short,
highly arched and well closed. Nails short,
strong and as dark as possible.
Faults: A croup which is too straight; a
croup which slopes downward too steeply; and too
narrow a croup. Hind legs: soft, flabby, poorly
muscled thighs; cowhocks which are the result of
the hock joint turning inward and the hock and
rear paws turning outward; barrel legs, the
result of the hock joints being too far apart;
steep rear. As seen from the side, a steep rear
is the result of the angles of the rear legs
forming almost a straight line; over angulation
is the rsult of exaggerated angles between the
first and second thighs and the hocks and is
very conducive to weakness. The rear legs should
never bee too long in proportion to the front
legs. Spreading toes (splay foot); bent, long
toes (rabbit paws); toes turned towards the
outside or towards the inside. Furthermore, the
fifth toe on the hind legs appearing at a higher
position and with wolf's claw or spur;
excessively long nails; light coloured nails.
C.
Front End (shoulders, legs, paws)
Shoulders:
The shoulder blades
must be strong and sloping and seen from the
side, must form as nearly as possible a right
angle in its articulation with the humerus
(upper arm) to give a long stride. A line from
the upper tip of the shoulder to the back of
the elbow joint should be as nearly
perpendicular as possible. Since all dogs lack
a clavicle (collar bone) the ligaments and
muscles holding the shoulder blade to the rib
cage must be well developed, firm and secure
to prevent loose shoulders.
Faults: Steep shoulders, which occur if
the shoulder blade does not slope
sufficiently; over angulation; loose shoulders
which occur if the Dane is flabbily muscled,
or if the elbow is turned toward the outside;
loaded shoulders.
Forelegs:
The upper arm should
be strong and muscular. Seen from the side or
front the strong lower arms run absolutely
straight to the pastern joints. Seen from the
front, the forelegs and the pastern roots
should form perpendicular lines to the ground.
Seen from the side, the pastern root should
slope only very slightly forward.
Faults: Elbows turned toward the inside
or toward the outside, the former position
caused mostly by too narrow or too shallow a
chest, bringing the front legs too closely
together and at the same time turning the
entire lower part of the leg outward; the
latter position causes the front legs to
spread too far apart, with the pastern roots
and paws usually turned inwards. Seen from the
side, a considerable bend in the pastern
toward the front indicates weakness and is in
most cases connected with the stretched and
spread toes (splay foot); seen from the side a
forward bow in the forearm (chair leg); an
excessively knotty bulge in the front of the
pastern joint.
Paws:
Round and turned
neither toward the inside nor toward the
outside. Toes short, highly arched and well
closed. Nails short, strong and as dark as
possible.
Faults: Spreading toes (splay foot),
bent, long toes (rabbit paws); toes turned
toward the outside or toward the inside;
light-coloured nails.
3. HEAD
A.
Head Conformation
Long, narrow,
distinguished, expressive, finely chiselled,
especially the part below the eyes (which means
that the skull plane under and to the inner
point of the eye must slope without any boney
protruberances in a pleasing line to the full
square jaw), with strongly pronounced stop. The
masculinity of the male is very pronounced in
the expression and structure of the head (this
subtle difference should be evident in the dog's
head through massive skull and depth of muzzle);
the bitch's head may be more delicately formed.
Seen from the side, the forehead must be sharply
set off from the bridge of the nose. The
forehead and the bridge of the nose must be
straight and parallel to one another. Seen from
the front, the head should appear narrow, the
bridge of the nose should be as broad as
possible. The cheek muscles must show slightly
but under no circumstances should they be too
pronounced (cheeky). The muzzle part must have
full flews and must be as blunt vertically as
possible in front; the angles of the lip must be
quite pronounced. The front part of the head,
from the tip of the nose up to the centre of the
stop should be as long as the rear part of the
head from the centre of the stop to the only
slightly developed occiput. The head should be
angular from all sides and should have definite
flat planes and its dimensions should be
absolutely in proportion to the general
appearance of the Dane.
Faults: Any deviation from the parallel
planes of the skull and foreface; too small a
stop; a poorly defined stop or none at all; too
narrow a nose bridge; the rear of thead
spreading laterally in a wedgelike manner (wedge
head); an excessively round upper head (apple
head); excessively pronounced cheek musculature;
ointed muzzle; loose lips hanging over the lower
jaw (fluttering lips) which create the illusion
of a full deep muzzle. The head should be rather
shorter and distinguished than long and
expressionless.
B.
Teeth
Strong, well developed
and clean. The incisors of the lower jaw must
touch very lightly the bottoms of the inner
surface of the upper incisors (scissors bite).
If the front teeth of both jaws bit on top of
each other, they wear down too rapidly.
Faults: Even bite, undershot and
overshot; incisors out of line; black or brown
teeth; missing teeth.
C.
Eyes
Medium size, as dark as
possible, with lively intelligent expression;
almond shaped eyelids, well developed eyebrows.
Faults: Light coloured, piercing, amber
coloured; light blue to a watery blue, red or
bleary eyes; eyes of different colours, eyes too
far apart, mongolian eyes, eyes with pronounced
haws; eyes with excessively drooping eyelids. In
blue and black Danes, lighter eyes are permitted
but are not desirable. In harlequins, the eyes
should be dark. Light-coloured eyes, two eyes of
different colour and walleyes are permitted but
are not desirable.
D.
Nose
The nose must be large
and in the case of brindled and single coloured
Danes, it must always be black. In harlequins,
the nose should be black; a black spotted nose
is permitted; a pink-coloured nose is not
desirable.
E.
Ears
Ears should be high, set
not too far apart, medium in size, of moderate
thickness, drooping forward close to the cheek.
Top line of folded ear should be about level
with the skull. Cropped ears; high set, not set
too far apart; well pointed but always in
proportion to the shape of the head and carried
uniformly erect.
Faults: Hanging on the side, as on a
Foxhound.
4.
TORSO
A.
Neck
The neck should be firm
and clean, high set, well arched, long, muscular
and sinewy. From the chest to the head it should
be slightly tapering, beautifully formed, with
well developed nape.
Faults: Short, heavy neck, pendulous
throat folds (dewlaps)
B.
Loin and Back
The withers form the
highest part of the back which slopes downeard
slightly forward toward the loins, which are
imperceptibly arched and strong. The back should
be short and tensely set. The belly should be
well shaped and tightly muscled, and, with the
rear part of the thorax, should swing in a
pleasing curve (tuckup).
Faults: Receding back; sway back; camel
or roach back; a back line which is too high at
the rear, and an excessively long back; poor
tuck up.
C.
Chest
Chest deals with that
part of the thorax (rib-cage) in front of the
shoulders and front legs. The chest should be
quite broad, deep and well-muscled.
Faults: A narrow and poorly muscled
chest; strong protruding sternum (pigeon
breast).
D.
Ribs and Brisket
Deals with that part of
the thorax back of the shoulders and front legs.
Should be broad, witht he ribs sprung well out
from the spine and flattened at the side to
allow proper movement of the shoulders extending
down to the elbow joint.
Faults: Narrow (slab-sided) rib cage;
round (barrel) rib cage; shallow rib cage not
reaching the elbow joint.
5. TAIL
Should start
high and fairly broad, terminating slender and
thin at the hock joint. At rest, the tail should
fall straight. When excited or running, slightly
curved (sabrelike).
Faults: A too high or too low set tail
(the tail set is governed by the slope of the
croup); too long or too short a tail; tail bent
too far over the back (ring tail); a t ail which
is curled; a twisted tail (sideways); a tail
carried too high over the back (gay tail); a
brush tail (hair too long on lower side).
Cropping tails to desired length is forbidden.
6. FAULTS OF THE
GREAT DANE
Note: The
non-disqualifying faults below are important
according to their groupings (very serious,
serious, minor) and not according to their
sequence as placed in each grouping.
Disqualification Faults:
- Deaf Danes
- Danes under minimum height
- Spayed bitches
- Without visible scrotum
- Monorchids
- White Danes without any black marks (albinos)
- Danes with a predominantly blue, grey, yellow
or also brindled spots
- Docked tails
- Split noses
- Merles (a solid
mouse-gray colour or a mouse-gray base with
black or white or both colour spots or white
base with mouse-gray spots)
- Harlequins and solid-coloured Danes (except
Boston or black mantled) in which a large spot
extends coat-like over the entire body so that
only the legs, neck and the point of the tail
are white
- Brindle, Fawn and Blue Danes with white
forehead line, white collars, high white
stockings and white bellies.
Very Serious:
- Lack of unity
- Poor Bone Development
- Poor Musculature
- Lightweight, whippety Danes
- Rickets
- Timidity
- Bitchy Dog
- Sway back
- Roach back
- Cowhocks
- Pitching gait
- Short steps
- Undershot teeth
Serious:
- Out of condition
- Coarseness
- Any deviation from the standard on all
colouration
- Deviation from parallel planes of skull and
foreface
- Wedgehead
- Poorly defined stop
- Narrow nose bridge
- Snipey muzzle
- Any colour but dark eyes in fawns and brindles
- Mongolian eyes
- Missing teeth
- Overshot teeth
- Heavy neck or short neck
- Hackney gait
- Dewlaps
- Narrow chest
- Narrow rib cage
- Round rib cage
- Shallow rib cage
- Loose shoulders
- Steep shoulders
- Elbows turned inwards
- Chair legs (Front)
- Knotty bulge in pastern joint (adult dog)
- Weak pastern roots
- Receding back
- Too long a back
- Back high in rear
- In harlequin, a pink nose
- Poor tuck-up (except in bitches that have been
bred)
- Too straight, sloping, or narrow croup
- Overangulation
- Steep rear
- Paws turned inward
- Rabbit paws
- Wolf's claw
- Barrel legs
- Poorly muscled thighs
- Too long rear legs
Minor:
- Doggy Bitches
- Small white marks on chest and toes - blues
blacks, brindles and fawns
- Few gray spots and pointings on harlequins
- White tipped tail except in harlequins and
Boston/black mantled Danes
- Excessively long hair
- Excessively dull hair
- Apple head
- Small stop
- Fluttering lips
- Eyes too far apart
- Drooping lower eyelids
- Haws
- Any colour but dark eyes in blacks, blues and
harlequins
- Discoloured teeth
- Even bite
- Pigeon breast
- Loaded shoulders
- Elbows turned outwards
- Paws turned inward
- Splay foot
- Excessively long toe nails
- Light nails (except harlequins)
- Low-set tail
- Too long a tail
- Too short a tail
- Gay tail
- Curled tail
- Twisted tail
- Brush tail |