Puppy Dharma
About The Briard
The Briard is a minute working class dog. It was designed to protect herds of animals, plus herd them up, as would a sheepdog.
During the
by the 90s sitcom Married… as well as Children. Others that are somewhat famous are Tramp (by the 60s sitcom My Three Sons), Jasper (from Bachelor Father), Agent K-13 Fang (by 60s sitcom Get Shrewd, the inspiration for Inspector Gadget), Stinky (by the sitcom Dharma as well as Greg), “Them” (by the Addams Family cartoon that was the inspiration for the sitcom with movies), Reno (through the movie Top Dog), Rosie (from Dennis the Menace, Dennis’ canines over the movie), and Cho Cho (the chief consequence~of great magnitude~of the essence} character of The Karate Dog).
Outer shell
The Briard is a
tremendous muscular herding dog in addition to a coarse, long, slightly wavy double coat. Briards are ordinarily black, gray, or tawny in solid color. The tawny puppy coat turns to a lighter yearling coat. Then the coat deepens in color again to a richer colored adult coat. The hair of an adult coat is six or additional inches, giving the coat an motivating, bushy exterior. The Briard features a shaggy beard, eyebrows, plus mustache.
The ears
may be cropped or left natural in addition to are more often than not clipped into a rounded shape so the hair falls back from them into the leave of the coat. The muzzle is square in addition to long and the nose is black. The long tail is known for a crochet style hook at the tip. The Briard’s elegant gait is floating in addition to alert, as if it never touches the ground.
Briards stand 22 to 27 inches at the withers. Ear cropping has been common
in the breed, but additional breeders are leaving the ears in their natural state since ear cropping is becoming unlawful in most European countries.
The Briard is a medium sized, rugged,
supple dog. It carries a harsh coat along with double dewclaws mounted low on each rear leg, resembling additional toes. Each double dewclaw should have bone substance with a nail, giving the look of a wider rear foot. Bred for centuries to herd, the additional “toes” on each rear foot give the Briard the skills of pivoting on one foot for quick turns, which are necessary for their work.
The Briard has retained a balance of size
and build that is required for both herding with protection of their flocks. They’re not too super grow tired during herding however great enough to fend off predators.
source, the Briard was bred to work herding with guarding sheep, as well as this meaning they were left alone to care for the sheep for months at a time without human interaction. This makes the Briard more versatile than the breeds that only herd or only guard. The size of the Briard has quite a bit to do with the job they were expected to perform. The smaller, active, along with supple Briard’s were chiefly used for herding, while the larger, heavier, along with stronger breeds were used essentially for guarding the sheep.
The most famous Briard to date is Buck, the dog
http://www.zdogpark.com/Dog_Breeds/Herding_Dogs/Briard/
http://europe.wyomingpuppies.info/briard-herding-dogs.shtml
http://www.puppyfair.com/index.php?c=208

Puppy’s Dharma 001/2010


