July 22, 2005

wolf dogs

A topic of enduring mild interest to Isa and myself is the subject of "wolf dogs" -- wolf hybrids, breeds developed from wolves, natural close-to-the-wild-type breeds, wild canids. Yesterday I happened onto several websites dealing with wolf look-alike or wolf-derived breeds, complete with plentiful photos. Most interesting was the one on the Saarloos Wolfhond, complete with a fascinating rundown on the developmental history of the breed and the woes of its developer. Another interesting one was the Czechoslovakian Wolfdog. And finally, one from (of all places) the U. K. I had not heard of before, the Utonagan, this latter a wolf look-alike developed largely from the GSD, Alaskan Malamute and Siberian Husky.

After looking at all of these web wolfdogs, I went home and had a hard look at my two 7-month-old "wolfesses" Darka and Dushka, growing pups from a litter that is 3/4 Markovo-Seppala and 1/4 Solovyev (Russian) bloodline:

Darka of Seppala

Dushka of Seppala

They looked just as "wolfy" but about two or three times more beautiful, somehow, than the actual wolfdogs. An enduring joy of owning Seppalas has always been their breathtaking natural grace and beauty. (Yet another reason why I have no time for the part-Seppala strain-crossed sorry excuses for Seppalas promoted by the ISSSC -- too many of them are clumsy and ugly in appearance. I know from thirty years of experience that real Seppalas are almost never like that.) These two pups looked like wolf-cubs when they were small, and they have yet to lose their wolfy looks. A few years ago we had a long-coated Seppala, Kidron of Spirit Wind, who looked all for the wolf like a Gray Wolf from Montana or Idaho. Well, when they first came to Alaska, they called them "Siberian wolf-dogs," I'm told . . .

. . . I just came back from an hour's run in the exercise yard with the D-litter (including wolfesses), the C litter, their dams and their two "aunties" Tonya and Lizzy. The young ones are growing apace, looking as good as any litters we have had here, and showing lovely temperaments. There just is nothing like the real Markovo-Seppalas, and the Solovyev outcross appears to be a perfect complement to them.

Posted by jjeffrey at July 22, 2005 11:41 AM
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