This site is about Irish Wolfhounds in Russia.
In Russian, please.
...Olaf, the son of an Irish princess, offers his friend Gunnar a hound that was given to him in Ireland. "He is big," he says, "and no worse than a stout man. Besides, it is part of his nature that he has man's wit, and he will bay at every man whom he knows to be thy foe, but never at thy friends. He can see, too, in any man's face whether he means thee well or ill, and he will lay down his life to be true to thee."...
(Icelandic Saga of Burnt Njal)
Capitan of Shantamon (Nutstown Irish Wolfhound)
Be our friends (Gasia, Melissa and others)
In next update will add the schedule of Russians Dog Show
Links to other Irish Wolfhound sites
General appearance. The Irish Wolfhound should not be quite so heavy or massive as the Great Dane, but more so than the Deerhound, which in general type he should otherwise resemble. Of great size and commanding appearence, very muscular, strongly though gracefully built, movements easy and active; head and neck carried high; the tail carried with an upward sweep with a slight curve towards the extremity. The minimum height and weight of dogs should be 31 inches (79cm) and 120 pounds (54kg); of bitches, 28 inches (71cm) and 90 pounds (41kg). Anything below this should be debarred from competition. Great size, including height at shoulder and proportionate length of body, is the desideratum to be aimed at, and it is desired to firmly establish a race that shall average from 32 inches (81cm) to 34 inches (86cm) in dogs, showing the requisite power, activity, courage and symmetry.
Head. Long, the frontal bones of the forehead very slightly raised and very little indentation between the eyes. Skull, not too broad. Muzzle, long and moderately pointed. Ears, small and Greyhound-like in carriage. Bite: scissors ideal, level acceptable.
Neck. Rather long, very strong and muscular, well arched, without dewlap or loose skin about the throat.
Chest. Very deep. Breast wide.
Back. Rather long than short. Loins arched.
Tail. Long and slightly curved, of moderate thickness, and well covered with hair.
Belly. Well drawn up.
Forequarters. Shoulders muscular, giving breadth of chest, set sloping. Elbows well under, neither turned inwards nor outwards. Leg. Forearm muscular, and the whole leg strong and quite straight.
Hindquarters. Muscular thighs and second thigh long and strong as in the Greyhound, and hocks well let down and turning neither in nor out.
Feet. Moderately large and round, neither turned inwards nor outwards. Toes: well arched and closed. Nails: very strong and curved.
Hair. Rough and hard on body, legs and head; especially wiry and long over eyes and under iaw.
Colour and markings. The recognised colours are grey, brindle, red, black, pure white, fawn, or any colour that appears in the Deerhound.
Faults. Too light or too heavy a head, too highly arched frontal bone; large ears and hanging flat to the face; short neck; full dewlap; too narrow or too broad a chest; sunken or hollow or quite straight back; bent forelegs; overbent fetlocks; twisted feet; spreading toes; too curly a tail; weak hindquarters and a general want a muscle; too short in body; pink or liver-coloured eyelids; lips and nose any colour other than black; very light eyes.
The Irish Wolfhound A short historical sketch by Phyllis Gardner (1920)
Raising, Showing and Breeding The Irish Wolfhound by Elizabeth C. Murphy (1994)
The Irish Wolfhound. A Collection of Photographs and Pedigrees. Ireland&UK 1950-1990 by Elizabeth C. Murphy
A Discussion of The Irish Wolfhound by Anthony Killykeen-Doyle (1995)
Irish Wolfhounds by Beverly Pisano (1990)
Links to other Irish Wolfhound sites
Nutstown Irish Wolfhounds Irish site with music and nice photos.
Irish Wolfhounds FAQ American site (very big).
IGORwolf Irish Wolfhounds Geocities site with many links to other Irish Wolfhound sites.
Red Branch Irish Wolfhounds. Red Branch Irish Wolfhounds site by Marsha Williams.
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