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The Caucasian Mountain Dog also
known as the Caucasian Ovtcharka is an ancient breed that for centuries
was little known outside the remote regions from which it hails, namely
the Caucasus which incorporate: Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Dagestan,
Iran and Turkey. The Caucasian Mountain Dog or Ovtcharka (in Russian
Ovtcharka means shepherd or sheepdog) is a member of the working group
of dog breed and despite its appellation of sheepdog/shepherd this dog
was never a livestock herder but rather a guardian or protector which
goes a long way in explaining its not inconsiderable size! The Caucasian
Mountain dog was bred to protect livestock against wolves, bears and
other predators; in fact the Caucasian Ovtcharka has an uncanny
resemblance to a bear! Considered until fairly recently by many to be a
descendent of the Tibetan Mastiff, updated archeological evidence
suggests that its ancestry originated from ancient dogs that lived in
the woody hills of Iraq and Mesopotamia. It is believed that assorted
dog types that accompanied nomadic tribes that settled in the Caucasus
regions, with little intervention and interference from outside
influences, eventually evolved into the Caucasian Mountain Dog.Up until
the 1930s, the Caucasian Ovtcharka was little known outside its home
range until it started appearing in European dog shows in Germany.
Around 1952 the Caucasian Mountain Dog was sub-divided into two distinct
breeds: the Transcaucasian Ovtcharka which is typically the
heavier-boned, massive dog that hails from the mountainous regions; and
the Caucasian Ovtcharka, the less heavily built type that originates
from the steppe regions. In 1976 the two sub-breeds were consolidated
and reclassified as one breed, and these days the Caucasian Mountain Dog
is expected to conform to a single standard. Be that as it may however,
the various sub-breeds can still be differentiated regionally from the
various territories of the former USSR and nowadays one of the most
coveted type of Caucasian Mountain Dog is the so-called Georgia
sub-breed which is characteristically a thick-coated, heavy-boned,
massive dog that most closely resembles a bear. The potential of the
Caucasian Mountain Dog as much more than a Livestock Guardian Dog (LGD)
was quickly realized by the now defunct Soviet Army and soon enough this
dog breed was employed both during peace and war time as auxiliary
military "personnel" within the expanse of the Soviet Union.
In the late 1960s the Caucasian Ovcharka was widely introduced to East
Germany specifically for border patrol duty, fore mostly to patrol the
infamous Berlin Wall. When the Berlin Wall came toppling down in 1989,
the by-then, at least 7000-strong unit of Caucasian Mountain Dogs
employed to patrol the Wall's perimeter was disbanded and many of those
dogs found new homes within the newly emancipated civilian population!
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| General
Appearance
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| Characteristics
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| The
Question Of Apartment Dwelling?
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| Interactivity
With Other Dogs
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Caucasian Mountain Dog Breed Standard Height of Males: 25.5 – 30 inches (64cm – 70cm) Height Females: 24.5 and upwards Weight of Males: 100lbs + (45kg – 70 kg) Weight Females: 80lbs + (37kg – upwards) It should be noted however that for the Kavkazskaya Ovcharka Breed (the Georgian Caucasian Mountain Dog sub-breed that most closely resembles a bear) the requisite dimensions differ considerably: Height of Male: 28.3 – 29.5 inches (72cm – 75cm; minimum is 68cm or 26.8 inches) Female Height: 26.0 – 27.2 inches (66cm – 69cm; minimum is 64 cm or 25.2 inches) Naturally the weight of the Kavkazskaya Ovcharka Breed will tend to be somewhat heavier and it is not unusual for males to top 180lbs! The Caucasian Mountain Dog falls under the category of Working Dogs as a Livestock Guardian Dog (LGD).
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Faults Note ** Male animals should have two apparently normal testicles fully descended into the scrottum.
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