The Portuguese Water Dog
Portuguese
Water Dogs (PWD) once existed all along Portugal's
coast, where they were taught to herd fish into fishermen's nets, to retrieve
lost tackle or broken nets, and to act as couriers from ship to ship, or ship
to shore. Portuguese Water Dogs rode in bobbing trawlers as
they worked their way from the warm Atlantic waters
of Portugal to the frigid fishing waters off the coast of Iceland where the
fleets caught saltwater codfish to bring home.
In Portugal,
the breed is called Cão d'Água (pronounced "Kown-d'Ahgwa"). Cão
means dog, de Água means of water. In its native land, the
dog is also known as the Portuguese Fishing Dog (Cão Pescador Português). Cão
de Água de Pelo Ondulado is the name given the wavy-haired variety, and Cão de
Água de Pelo Encaracolado is the name for the curly-coated variety.
The closest
relative of the PWD also known as black dog is widely thought to be the Standard
Poodle; and like poodles, PWDs are highly intelligent, have curly coats,
and do not shed. However, unlike poodles, Portuguese Water Dogs have long,
undocked, feathery tails. They are also smaller and more robustly built than
the Standard Poodle breed. They have webbed toes, for swimming, which one can
notice by trying to pass one's finger between the dog's toes. Their eyes are
brown.
PWDs have a
single-layered coat that does not shed, and therefore their presence is
tolerated extremely well among many people who suffer from dog allergies.
Some call PWDs hypoallergenic dogs, but any person with dog allergies
who seeks a dog with these qualities should actually spend time with the
animals before purchasing, to test whether the dog is actually non-allergenic
to them.
Male Portuguese
Water Dogs usually grow to be about 20 to 23 inches (51 cm to 58 cm) tall, and
weigh between 40 to 60 pounds (18 kg to 27 kg), while the females usually grow
to be about 17 to 21 inches (43 cm to 53 cm) tall and weigh between 35 to 50
pounds.
Most PWDs,
especially traditional show dogs, are entirely black, black and white, brown, or
silver-tipped; it is common to see white chest spots and white paws or legs on
black or brown coated dogs. "Parti" or "Irish-marked"
coats, with irregular white and black spots, are rare but visually striking.
"Parti" dogs are becoming more common in the United States. However,
in Portugal the breed standard does not allow more than 30% white markings.
The black
portions of Portuguese Water Dogs have a bluish tinge to their skin that is
hard to notice underneath their black hair. Predominantly white areas have pink
skin underneath and are more sensitive to exposure to the sun than black or
brown areas. White hair is finer than black.
Portuguese
Water Dogs have a multi-octave voice. Some of them are said to
"yodel" when excited, especially when greeting a returning master.
Although they are not prone to barking excessively, they have a wide range of
barks and sighs, as well as an audible "laugh": a loud, irregular,
breathy pant used at play or during greetings. This is sometimes called
"expressive panting".
This breed
makes an excellent watch dog due to its determination to defend its territory
with a very loud and distinctive bark. However it will rarely (if ever) attack
an intruder after having given the alarm-barks, and so it is not considered a
guard dog in the normal sense. In fact many PWDs will, without training, bark
three or four times then rush to their master's side to await further
instructions on how to relate to a perceived intruder.
The PWD's
bidability, high intelligennce, and tendency to vocalize and then seek out its
human master when specific alarms occur make it an ideal hearing-ear or
deaf-assistance dog. PWDs can be readily trained to bark loudly when a
telephone rings, and then to find and alert a hard-of-hearing or deaf master.
Portuguese Water Dogs are active and well-suited to many dog sports
Portuguese
Water dogs make excellent companions. They are loving, independent, and
intelligent and are easily trained in obedience and agility skills. Once
introduced, they are generally friendly to strangers, and actively enjoy being
petted, which, due to their soft, fluffy coats, is a favour that human beings
willingly grant them.
Because they
are working
dogs, PWDs are generally content in being at their master's side, awaiting
directions, and, if they are trained, they are willing and able to follow
complex commands. They are generally considered too small to be used as service
dogs, but make unusually good therapy dogs and hearing-ear dogs.
Owners of this
breed will attest that their PWD usually stays in close proximity to them both
indoors and outdoors. This is typical of the breed. Though very gregarious
animals, these dogs will typically bond with one primary or alpha family
member. Some say that this so-called "velcro bonding" trait arose in
the breed because the dogs wre selected to work in close proximity to their
masters on small fishing boats, unlike other working dogs that range out to
perform tasks. In any case, the modern PWD, whether employed on a boat or kept
as a pet or working therapy dog, loves attention and prefers to be engaged in
activity within sight of a human partner. This is not a breed to be left alone
for long periods of time, indoors or out.
As water dogs,
the PWD's retrieving instinct is strong, which also gives some dogs tugging and
chewing tendencies.
A PWD will
commonly jump as a greeting. Owners may choose to limit this behavior. Some
PWDs may walk, hop, or "dance" on their hind legs when greeting or
otherwise enthusiastic. Some PWDs will stand upright at kitchen counters and
tables, especially if they smell food above them. This habit is known as
"counter surfing" and is characteristic of the breed. Although it can
be a nuisance, many PWD owners evidently enjoy seeing their dogs walking,
hopping, standing up, or "countering" and do not seriously discourage
these activities.
This breed does
not shed its hair. The hair is either wavy or curly in texture. Many dogs have
mixed pattern hair; curly all over the body but wavy on the tail and ears. The
hair must be trimmed about every two months and, although it is possible to
groom at home, it is usually easier to pay a professional groomer.
From the Portuguese Water Dog Club of America
Revised Standard for the Portuguese Water Dog come these descriptions of
the two coat types:
White is one of the less-common colours among PWDs
Occasionally, a
dog may have what is termed an "improper" coat. This genetic
condition causes the dog to sometimes have an undercoat. Because these dogs do
not adhere to the breed standard, they may not be shown in competition,
but otherwise are completely
healthy and have all the excellent traits of PWDs. They should not be used in
breeding programs, because improper coat is a heritable condition.
The hair of
PWDs grows continually and requires regular brushing and cutting or clipping.
The coat is usually worn in a "retriever cut" or a "lion
cut".
In the lion
cut, the hindquarters, muzzle, and the base of the tail are shaved and the rest
of the body is left full length. This cut originated with the fishing dogs of
Portugal to keep the body warm while allowing movement of the back legs.
The retriever
cut is left 1" (2.5 cm) long evenly over the body (although some owners
prefer the muzzle or the base of the tail shorter). This cut is a more recent
style and originated because breeders wanted to make the breed more appealing
and less unusual looking for buyers.
At home in the water
Some belief
exists that the breed traces as far back as 700 B.C. to the wild Central-Asian
steppes, near the Chinese-Russian border, terrains and waters guaranteed to
nourish ruggedness. The early people who lived here raised cattle, sheep,
camels, or horses, depending upon where they lived. They also raised dogs to
herd them. Isolated from the rest of the world, these dogs developed into a
definite type, very much like the heavier long-coated Portuguese Water Dog.
One theory of
these long-perished times is that some of the rugged Asian herding dogs were
captured by the Berbers,
a people who spread slowly across the face of North
Africa to Morocco.
Their descendants, the Moors, arrived in Portugal in the 8th century, bringing the
water dogs with them.
Another theory
purports that some of the dogs left the Asian steppes with the Goths, a
confederation of German tribes. Some, (the Ostrogoths),
went west and their dogs became the German poodle, called in German the
poodle-hund or puddle-dog, that is, water-dog. Others, (the Visigoths),
went south to fight the Romans, and their dogs became the Lion Dog, groomed in
the traditional lion cut. In A.D. 400, the Visigoths invaded Spain and Portugal
(then known only as Iberia) and the dogs found their homeland.
A Portuguese Water Dog is first
described in 1297 in a monk’s account of a drowning sailor who was pulled from
the sea by a dog with a "black coat, the hair long and rough, cut to the
first rib and with a tail tuft". The Portuguese Water Dog became known as
the "lion dog" due to the appearance of this clip. Some believe that
the Portuguese Water Dog made its contribution to history in the 16th century,
working on board the ships of the Spanish
Armada.
These theories
explain how the Poodle and the Portuguese Water Dog may have developed from the
same ancient genetic pool. At one time the Poodle was a longer-coated dog, as
is one variety of the Portuguese Water Dog. The possibility also exists that
some of the long-coated water dogs grew up with the ancient Iberians. In
early times, Celtiberians migrated from lands which now belong to southwestern
Germany. Swarming over the Pyrenees, circulating over the whole of western
Europe, they established bases in Iberia, as well as in Ireland, Wales, and
Brittany. The Irish Water Spaniel is believed to be a
descendant of the Portuguese Water Dog.
The PWD was a
breed on the verge of extinction when, during the 1930s, Dr. Vasco Bensuade, a
wealthy Portuguese Sephardic Jewish shipping magnate, began to seek
out fishermen's dogs and utilize them in a breeding program to re-establish the
breed. Bensaude's keel was named Algarbiorum, and his most famous dog was Leao
(1931-1942), a very "type-y" fisherman's stud dog who was bred to so
many different bitches that about half of the pedigreed Portuguese Water Dogs
in existence can trace their lineage back to him. Bensaude was aided by two
Portuguese veterinarians, Dr. Francisco Pinto Soares and Dr. Manuel Fernander
Marques. His work was carried on by Conchita Cintron De Castelo Branco, to whom
he gave his last 17 PWDs and all his archives.
Dr. Antonio
Cabral was the founder of De Avalade kennels in Portugal. Ch. Charlie de Avalade
(Charlie), a brown-coated dog, and C. B. Baluarte De Avalade (Balu) were two of
his many famous PWDs. He registered his first PWD in 1954, after Bensaude had
pioneered the re-establishment of the breed in Portugal. Cabral worked with
Carla Molinari, Deyanne Miller, Sonja Santos and others to establish PWDs in
the US. The "Mark of Cabral" is a triangular shape of different
color/textured hair, usually a few inches from the base of the tail. You can
see it more easily on a fresh lion clip -- it can look like the clipper got too
close.
Deyanne Miller
is the single person most responsible for the rise of the PWD in America. In
1972, the Millers, along with 14 other people, formed the Portuguese Water Dog
Club of America, Inc. (PWDCA). She worked with dogs from both the Cintron and
Cabral lineages to establish a stable genetic pool of PWDs in the United States
at her Farmion kennels. Another early US breeder of PWDs was the actor Raymond
Burr.