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Alaskan Malamute
Breed Standard
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GENERAL APPEARANCE
The Alaskan Malamute, one of the oldest Arctic sled
dogs, is a powerful and substantially built dog with a deep chest
and strong, well-muscled body. The Malamute stands well over the
pads, and this stance gives the appearance of much activity and a
proud carriage, with head erect and eyes alert showing interest and
curiosity. The head is broad. Ears are triangular and erect when
alerted. The muzzle is bulky, only slight diminishing in width from
root to nose. The muzzle is not pointed or long, yet not stubby. The
coat is thick with a coarse guard coat of sufficient length to
protect a woolly undercoat. Malamutes are of various colors. Face
markings are a distinguishing feature. These consist of a cap over
the head, the face either all white or marked with a bar and/or mask.
The tail is well furred, carried over the back, and has the
appearance of a waving plume.
The Malamute must be a heavy boned dog with sound
legs, good feet, deep chest and powerful shoulders, and have all of
the other physical attributes necessary for the efficient
performance of his job. The gait must be steady, balanced, tireless
and totally efficient. He is not intended as a racing sled dog
designed to compete in speed trials. The Malamute is structured for
strength and endurance, and any characteristic of the individual
specimen, including temperament, which interferes with the
accomplishment of this purpose, is to be considered the most serious
of faults.
SIZE, PROPORTION, SUBSTANCE
There is a natural
range in size in the breed. The desirable freighting sizes are males,
25 inches at the shoulders, 85 pounds; females, 23 inches at the
shoulders, 75 pounds. However, size consideration should not
outweigh that of type, proportion, movement and other functional
attributes. When dogs are judged equal in type, proportion, movement,
the dog nearest the desirable freighting size is to be preferred.
The depth of chest is approximately one half the height of the dog
at the shoulders, the deepest point being just behind the forelegs.
The length of the body from point of shoulder to the rear point of
pelvis is longer than the height of the body from ground to top of
the withers. The body carries no excess weight, and bone is in
proportion to size.
HEAD
The head is broad and
deep, not coarse or clumsy, but in proportion to the size of the
dog. The expression is soft and indicates an affectionate
disposition. The eyes are obliquely placed in the skull. Eyes are
brown, almond shaped and of medium size. Dark eyes are preferred.
Blue Eyes are a Disqualifying Fault. The ears are of medium size,
but small in proportion to the head. The ears are triangular in
shape and slightly rounded at the tips. They are set wide apart on
the outside back edges of the skull on line with the upper corner of
the eye, giving ears the appearance, when erect, of standing off
from the skull. Erect ears point slightly forward, but when the dog
is at work, the ears are sometimes folded against the skull. High
set ears are a fault.
The skull is broad and
moderately rounded between the ears, gradually narrowing and
flattening on top as it approaches the eyes, rounding off to cheeks
that are moderately flat. There is a slight furrow between the eyes.
The topline of the skull and the topline of the muzzle show a slight
break downward from a straight line as they join. The muzzle is
large and bulky in proportion to the size of the skull, diminishing
slightly in width and depth from junction with the skull to the nose.
In all coat colors, except reds, the nose, lips, and eye rims'
pigmentation is black. Brown is permitted in red dogs. The lighter
streaked "snow nose" is acceptable. The lips are close fitting. The
upper and lower jaws are broad with large teeth. The incisors meet
with a scissors grip. Overshot or undershot is a fault.
NECK,
TOPLINE, BODY
The neck is strong and
moderately arched. The chest is well developed. The body is
compactly built but not short coupled. The back is straight and
gently sloping to the hips. The loins are hard and well muscled. A
long loin that may weaken the back is a fault. The tail is
moderately set and follows the line of the spine at the base. The
tail is carried over the back when not working. It is not a snap
tail or curled tight against the back, nor is it short furred like a
fox brush. The Malamute tail is well furred and has the appearance
of a waving plume.
FOREQUARTERS
The shoulders are
moderately sloping; forelegs heavily boned and muscled, straight to
the pasterns when viewed from the front. Pasterns are short and
strong and slightly sloping when viewed from the side. The feet are
of the snowshoe type, tight and deep, with well-cushioned pads,
giving a firm, compact appearance. The feet are large, toes tight
fitting and well arched. There is a protective growth of hair
between the toes. The pads are thick and tough; toenails short and
strong.
HINDQUARTERS
The rear legs are
broad and heavily muscled through the thighs; stifles moderately
bent; hock joints are moderately bent and well let down. When viewed
from the rear, the legs stand and move true in line with the
movement of the front legs, not too close or too wide. Dewclaws on
the rear legs are undesirable and should be removed shortly after
puppies are whelped.
COAT
The Malamute has a
thick, coarse guard coat, never long and soft. The undercoat is
dense, from one to two inches in depth, oily and woolly. The coarse
guard coat varies in length as does the undercoat. The coat is
relatively short to medium along the sides of the body, with the
length of the coat increasing around the shoulders and neck, down
the back, over the rump, and in the breeching and plume. Malamutes
usually have a shorter and less dense coat during the summer months.
The Malamute is shown naturally. Trimming is not acceptable except
to provide a clean cut appearance of feet.
COLOR
The usual colors range
from light gray through intermediate shadings to black, sable, and
shadings of sable to red. Color combinations are acceptable in
undercoats, points, and trimmings. The only solid color allowable is
all white. White is always the predominant color on underbody, parts
of legs, feet, and part of face markings. A white blaze on the
forehead and/or collar or a spot on the nape is attractive and
acceptable. The Malamute is mantled, and broken colors extending
over the body or uneven splashing are undesirable.
GAIT
The gait of the
Malamute is steady, balanced, and powerful. He is agile for his size
and build. When viewed from the side, the hindquarters exhibit
strong rear drive that is transmitted through a well-muscled loin to
the forequarters. The forequarters receive the drive from the rear
with a smooth reaching stride. When viewed from the front or from
the rear, the legs move true in line, not too close or too wide. At
a fast trot, the feet will converge toward the centerline of the
body. A stilted gait, or any gait that is not completely efficient
and tireless, is to be penalized.
TEMPERAMENT
The Alaskan Malamute
is an affectionate, friendly dog, not a "one man" dog. He is a loyal,
devoted companion, playful in invitation, but generally impressive
by his dignity after maturity.
SUMMARY
IMPORTANT: In judging Malamutes, their function as a
sledge dog for heavy freighting in the Arctic must be given
consideration above all else. The degree to which a dog is penalized
should depend upon the extent to which the dog deviates from the
description of the ideal Malamute and the extent to which the
particular fault would actually affect the working ability of the
dog. The legs of the Malamute must indicate unusual strength and
tremendous propelling power. Any indication of unsoundness in legs
and feet, front or rear, standing or moving, is to be considered a
serious fault. Faults under this provision would be splay-footedness,
cowhocks, bad pasterns, straight shoulders, lack of angulation,
stilted gait (or any gait that isn't balanced, strong and steady),
ranginess, shallowness, ponderousness, lightness of bone, and poor
overall proportion.
DISQUALIFICATIONS
Blue Eyes
Approved April 12, 1994
Effective May 31, 1994
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