If the Cavalier King
Charles Spaniel enjoys the distinction of being the only purebred dog
born of
dissatisfaction, surely the Havana Silk Dog enjoys the distinction of
being the
only purebred dog born of an effort to eliminate a genetic problem from
within
a breed!
For it was the efforts of a dedicated group of American Havanese
breeders to
simply produce a sounder and healthier animal which resulted in the
reemergence
of the Havana Silk Dog, a breed of Cuban origin popular some one
hundred fifty
years earlier and long thought to be extinct.
This disappearance,
as it turns out, was apparently less a matter of true genetic
extermination
than a case of what cultural anthropologists term “extinction
by assimilation”.
As was true with the Cavalier and the English Toy Spaniel, the genes
which had
originally created the Havana Silk Dog were still alive and well, but
had
simply been assimilated into the modern Havanese
breed over the years.
Utilizing only rigid
selection in an effort to breed away from dwarfism, this elegant little
Cuban
breed was restored to its original form, at first by accident and then
by
deliberate design, and was found to breed true within a very few
generations.
That the breed is very
old is without doubt. As early as 1700, an entrepreneur by the name of
Mr.
Cowley brought a troop of small dogs advertised as “the
Little Ball of Dancing
Dogs” from Cuba to the court of Queen Anne, who was by all
accounts enchanted
by them and later owned several. Likewise the Toy Poodle counts among
its
earliest progenitors a breed of Caribbean origin known in
These so-called
“small
dogs of Havane”, or “Havana Silk Dogs”,
were popular in the courts of Europe in
the 18th, 19th, and early
20th centuries, and
were exhibited in early shows there, but by the end of WWII, it
appeared they
had vanished from the Continent along with so much else, and were all
but
forgotten outside their Caribbean home.
Then in the early 1970s,
ads began appearing in American dog magazines for “Toy
Havanese”, a purely
American name given to the small dogs apparently brought to the
In 2000, when it became
apparent that the particular form of dwarfism often found in the
Havanese
throughout the US and Europe was associated with many of the health
problems
plaguing the breed, a small group of American breeders began choosing
only
those dogs with long, straight forelegs for breeding, adding
straight-legged
dogs from the Russian and post-revolutionary Cuban gene pools to
strengthen
their lines.
Within three
generations, a “new” dog started to emerge, and to
reproduce itself with a
consistency astonishing in a breed heretofore famous for its lack
thereof.
Besides displaying the
straight legs
and physical soundness that the breeders were selecting for, this
“new” dog was
invariably leaner of bone, with a much flatter, silkier coat, a longer,
more
refined muzzle and smaller ears, a longer neck, more angulation, a
dropped
croup, and a crosier tail carried waving like a plume high over the
rump. In
short, it was a much different - and much more elegant - dog.
In early 2007, those
fanciers preferring both the look and general robust health of these
very
different dogs split off completely from the Havanese breed,
establishing their
own national Parent Club and registry for the express purpose of
preventing any
further interbreeding with the Havanese.
The old name
Havana Silk Dog was chosen for this newly restored breed because the
traits
displayed so consistently in these dogs (but not described in the
current
Havanese standard) were precisely those pictured and described in the
dogs of
Because the restoration
of the Havana Silk Dog was in truth a happy accident resulting from the
founding breeders’ recognition of the importance of soundness
and health in a
breeding program, full registration of intact animals by the Havana
Silk Dog
Association of America, the breed’s national Parent Club,
requires an OFA/CHIC
number, a DNA profile, and a physical evaluation to exclude from the
gene pool
dogs displaying short or bowed forelegs and other deviations from
soundness and
traditional Cuban breed type.
Copyright
2007 Havana Silk Dog
Association of
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