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Welcome to all visitors. My name is Dawn and I have been involved with this
breed and The Utonagan Society since early 2000. I bought my first Utonagan (Luca stud dog featured above)
in 2001. I
own five Utonagan and am a registered, accredited breeder with The Utonagan
Society (TUS) Occasionally I produce a litter of registered puppies
which are available for sale.
From 2004 to January 2007 I was the Secretary for TUS but at the 2007 AGM after
a long stint I resigned as Secretary and was assigned the role of TUS Breed Advisor and Database Manager.
The Utonagan Society established 1999 was the first Utonagan establishment and holds the most extensive
records on the breed, including vital health data and litters produced since that date.
All registered Breeders of TUS adhere to quite strict but necessary breeding
ethics, to
ensure the continued good health and future of our beautiful breed. One of the most
important of our ethics applied in 2005 was to prevent further inbreeding and
line breeding which has been proven to have had a very
negative impact on certain lines, no longer registered to TUS. We have seen a great improvement in
health since this rule was applied and with continued careful selective
breeding, the breed can only benefit.
I hope that you find this website both informative and interesting and
that it helps you fully assess whether this is the breed for you and indeed
whether you are a suitable owner for this breed.
Please read the notice at the bottom of
the page, which gives you important advice about what to be cautious of.
Information for prospective Utonagan owners
Utonagan are a large, friendly,
and energetic breed with mischievous and
clumsy traits. They are exceptionally intelligent and will adapt to
any discipline i.e. agility, obedience, showing, IF you
put the time and effort in. Their
progress relies purely on your ability to nurture their growth and slow maturity,
by providing a good diet, exercise, regular worming etc and consistent training
programme. If you do provide this, they will bring you years
of dedication and companionship.
The Utonagan is not a
breed suitable for first time dog owners as they can be very challenging, during
maturity to adulthood.
I
personally do not feel the Utonagan is suitable for families with small children
or toddlers, unless both are schooled into correct behaviour. Because the breed
is naturally large, excitable and clumsy, and so too are toddlers..lol, children
could be knocked over accidentally and injuries may occur.
The Ute is
equally not suitable for families who work long unsociable hours.
The Ute
does not do well if left alone for long periods of time and needs either human or canine company. They can be
trained to adapt to periods of isolation, but if not trained adequately, they can develop separation anxiety and may
become destructive to your property, or try to escape to find you.
However
depending on the owner's responsibility and their dedication to training and
care, the Ute can adapt to any situation, so don't be disheartened by the above
just get in touch and I'll go through what would be required to adapt your pup
to your lifestyle. Although I'm a little choosy this is only because, I need to do everything to
ensure that when
my pups leave me, they are going to the most suitable homes possible.
Not all
Utes are destructive or escape artists, some are monsters some are little
angels. Whichever you purchase, if you raise them correctly they will be well
balanced dogs. Right from
the start you need to get your pup used to your daily routine and assert your
role as his alpha.
In my opinion, once you have owned a Ute, you will never want to own
another breed. I know this is true for myself, my fellow Committee Members and
possibly our entire list of TUS Members.
The Ute is
extremely easy to train because of their natural desire to please their owner.
They are easily
distracted and bored, therefore training sessions need to be short and
enjoyable for the pup.
Whilst
growing, (especially whilst teething) they may continue to chew things they shouldn't, as with most
breeds. This is easily combated by consistently removing whatever he's wrongly
chewing and replacing it with one of his toys or chews.
They have
remarkable reach (kitchen worktops and sinks are a favourite) so leave all
surfaces clear and provide plenty of
chews and toys for him to chew.
Because they can be prone to escaping,
you
need to have a secure garden with high and sturdy
fencing/gates (preferably not wooden).
If owned
and trained suitably, they can and
have excelled
in ANY field including agility, flyball, gundogs, obedience, disabled assistance dogs and Pets as
Therapy (PAT) Dogs of which we have several registered with our Society.
The Ute is
not a guard dog. Although they look the part, their temperaments do not suit
guarding duties, there are just too soft. They will bark to warn of visitors,
but this tends to be an excited woo-woo, rather than an imposing bark. Although
they can quite happily live outdoors with suitable shelter, they much prefer to
be a house dog as they need their owners company and attention.
Regardless of who you are
purchasing from, please be sure that you;
-
Have sight of the vets
letter confirming that all puppies are fit for re-homing, i.e. heart and
lungs are ok, they all have correctly aligned jaws (not overshot or
undershot) and that all boys have two testicles present. If you are buying
to breed or show your dog you need to be sure of the latter two points
especially.
-
Have sight of the eye screen
certificate for the full litter. All litters should be eye screened,
regardless of who the breeder is affiliated to. This will list all puppies
identification and should either have the 'unaffected' box ticked, or state
in the last field something similar to ' no evidence of ocular
abnormalities'. MRD is a serious eye disease, recently found to be affecting
two of the lines used independently of TUS, therefore if MRD is mentioned,
please contact
breedadvisor@theutonagansociety.com for advice. Make sure you see the
full certificate this way you ensure not only your pup but all his siblings
have tested unaffected.
-
Have sight of both parents pedigree
certificates. You need to check for any occurrences of inbreeding or
line-breeding, on both pedigrees. These are usually identifiable by
repetitions of the same names throughout the generations of the pedigree.
Please be cautious if you see any occurrences of these and seek advice on
the above e-mail.
-
Have sight of both parents Hip score
results and eye test certificates. Ensure the names on each match the names
on the parents pedigrees. The total score on the hip certificate should be
no more than 21 and preferably equal on both sides. The eye certificate
should have all 'unaffected' ticks in the middle section and in the bottom
section should state something like' no evidence of ocular disease. If MRD
is mentioned please be cautious and contact the Breed Advisor as above.
-
Have sight of the wormer used by the
breeder (there is no homeopathic cure for worms) usually either Drontol or
Panacur is used. Ensure that the puppies tummies are not swollen large and
distended (classic sign of worms)
-
Check for signs of ill health, runny
eyes, nose, rear end, lethargic underdeveloped sickly puppies should be
avoided.
-
Are supplied with genuine paperwork
for your pup on the day you collect him. This should include, Pedigree
certificate, Registration certificate, copy of litter eye certificate,
inoculation card, worming details, diet details, 6 weeks free
insurance, advice and puppy contract.
-
All TUS
puppies are sold with a breeding ban that will not be lifted until they have
passed a breeding quality assessment at 12 months, reached breeding age and achieved good health
tests. Males must have both testicles fully descended into scrotum. This
is to ensure only healthy dogs of good type are used for breeding.
If the breeder does not readily offer
you sight of all of the above, please be cautious, the puppies may not be pure
Utonagan, may be from stock affected by MRD or Hip Dysplasia, or may be from the
breeder currently awaiting trial by the RSPCA (see warning page)
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To prevent
hip dysplasia, puppies up to 18 months of age should not be over exercised and should not be allowed to
overly use the stairs. Rather than long lead walks, it is better to play in your
garden with him or drive to a local park and let the puppy play off lead within
his own energy limits whereby he can take a break whenever he needs to.
Excessive exercise can put undue stress on his growing bones and can cause dysplasia.
The Ute
moults twice yearly but sheds hair continuously throughout the year, therefore
if any of your family are allergic to animals or if you
are exceptionally house proud, then please choose another breed.
If you like
your gadgets, please believe me
the Ute does too, so put them safely out of reach.
They may
chew and ingest anything
(including tea towels etc) because of this there is a risk of him developing an interserception
(blockage) of the digestive tract whereby the bowel telescopes inside itself
causing acute infection and terrible pain.
This may require a costly operation if
caught in time, if not it could result in a fatality, therefore
for both your sakes you must not leave anything within his reach that could be swallowed.
Generally Ute ownership is no different to ownership of any
other large breed of dog, they just require a lot of dedication time and
commitment. I personally am
100% totally committed to and in awe of this breed, I must be I am owned
by 5 of them..lol.
Hopefully
any queries you may have will be answered on the various pages of
my website. However if you have any queries please e-mail me.
Warning and advice re purchasing from free ad websites
and magazines
The
Utonagan Society (TUS) Committee have noticed a surge of adverts
for HuskyxGSD puppies which are being incorrectly advertised as Utonagan. These
are appearing on various online classified websites like E-Pupz etc. The
majority of the breeders we are aware of are in Wales (please see warning page).
The pups are
advertised as registered Utonagan with registration documents. However no
documents are provided when the
owners pick their puppies up, they are told paperwork will follow in the post.
The paperwork does not arrive. They then contact us to register their pups and
we are obviously having to decline as they are not related to Utonagan.
Please note all puppies registered by TUS are advertised on TUS website. If you see an advert for Utonagan
elsewhere,
please check our website to see if they are featured on there. If not please
contact us.
If you are planning to
view a litter advertised elsewhere then please take the time to
contact myself as Breed Advisor at
breedadvisor@theutonagansociety.com in case the Breeder is the one listed on
my warning page.
Sadly these
people will continue to breed whilst unsuspecting buyers show demand. If you are
not shown all the documents listed above, this could impact severely on your
pups future health. Those that are actually Utonagan are invariably from lines
with a history of repeated inbreeding where ill health is evident. If
you are told that inbreeding has occurred to ascertain what defects the breeder
has in their lines, this is a poor and
irresponsible reason. There are other safer ways to establish what
defects your lines might be carrying, i.e. health tests!
Always ask to see both
parents. They may only have a photo of the sire and a copy of his pedigree and
health tests results which is OK as long as you are
given his owners details and tel. no. so that you can contact them. You should
ask to see the hip score results and eye
test results, before seeing the puppies, this way you do not become attached
before thoroughly checking all is well.
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