Another Type Of Cocker Spaniel, The English Cocker
Posted: Sunday, June 21, 2009
by John Jackson
GreatDogSite.com
If you live in the United States, you can probably picture a Cocker Spaniel in your head: a smaller dog with long, shiny fur, dangling ears with wavy hair, and big brown eyes. However, there is an English Cocker Spaniel that does not adhere to this stereotype! English Cocker Spaniels differ greatly from American Cocker Spaniels, but both are wonderful and charming breeds of dog.
The Springer Spaniel category did not always have clarification for the difference between Cocker Spaniels and their groupmates, the English Springer Spaniel and the Sussex Spaniel. There was no documented differentiation until the late 1800s, when England finally acknowledged that the Cocker Spaniel was a separate breed altogether.
While there was deliberation in England about the breaking up of the Springer Spaniel group into smaller, more specific breeds, the Cocker Spaniel had already been imported to the United States and was becoming a much sought-after breed of its own. This explains why the American and English Cocker Spaniels began to differ in various characteristics of the breed.
Even though the Cocker Spaniel's primary use in England was as a hunting dog, Americans appreciated the dog for entirely different reasons. Their glamorous coats made the American Cocker Spaniel very appealing, and thus breeders worked hard to accentuate their aesthetic traits as opposed to their working ability. The traits between English and American Cocker Spaniels continued to differ until there were distinct and obvious lines between each breed. In the 1940s, English Cocker Spaniel enthusiasts took action. They forced the AKC to recognize the English Cocker Spaniels as a different breed, unassociated with the American Cocker Spaniel.
The primary differentiation between the English and American Cockers is their coats. Having been bred for beauty, the American Cocker Spaniel's coat is much longer, shinier, and thicker than their English counterparts. The American Cocker Spaniel has also been bred somewhat smaller, also resulting in different facial features, such as a shorter snout and more forward-facing eyes. Despite the differences, both breeds are absolutely lovely.
This article was written by John Jackson and has been contributed by http://www.greatdogsite.com. For more information on the Cocker Spaniel, please visit our page http://www.greatdogsite.com/breeds/details/Cocker_Spaniel/.
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