T
Terry R
Guest
Re: Boxer colour
Actually the color of the Boxer goes back much farther than what was desireable during the wars. During the creation of the Boxer there were many bulldogs from England in Germany. These bulldogs much resembled the German "bulldog" the bullenbeisser of the time except for color. These dogs intermixed improving both breeds but also adding more colors. When the Germans began getting serious about the Boxer they further refined the breed. In order to get back to the German roots of the bullenbeisser and to create a greater difference between the German Boxer and the English bulldog (not todays version) they tried to eliminate the white in the Boxer. The Germans wanted a unique German dog not to be confused with their English cousin. While there may have been some health issues such as deafness that motovated them nationalism had at least as much to do with the Boxer standard. These goals and eventual standard far preceeded even WW1. German Boxers of today are much more "plain" (less white, less flash) than American Boxers. These "plain" (I hate that word because these Boxers are anything but plain) produce fewer white Boxers than Americans do.
Originally posted by boxerkids
I have read that 20% of all Boxers are born white. If this is true and white was written out of the standard due to war time Boxers being too visible wouldn't it be just as easy to write white back into the standard.
I can understand some colours being undesirable due to a higher prevalence of genetic disorders, but not due to the fact that they were too visible in wartime.
Actually the color of the Boxer goes back much farther than what was desireable during the wars. During the creation of the Boxer there were many bulldogs from England in Germany. These bulldogs much resembled the German "bulldog" the bullenbeisser of the time except for color. These dogs intermixed improving both breeds but also adding more colors. When the Germans began getting serious about the Boxer they further refined the breed. In order to get back to the German roots of the bullenbeisser and to create a greater difference between the German Boxer and the English bulldog (not todays version) they tried to eliminate the white in the Boxer. The Germans wanted a unique German dog not to be confused with their English cousin. While there may have been some health issues such as deafness that motovated them nationalism had at least as much to do with the Boxer standard. These goals and eventual standard far preceeded even WW1. German Boxers of today are much more "plain" (less white, less flash) than American Boxers. These "plain" (I hate that word because these Boxers are anything but plain) produce fewer white Boxers than Americans do.
