1) Angulation and Movement
The German Shepherd Dog is a trotter. His gait exhibits diagonal
movement, i.e., the hind foot and the forefoot on opposite sides move
simultaneously. The limbs, therefore, must be so similarly
proportioned to one another, i.e. angulated, that the action of the
rear as it carries through to the middle of the body and is matched by
an equally far-reaching forehand causes no essential change in the
topline. Every tendency toward overangulation of the rear quarters
diminishes soundess and endurance. The correct proportions of height
to length and corresponding length of the leg bones results in a
ground-eating gait that is low to the ground and imparts an impression
of effortless progression. With his head thrust forward and a slightly
raised tail, a balanced and even trotter will have a topline that
falls in moderate curves from the tip of the ears over the neck and
level back through the tip of the tail.
2) Temperament, Character and Abilities
Sound nerves, alertness, self-confidence, trainability,
watchfulness, loyalty and incorruptibility, as well as courage,
fighting drive and hardness, are the outstanding characteristics of a
purebred German Shepherd Dog. They make his suitable to be a superior
working dog in general, and in particular to be a guard, companion,
protection and herding dog.
His ample scenting abilities, added to his conformation as a trotter,
make it possible for him to quietly and surely work out a track
without bodily strain and with his nose close to the ground. This
makes him highly useful as a multipurpose track and search dog.
3) Head
The head should be in proportion to the body size (in length
approximately 40% of the height at the withers) and not coarse,
overrefined or overstretched(snipey). In general appearance, it should
be dry with moderate breadth between the ears.
The forehead when viewed from the front or side is only slightly
arched. It should be without a center furrow or with only a slightly
defined furrow.
The cheeks form a gentle curve laterally without protrusion toward the
front. When viewed from above, the skull (approximately 50% of the
entire head length) tapers gradually and evenly from the ears to the
tip of the nose, with a sloping rather than a sharply defined stop and
into a long, dry wedge-shaped muzzle (the upper and lower jaws must be
strongly developed.)
The width of the skull should correspond approximately to the length
of the skull. Also, a slight oversize in the case of males or
undersize in the case of females is not objectionable.
The muzzle is strong; the lips are firm and dry and close tightly.
The bridge of the nose is straight and runs nearly parallel with the
plane of the forehead.
4) Dentition
Dentition must be healthy, strong and complete (42 teeth, 20 in the
upper jaw and 22 in the lower jaw). The German Shepherd Dog has a
scissors bite, e.g. the incisors must meet each other in a
scissorslike fashion, with the outer surface of the incisors of the
lower jaw sliding next to the inner surface of the incisors of the
upper jaw.
An undershot or overshot bite if faulty, as are large gaps between the
teeth. A level bite is faulty, as the incisors close on a straight
line.
The jaws must be strongly developed so that the teeth may be deeply
rooted.
5) Ears
The ears are of medium size, wide at the base and set high. They
taper to a point and are carried facing forward and vertically (the
tips not inclined toward each other). Tipped, cropped and hanging ears
are rejected. Ears drawn toward each other greatly impair the general
appearance. The ears of puppies and young dogs sometiems drop or pull
toward each other during the teething period, which can last until six
months of age and sometimes longer.
Many dogs draw their ears back during motion or at rest. This is not
faulty.
6) Eyes
The eyes are of medium size, almond shaped, somewhat slanting and
not protruding.
The color of the eyes should blend with the color of the coat. They
should be as dark as possible. They should have a lively, intelligent
and self-confident expression.
7) Neck
The neck should be strong with well-developed muscles and without
looseness of the throat skin (dewlaps).
The neck is carried at an angle of about 45 degrees to the horizontal.
It is carried higher when excited and lower when trotting.
8) Body
The body length should exceed the height at the withers. It
shouldamount to about 110 to 117% of the height at the witthers. Dogs
with a short, square or tall build are undesirable.
The chest is deep (approximately 45 to 48% of the height at the
withers) but not too wide. The underchest should be as long as
possible and pronounced.
The ribs should be well formed and long, neither barrel shaped nor too
flat. They should reach the sternum, which is at the same level as the
elbows. A correctly formed rib cage allows the elbows freedom of
movement when the dogs trots. A too round rib cage disrupts the motion
of the elbows and causes them to turn out. A too flat rib cage draws
the elbows in toward one another. The rib cage extends far back so
that the loins are relatively short.
The abdomen is moderately tucked up. The back, including the loins, is
straight and strongly developed yet not too long between the withers
and the croup. The withers must be long and high, sloping slightly
from front to rear, defined against the back into which it gently
blends without breaking the topline. The loins must be wide, strong
and well muscled.
The croup is long and slightly angled (approximately 23 degrees). The
ileum and the sacrum are the foundation bones of the croup. Short,
steep or flat croups are undesirable.
9) Tail
The tail is bushy and should reach at least to the hock joint but
not beyond the middle of the hocks. Sometimes the tail forms a hook to
one side at its end, though this is undesirable. At rest the tail is
carried in a gentle downward curve, but when the dog is excited or in
motion, it is curved more and carried higher. The tail should never be
raised past the vertical. The tail, therefore, should not be carried
straight or curled over the back.
Docked tails are inadmissible.
10) Forequarters
The shoulder blade should be long with an oblique placement (the
angle at 45 degrees) and lying flat against the body. The upper arm
joins the shoulder blade in an approximate right angle. The upper arm
as well as the shoulder must be strong and well muscled.
The forearm must be straight when viewed from all sides. The bones of
the uppper arm and forearm are more oval than round.
The pasterns should be firm but neither too steep nor too down in
pastern (Approximately 20 degrees).
The elbows must be neither turned in nor turned out. the length of the
leg bones should exceed the depth of the chest (approximately 55%).
11) Hindquarters
The thigh is broad and well muscled. The upper thigh bone when
viewed from the side joins the only slightly longer lower thigh bone
at an angle of approximately 120 degrees. The angulation corresponds
roughly to the forequarter angulation without being overangulated. The
hock joint is strong and firm. The hock is strong and forms a firm
joint with the lower thigh. The entire hindquarters must be strong and
well muscled to be capable of carrying the body effortlessly forward
during motion.
12) Feet
The feet are relatively round, short, tightly formed and arched.
The pads are very hard, but not chapped. The anils are short, strong
and of a dark color. Dewclaws sometime appear on the hind legs and
should be removed within the first few days of birth.
14) Color
Color should be black with regular markings in brown, tan to light
gray, also with a black saddle, dark sable (black cover on a gray or
light brown case with corresponding lighter marks), black, uniform
gray or with light or brown markings. Small white markings on the
forechest or a very light color on the insides of the legs are
permissible though not desired. The nose must be black with all coat
colors. (Dogs with little or no masks, yellow or strikingly light
eyes, light markings on the chest and insides of the legs, white nails
and a red tip of the tail or washed out weak colors are considered
lacking in pigment.) The undercoat or base hair is always light gray,
with the exception of that on black dogs. the final color of a puppy
is only determined when the outer coat completely develops.
15) Coat
a) The medium smooth coated German Shepherd Dog
The outer coat should be as thick as possible. The individual hairs
are straight, coarse and lying flat against the body. The coat is
short on the head inclusive of the ears, the front of the legs, the
feet and the toes but longer and thicker on the neck. The hair grows
longer on the back of the fore- and hind legs as far down as the
pastern and the hock joint, forming moderate breeching on the thighs.
the length of the hair varies, and due to these differences in length,
there are many intermediate forms. A too short or molelike coat is
faulty.
b) The long smooth coated German Shepherd Dog
The individual hairs are longer, not always straight and above all
not lying close to the body. The coat is considerably longer inside
and behind the ears, on the back of the forearm and usually in the
loin area. now and then there will be tufts in the ears and feathering
from elbow to pastern. The breeching along the thigh is long and
thick. The tail is bushy with slight feathering underneath. the
long-smooth-coat is not as weatherproof as the medium-smooth-coat and
is therefore undesirable; however, provided there is sufficient
undercoat, it may be passed for breeding, as long as the breed
regulations of the countr allow it.
With the long smooth coated German Shepherd Dog, a narrow chest and
narrow overstretched muzzle are frequently found.
c) The long coated German Shepherd Dog
The coat is considerably longer than that of the long-smooth-coat.
It is generally very soft and forms a parting along the back. The
udnercoat will be found in the region of the loins or will not be
present at all. A long coat is greatly diminished in weatherproofing
and utility and therefore is undesirable.
=Faults=
Faults include anything that impairs working versatility, endurance
and working competency, especially lack of sex characteristics and
temperament traits contrary to the German Shepherd Dog such as apathy,
weak nerves or overexcitability, shyness; lack of vitality or
willingness to work; monorchids and cryptorchids and testicles too
small; a soft or flabby constitution and a lack of substance; fading
pigment; blues, albinos (with complete lack of pigmentation, e.g. pink
nose, etc.) and whites (near to pure white with black nose); over and
under size; stunted growth; high-legged dogs and those with an
overloaded forechest; a disproportionaltely short, too refined or
coarse build; a soft back, too steep a placement of the limbs and
anything depreciating the reach and endurance of gait; a muzzle that
is too short, blunt, weak , pointed or narrow and lacks strength; an
over-or undershot bite or any other faults of dentition, especially
weak or worn teeth; a coat that is too soft, too short or too long; a
lack of undercoat; hanging ears, a permanently faulty ear carriage or
cropped ears; a ringed, curled or generally faulty tail set; a docked
tail (stumpy) or a naturally short tail.
The above standard was approved and put into
effect for the countries and clubs of the FCI. The name of the breed
is the German Shepherd Dog. The country of origin is Germany.