The following Cardigan Welsh Corgi breed standard is printed by kind permission of the Irish Kennel Club. In addition, the Cardigan Welsh Corgi Club of America has also given permission to include their illustrated standard on our web site Though the written standards are somewhat different, the illustrated standard provides excellent drawings and color illustrations of Cardigan coat colors (page 16).

 

 

 

Cardigan Welsh Corgi Club of America Illustrated Standard (PDF Format)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Irish Kennel Club Breed Standard - Cardigan Welsh Corgi

 

 

 

Last Update: 1984

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

General Appearance

Sturdy, tough, mobile, capable of endurance. Long in proportion to height, terminating in a fox-like brush, set in line with body.

 

 

 

Characteristics

Alert, intelligent, steady not shy or aggressive.

 

 

 

Head and Skull

Head foxy in shape and appearance, skull wide and flat between ears tapering towards eyes above which it is slightly domed. Moderate stop. Length of foreface in proportion to head 3 to 5, muzzle tapering moderately towards nose which projects slightly and is no sense blunt. Under jaw clean cut. Strong but without prominence. Nose black.

 

 

 

Eyes

Medium size, clear, giving kindly, alert but watchful expression. Rather widely set with corners clearly defined. Preferably dark, or to blend with coat, rims dark. One or both eyes pale blue, blue or blue flecked, permissible only in blue merles.

 

 

 

Ears

Erect, proportionately rather large to size of dog. Tips slightly rounded, moderately wide at base and set about 8 cm (3-1/2 ins.) apart. Carried so that tips are slightly wide of straight line drawn from tip of nose through centre of eyes, and set well back so that they can be laid flat along the neck.

 

 

 

Mouth

Teeth strong, with scissor bite, i.e. upper teeth closely overlapping the lower teeth and set square in the jaws.

 

 

 

Neck

Muscular, well-developed, in proportion to dog’s build, fitting into well sloping shoulders.

 

 

 

Forequarters

Shoulders well laid, angulated at approximately 90 degrees to upper arm, muscular, elbows close to sides. Strong bone carried down to feet. Legs short but body well clear of the ground, forearms slightly bowed to mold round the chest. Feet turned slightly outwards.

 

 

 

Body

Chest moderately broad with prominent breastbone. Body fairly long and strong, with deep brisket, well sprung ribs, clearly defined waist. Top line level.

 

 

 

Hindquarters

Strong, well-angulated and aligned with muscular thighs and second thighs, strong bone carried down to feet, legs short; when standing hocks vertical, viewed from side and rear.

 

 

 

Feet

Round, tight rather large and well padded. All dew claws to be removed.

 

 

 

Tail

Like a fox’s brush set in line with the body and moderately long (to touch or nearly touch ground). Carried low when standing but may be lifted a little above body when moving, not curled over back.

 

 

 

Gait

Free and active, elbows fitting close to sides, neither loose nor tied. Forelegs reaching well forward without too much lift, in unison with thrusting action of hind legs.

 

 

 

Coat

Short or medium of hard texture. Weatherproof, with good undercoat. Preferably straight.

 

 

 

Colour

Any colour, with or without white markings, but white should not predominate.

 

 

 

Size

Height: ideal 30 cms (12 ins) at shoulder. Weight in proportion to size with overall balance the prime consideration.

 

 

 

Faults

Any departure from the foregoing points should be considered a fault and the seriousness with which the fault should be regarded in exact proportion to its degree.

 

 

 

Note

Male animals should have two apparent normal testicles fully descended into the scrotum.

 

 

 

 

 

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Last Update: 1 Aug 2008

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