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  #1  
Old 11-29-2005, 04:23 AM
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Rat Terrier

A friend had one of these cute and energenic breed, and Rudy's breeder also breeds these.

Rat Terrier
(not recognized by The Canadian Kennel Club)





Sweetwhisper Mr Milo. Beautiful, intelligent and fun-loving companions. Real heart-stealers! Bred by Dianna Thomas, Sweetwhisper. Owned by Melissa G. Dostalek, Pocketmouse Reg'd, Site 3, Comp. 27, R.R. 4, Terrace, BC V8G 4V2.

Origin: The Rat Terrier's name came courtesy of U.S. President Teddy Roosevelt, who brought a spirited little terrier back from a trip near the Grand Canyon. The newest member of the White House menagerie promptly exterminated a horde of rats that had moved into 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. after a nearby greenhouse was demolished. An amalgamation of many breeds, the Rat Terrier's beginnings may have started with the crossbreeding of Smooth Fox Terriers and Manchester Terriers in the 1820s in Britain. It's thought the British may also have blended in the now-extinct English White Terrier as well as the Bull Terrier before the breed reached U.S. shores in the 1890s. Popular as a farm dog in the early 1900s, the Rat Terrier was interbred with a wide variety of breeds including Beagles, Whippets, Toy Fox Terriers and Chihuahuas. Though the breed had a name for close to a century, it didn't have a standard until 1994, when charter members of the Rat Terrier Club of America polled breeders, owners and judges in order to draw up an acceptable standard. With further crossbreeding discouraged and a standard as a blueprint, reputable breeders began to develop uniformity and a clear breed type.

Temperament: Spunky, lively, playful and inquisitive, the Rat Terrier is an affectionate and faithful companion. They can be vocal but not particularly yappy. Count on them to keep the family informed if strangers invade their territory.

Activity level: Early socialization and obedience training are highly recommended to keep the Rat Terrier occupied. These busy characters are easily bored. Though not technically 'earth dogs,' they may indulge in digging when the spirit strikes.

Height/Weight: Rat Terriers come in two sizes. Miniatures range from 10-13 in at the withers (25-33 cm). Standards will measure over 13 and up to 19 in (33-48 cm). Weight may be anywhere from 8-25 lb (3.5-11 cm).

Coat: The coat is smooth, short and dense.

Colour: Just about any colour is acceptable, but hound colours are preferred, being predominately white and black with tan trim, white and black, or white and tan. However, red, orange, lemon, blue or blue with or without the tan trim are also approved as long as there's at least a minimal patch of white on the body.

Grooming: It's a positive breeze. A wipe-down with a hound glove, a swipe or two with a shedding blade or a going-over with a stiff bristle brush will do the job.
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Old 11-29-2005, 04:33 AM
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The Rat Terrier is an American breed that originated from a mixture of crosses by early immigrants of this country using old time Fox Terriers and other European Terriers common in the 19th century; the Old English White Terrier, Manchester Terrier, Bull Terrier, etc., and later crossed with Beagles, more Smooth Fox Terrier, Toy Fox Terriers, Whippets, Italian Greyhounds and other available Feist breeds.
These small to medium sized, smooth coated Terriers are muscular and medium boned. Bred primarily for farm and ranch dogs to hunt, protect and guard against vermin and varmints, Rat Terriers have strong jaws and are known for their quick, agile movements, which enable them to kill rats and other vermin and small game. Generally 10-25 pounds, they were not however specifically bred to be Earthdogs and are thus not normally spanned.

A short chase of about two hundred yards and a high shrill “yipping” is natural to the breed. Rat Terriers will follow most quarry to ground. But, unlike the Jack Russell Terrier, Fox Terrier and other traditional Earthdog breeds, Rat Terriers are more suited for trailing, flushing and treeing game or birds, and hunting hares, rabbit or other varmint that usually give a much faster, longer and straighter run.

During the 1910s and 1920s, the Rat Terrier was one of the most common farm dogs. Because Kansas Jack Rabbits were plaguing crops in the Midwest, to increase the speed and versatility of the Rat Terrier, some Farmers began breeding them to Whippets, Italian Greyhounds and other "snap dog" breeds. Around the same time, others in the Central and Southern regions, bred their Rat Terriers to Beagles to bring out a stronger prey and pack drive for hunting purposes. These early crosses eventually gave the breed the speed and "nose", as well as the good disposition they are known for today. A non-sparing, playful, happy-go-lucky, devoted companion that is also protective, and yet can be aloof with strangers. They are an efficient, intuitive hunter as well as an energetic and intelligent companion, at home in the city or country.

A tenacious Terrier of questionable ancestry, named "Skip", was acquired on a trip near the Grand Canyon by our 26th President, Theodore Roosevelt, and resided there in The White House during Roosevelt’s presidency. The breed's name is attributed to T.R., coined up in honor of his own Terriers’ who promptly exterminated the many thousands of rats that infested The White House after the demolition of the old Jefferson greenhouses, and during the subsequent construction of additional wings.

Rat Terriers, popular from the 1910s through the 1940's, were owned and loved by many of our parents and grandparents. In the 1930s film "The Little Colonel", you can see Shirley Temple putting one of these pied dogs to bed under the covers. As mechanized farming and poison control began to dominate the farming environment, the breed's numbers began to dwindle. In the 1950s the breed was maintained by only a handful of breeders. The breed successfully reemerged during the late 70's through 1980s, but more as a companion dog that hunts, rather than a hunting companion.

In the mid 1920s, Fox Terrier fanciers sought a distinct category for their toy dogs. When the Toy Fox Terrier was officially recognized by the United Kennel Club on February 24th, 1936; those individuals that did not meet the criteria of TFT standard because they were over-sized, mismarked, or had wrong coloration or patterning, were “culled” and often found their way back into Rat Terrier breeding programs. With the desire of some to use these otherwise "good dogs" and because there was no standardized Rat Terrier breed, the practice of hybridizing Toy Fox Terrier stock with those of the Rat Terrier were common in some areas.

This official recognition of the smaller toy types of Fox Terrier began the true separation of our American breeds. With the development of the Toy Fox Terrier breed came the battle of keeping these toy terriers, a toy. Breedings to Toy Manchester or Chihuahua were subsequently allowed and crosses were made within some TFT bloodlines. Although this practice was denounced by many, it wasn't abolished until the breed’s stud file officially closed on August 31, 1960. These mixes ceased to be produced, but the resulting culls may have been introduced into our Rat Terrier breed too.

The Universal Kennel Club (now UKCI), a pedigree service that registered Rat Terriers for several decades, condoned and registered these hybrid crosses. Thus breedings with Toy Fox Terrier's were still occasioned and continued to be used by some Rat Terrier breeders due to the lack of available Rat Terrier breeding stock. These infusions of Toy Fox Terrier along with earlier breedings to Beagles and sight hounds have added a degree of hybrid vigor and certainly influenced the varying types, sizes and colorations that may be seen today.

Recognition of today’s Rat Terrier is limited and little has been written about the breed. This is probably because of this mixed-breed stigma and due to the fact, as recently as 1994, the Rat Terrier did not have a written breed standard. Rat Terriers existed in numbers, but were considered by many to be a strain of Smooth Fox Terrier and sometimes were even referred to as being a "Fox Terrier” by others. For decades, breeders in various pocket communities around the country had been breeding toward their own specific standards; mostly purebreds, but with some crossbreeding for size or color, etc. Registration was haphazard and usually done, if at all, with pedigree services and many individuals lacked a documented multi-generational lineage. Plagued by these problems, and technically, without a written nationwide standard, there was no breed.

The charter members of the Rat Terrier Club of America, founded in 1995, and others worked several years prior to the actual formation of the club, to draft a standard that would correctly define and promote the breed as it is today. Through nationwide correspondence between many hundreds of breeders, fanciers and judges and by using numerous questionnaires and breed surveys, the breed was defined and an accredited, nationwide standard finally written. With a written standard in place and hybridizing discouraged, most reputable breeders have been selecting and breeding Rat Terrier to Rat Terrier with this written Standard used as their breeding goal.

The Rat Terrier Club of America is a nationally recognized organization that promotes the modern Rat Terrier breed and the written, accredited standard. This national standard accurately describes the majority of the Rat Terrier breed, as it exists today. The ideals and format set forth in the RTCA standard, were adopted by the United Kennel Club in January 1999. This has ultimately has brought more uniformity to the breed and helped to establish a more defined Rat Terrier than at any previous time in its history.

http://www.ratterrierclub.com/
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Old 11-29-2005, 04:56 AM
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One of these little gits bit my daughter right in the face.

The owners did nothing about it. I should ahve sued them.

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Old 11-29-2005, 09:00 AM
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My aunt has one from the dog pound, poor girl had a litter of chow-chow puppies!

Hers still has a tail though.
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Old 11-29-2005, 02:42 PM
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My friend has a rat terrier. It is the sweetest, most hyperactive dog! Very cute dogs, he's a tricolored one with a teeny tiny stub of a tail
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Old 11-29-2005, 02:46 PM
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I have a rat terrier he is registered with ukc. he is the sweetest thing very affectionate not too hyper but very yappy. Barks all the time and they have a howl in their bark. I attached a pic of him his name is Bud.
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Old 11-29-2005, 06:00 PM
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We have two toy Rat Terriers. Great dogs but make sure you socialize them to other dogs when young! Ours are little demons when it comes to other dogs! Especially my Kaylee! lol Her sister Sammy isnt as bad but they will get into it with each other or another dog alot.
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Old 11-29-2005, 07:45 PM
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I have a rat terrier.. Hes not mine, hes my parents..
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