Lodi News-Sentinel

The dog days of summer are coming to Lodi

Kennel clubs to hold annual dog shows at Lodi Grape Festival

- Wes Bowers NEWS-SENTINEL STAFF WRITER

The Lodi Grape Festival Grounds will be going to the dogs for a brief period next week.

The Golden Valley and San Joaquin kennel clubs will host their annual dog shows at the festival grounds Aug. 13-16, with more than 4,000 canines of all breeds participat­ing.

It will be the first show the two clubs have held since December of 2019, and the first in Lodi.

“Our shows in the past have been at the San Joaquin County Fairground­s in Stockton,” show manager and club secretary Virginia Latham-Smith said. “We couldn’t hold the show last year because of COVID, and then the fairground­s closed permanentl­y, so we had to find a new venue.”

The 250-acre fairground­s closed in October 2020 to make way for a new mixed-use housing developmen­t on 110 acres, of which 20% will be affordable housing, according to reports.

The Grape Festival, LathamSmit­h said, had all the facilities the clubs needed to hold a successful event, including cooled buildings for the summer weather, lots of outdoor space and plenty of parking for participan­ts and attendees.

A “Best in Show” award will be presented each day of the fourday event, with dogs from all over the country participat­ing.

Dogs will earn points toward a national ranking system as well, Latham-Smith said.

“Some of the dogs that will be here have been shown at the Westminste­r Kennel Club show,” she said.

There have been a few dogs from San Joaquin County to make the Westminste­r show over the years, including Bono, a Havanese that won the Toy Group category at the 2020 Westminste­r Show and is handled by Acampo residents Bill and Taffe McFadden.

According to media reports, Bill McFadden was injured in an automobile accident in Wyoming earlier this year on his way to this year’s Westminste­r show, and will be off the show trail for a while.

Bill McFadden has handled two Westminste­r Best in Show winners in the past — a Bichon Frise named Flynn in 2018, and a Kerry blue terrier named Mick in 2003.

There is no entry fee to the show, but parking is $10. Once inside, attendees can get a close-up

look at the dogs and speak with their handlers.

Latham-Smith said tours will also be given explaining the process of showcasing the dogs and selecting winners in categories such as Terrier, Toy, Working, Sporting, Hound, Non-Sporting and Herding.

There will be an obedience competitio­n, an informatio­n booth about the clubs, as well as vendors selling dog-related merchandis­e and supplies.

The show opens at 8 a.m. each day, and closes at 6 p.m. For more informatio­n, visit www.sanjoauqui­nkc.org.

“We’re very happy to have found a location,” Latham-Smith said. “The management at the Grape Festival has been very helpful to us. It’s a dramatic change because we had been holding shows in Stockton for 45 years, but we’re happy we’ve found a new home in Lodi.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTOGRAPH ?? A dog handler is presented an award for Best Junior Showman during the 2016 San Joaquin Kennel Club dog show in Stockton. After being held in Stockton for decades, the event will be held at the Lodi Grape Festival grounds this year.
COURTESY PHOTOGRAPH A dog handler is presented an award for Best Junior Showman during the 2016 San Joaquin Kennel Club dog show in Stockton. After being held in Stockton for decades, the event will be held at the Lodi Grape Festival grounds this year.

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