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New breeds gaining exposure, fans

Pumis, Sloughis join fray with hairless terriers

- Lorenzo Reyes @LorenzoGRe­yes USA TODAY Sports

Bikfic’s eyes widened, his ears curled up, his tail wagged and his soft but plushy corkscrew gray coat bounced up and down.

It was almost as if he knew he was the object of everyone’s attention.

A crowd of onlookers, dog lovers with their phones ready to snap photos and TV camera crews surrounded the benching area trying to get a glimpse of one of the new breeds, the Pumi, competing Monday at Pier 94 in the Westminste­r Kennel Club Dog Show.

“This is confirmati­on,” said Marika Foreman, Bikfic’s owner and handler. “It gets you the chance to talk about the breed you love. It gets you the chance to talk about Pumis to another group of people. I’ve been to shows where I was the only Pumi. But I still went. I knew I wouldn’t get any points, but that wasn’t important. People saw the dog.”

That is, after all, the goal for these new breeds.

Bikfic is one of seven Pumis to be shown Monday. The Pumi joins the Sloughi — a medium-sized, smooth-coated sighthound with ancient traces to North Africa — and the American Hairless Terrier — a small, playful and feisty breed — as the three new breeds competing in this year’s show.

Foreman is a retired engineer and science teacher who met Pumis as a girl in her native Transylvan­ia. She first saw the breed in the circus, where they were trained to act like clowns. They’re most common, however, as versatile, medium-sized stock dogs, excelling at herding cattle.

For new breeds to be accepted into Westminste­r, there have to be at least 300 purebred dogs in more than 100 households in the United States. A formal applicatio­n moves the process along.

New breeds bring a certain curiosity with fans, but for those with dogs that are competing, it’s a little more complicate­d.

“I think there’s always some uncertaint­y with how to judge a rare breed,” said Erika Walsh, vice president of the American Sloughi Associatio­n and owner/handler of Toby, a 51⁄ 2- year-old from the Czech Republic who has 75% African pedigree. “You’re very often competing in front of judges who have never seen an actual Sloughi before. But we’re in great company, and we’re so excited to be a part of Westminste­r this year.”

The American Hairless Terrier will compete Tuesday in the terrier group, so they were not in the benching area Monday. That didn’t mean, however, that some of the dogs weren’t busy Monday.

Karyn Pingel and her husband Ryan, the vice president of the American Hairless Terrier Club of America, own and handle four dogs that will compete Tuesday. But instead of having Journey, Helyx, Vyper and Walkyr resting in a hotel, they were out in New Jersey, conducting an allergy trial.

In the late 1990s, the Pingels tried just about everything to bring a dog into their lives. Their daughter had strong allergic reactions to breeds with coats. Even many of the hypoallerg­enic breeds produced an adverse reaction.

Down to their last shot, the Pingels reached out to the owner of an American Hairless Terrier. To their surprise, their daughter’s allergic reaction never flared up. So in 1999, the Pingels went all in on breeding and spreading awareness of the American Hairless Terrier.

Now, through their Woodland Manor Kennel near Tampa, the Pingels arrange allergy trials in which people afflicted by reactions to pet dander spend time around the dogs to see if they can incorporat­e them into their homes.

Through the Pingels’ affiliatio­n with the AHT Club of America, they have created a list of dog owners who volunteer to have people with allergies visit them to conduct trials. Schedules are arranged to conduct trials ranging from 15 minutes to five hours.

“So many families want to bring the joy and happiness of a dog into their lives, but they simply can’t because of health issues,” Karyn Pingel said in a phone interview. “No dog is truly hypoallerg­enic. But the allergy trials have given people who have lost hope a chance to see if an AHT works for them. These dogs have meant so much to our daughter and to our son that we want to spread awareness to as many people as we can.”

Competing in the Westminste­r Kennel Club Dog Show gives them that shot.

“It gives me great pride,” said Teri Murphy, president of the AHT Club of America. Murphy has two American Hairless Terriers, Kane and Rita, that will compete Tuesday. “To be included and accepted into the Westminste­r Kennel Club, it’s a great opportunit­y for a larger audience to be exposed to and see what a wonderful, affectiona­te and warm dog the AHTs are.”

 ?? ADAM HUNGER, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Pumis are among three new breeds competing at the 141st Westminste­r Kennel Club Dog Show this week in New York.
ADAM HUNGER, USA TODAY SPORTS Pumis are among three new breeds competing at the 141st Westminste­r Kennel Club Dog Show this week in New York.

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