Mixed-breeds get the chance to strut their stuff
Westminster dog show taking ‘a step in the right direction’: PETA vice-president
NEW YORK — When the United States’ foremost dog show added an event open to mixed breeds, owners cheered that everydogs were finally having their day.
They see the Westminster Kennel Club’s new agility competition, which will allow mutts at the elite event next month for the first time since the 1800s, as a singular chance to showcase what unpedigreed dogs can do.
“It’s great that people see that, ‘Wow, this is a really talented mixed breed that didn’t come from a fancy breeder,’ ” said Stacey Campbell, a San Francisco dog trainer heading to Westminster with Roo!, a high-energy — see exclamation point — husky mix she adopted from an animal shelter.
“I see a lot of great dogs come through shelters, and they would be great candidates for a lot of sports. And sometimes, they get overlooked because they’re not purebred dogs,” Campbell said.
Roo! will be one of about 225 agility dogs whizzing through tunnels, around poles and over jumps before the Westminster crowd. And, if she makes it to the championship, on national TV in February.
Animal-rights advocates call the development a good step, though it isn’t ending their long-standing criticism that the show champions a myopic view of man’s best friend.
Westminster’s focus is still on the nearly 190 breeds — three of them newly eligible — that get to compete toward the best-in-show trophy; more than 90 per cent of the agility competitors are purebreds, too. But Westminster representatives have made a point of noting the new opening for mixed breeds, or “all-American dogs,” in showspeak.
“It allows us to really stand behind what we say about Westminster being the show for all the dogs in our lives” while enhancing the 138-yearold event with a growing, funto-watch sport, said David Frei, the show’s longtime TV host.
Some dog organizations have allowed mixes to compete in obedience, agility and other sports for years. The American Kennel Club — the governing body for Westminster and many other events — followed suit in 2009. It has since enrolled some 208,000 mixes and dogs from nonrecognized breeds as eligible competitors.
One of the nation’s oldest sporting events, the Westminster show had a few mixed breeds in its early days but soon became purebred territory. This year, more than 2,800 dogs are due to be judged on how well they fit breed standards that can specify everything from temperament to toe configuration.
That has long made Westminster a flashpoint for the purebred-versus-mixedbreed debate.
Proponents say breeds preserve historic traits and help predict whether a puppy will make a good police dog or hiking companion, for instance, facilitating happy pet-owner matches.
Animal-rights activists argue that the desire for purebreds fuels puppy mills, forsakes mixed-breed dogs that need homes and sometimes propagates unhealthy traits.
Westminster president Sean McCarthy says the club supports conscientious breeding and is “a big believer in dogs that are well cared for, loved and healthy,” purebred or not. But to critics, the show spotlights a skin-deep appreciation of dogs while downplaying darker sides of breeding, and adding some mixed breeds outside the main event goes only so far.
“It’s definitely a step in the right direction,” says Daphna Nachminovitch, senior vice-president for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. But there are better ways to help dogs than “supporting this antiquated entertainment show,” she said.
PETA members have protested Westminster, once getting into the show’s centre ring with signs in 2011. The group plans to demonstrate outside the show this year.
Irene Palmerini connected with Alfie, a poodle mix, when she spotted him seven years ago in a mall pet shop, seeming eager to get out of his crate. She wasn’t looking for a dog, but couldn’t resist him.
Nor was she looking to take up canine agility, but he had energy that needed a focus.
Now, she’s gearing up to bring Alfie to Westminster, with excitement and a bit of incredulity.
“I’m representing everybody who just sits on their couch with their dog,” said Palmerini, of Toms River, N.J. “He’s just our pet.”