Yes so the standard says. But the dog should be "squarish" in shape. That is only a little longer than tall. Everything must go together well. Head right size and shape for size, neck is "elegant" not short. Tail carriage is important. Basically looking like a "balanced" terrier.
If you have a very tall dog, and yet meets standard in terms of weight, I'd look at the solidity of their bones. Now I digress into a owner/exhibitor and this reflects my personal opinion.
And yes Nancy a dog can have three faults, but truth be told any major fault should not be within the key criteria of that particular breed. With Yorkies that would be coat or color.
Roughly speaking a dog can finish a championship and deservedly so, with 3 minor faults, or 1 major (outside of key criteria) and two minor. How-ever a top dog, will not get to that place with a major flaw, perhaps a much debated one or two minor flaws.
And there are few standards that instruct so clearly to the judges. This tends to be done in judging seminars as the breeders instruct the judges about judging to the standard, and what breeders look for when they sit on the sidelines and watch the judging of their breed.
__________________ Razzle and Dara. Our clan. RIP Karma Dec 24th 2004-July 14 2013 RIP Zoey Jun9 th 2008-May 12 2012. RIP Magic,Mar 26 2006July 1st 2018 |