Dog Show Entries Close Wednesday April 13

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Don’t forget to get your entries in for our annual all-breed show– it closes Wednesday, April 13.

(That’s Cincinnati native and silent film star Theda Bara and her Borzoi Bella on this year’s poster.)

We are again featuring Best Veteran in Breed and Veteran Parade, Best Brace in Show, National Owner-Handler Series, and on Sunday afternoon, Coursing Ability Tests.

As always, parking is free, and there is complimentary coffee on tap all day long. We have goodies in the  morning (until they’re gone) and serve refreshments in the afternoon during groups. There’s a Best of Breed prize in every breed and extra prizes in many.

Yes, there is still a bit of Premium RV camping available– but all the camping is reasonably close with electric and water at each site. The Premium is guaranteed to be closest, and also has 50 amp (and 30+30 amp) service as well as sewer hookups.

If you haven’t visited us before, the show is indoors, in one big building, on concrete. Great vendors alongside the rings, plenty of free grooming space and a bit of reserved space available ($25 for the weekend) if  you just need to be absolutely certain there’s a spot for you.

We have a stellar judging panel this year, and we’re especially pleased to welcome Mr. Nicolas DeBedout from Bogota, Colombia.

It’s going to be a wonderful weekend, we hope to see you there!

(And here’s a link to the Premium List.)  2016 Premium List

Update for Coursing Ability Tests

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We have now been approved for TWO coursing ability tests to be held Sunday, May 1. There is a 40 dog limit on each test. (This is two separate events.) We have posted a revised entry form which has both event numbers on it. Just check one or both (depending on whether or not you want to run one test or two). The tests will run consecutively.

The entry fee is $20 per test by pre-entry and $25 per test, day of trial entry.

If you have already sent in the first entry blank, that’s fine. If you have printed out the original entry form, and you want to enter both tests, just write the second event number (2016496104) on the entry blank as well.

We appreciate your patience as we tried to get all of this worked out, and we look forward to seeing you all at the Coursing Ability Tests!

Coursing Ability Tests at Fort St. Clair

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This is our third year for Coursing Ability Tests at Fort St. Clair, on the Sunday afternoon of our show weekend. (This year that is Sunday, May 1.)

The link for the Premium List and entry form is UP and LIVE, you can download the entry form from the menu on the left and send it in! We are running two tests, with a limit of 40 dogs for each test. We will take day of trial entries provided that the tests have not already filled. You are welcome to call and see how close they are. We have not filled tests in the past. Close, but not quite.

If you’ve never run a CAT test, and you’d like to try it, we’d love to have you. You can find the hows, whys and rules at this AKC site (click here). It is open to any dog who is fit enough to run it, is more than a year old and who is registered in some fashion with the AKC. Dogs of mixed parentage can get a “Canine Partners” registration number from the AKC — more information on that here.

The tests will run consecutively on Sunday afternoon. Entries will close by 10 a.m. Sunday morning. Please see the registrar at the Trophy desk in the show building. Of course, you can pre-enter and we strongly encourage that– just as soon as the entry form and premium list are posted.  If we fill the trial before the weekend, we will not have any day of trial registration.

The area for Lure Coursing is at the back of the Fairgrounds and not adjacent to nearby roads– however it is NOT fenced, so you will want to make sure that your dog is solid on recall. Also, we strongly advise that your dog run “naked” (ie without a collar) for safety reasons. The AKC does not insist on this, so we will defer to you if you insist, but really it is much safer if they don’t have anything that they could get hung up on while they’re running. Smaller dogs and flat-faced dogs run a shorter course. We’re all about having fun, but we want your dog to be safe too!

And even though it’s called a “CAT” test, it has nothing to do with cats! That’s an aconym for Coursing Ability Test.

Our Historic Dogs

scipioshowposterEach year at Fort St. Clair Kennel Club, our show has a special “show logo” and poster featuring a famous Ohio native and their beloved dog. We started this in 2011, with Orville Wright (Dayton) and his St. Bernard, Scipio. As it happens, we know a quite a bit about Scipio– he came to Ohio by train as a puppy, from Nina Dodd’s White Star Kennel in Long Branch NJ. Mrs. Dodd was a very prominent breeder of quality St. Bernard’s in her day and a frequent exhibitor at AKC shows and Westminster. Orville paid $75 for Scipio– the equivalent today is around $1400. Orville bought the dog in 1917, and Scipio died in 1924. When Orville himself died in 1948, he still had a photo of Orville in his wallet.

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In 2012, our pair was President Warren G. Harding (Blooming Grove, near Marion, OH) and his airedale, Laddie Boy.  Despite the scandals surrounding President Harding, Laddie Boy was enormously popular with the press and the American public. He came from Caswell Kennel in Toledo, OH and was a frequent presence at cabinet meetings and other state occasions. When Harding died, Laddie Boy pined at length– and when Laddie Boy died, newsboys collected pennies which were melted into a sculpture the likeness of Laddie which is today in the Smithsonian Institution.

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President Benjamin Harrison (North Bend, OH) and his granddaughter and his pointer, Jack, graced our 2013 show materials. There was not much to be found about President Harrison’s dogs, other than what sort of dog and what they were called.

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That changed in 2014, with Annie Oakley (Greenville, OH) and her beloved tri-color English Setter, Dave. Dave was like a child to Annie and her husband, Frank Butler, who was himself a traveling marksman and dog trainer. Dave worked with Annie and Frank in their performances as well as served as a hunting dog and constant companion. Upon Dave’s death in 1923, Frank wrote a little book about Dave’s life, as if it were told by the dog, “The Life of Dave, as Told By Himself.”

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2015 featured the great screen legend Clark Gable (Akron, OH) and his bluetick hound, lounging together on the set with Montgomery Clift. Alas, this was the first year we were not able to find out the name of the famous person’s dog. Clark Gable and Carole Lombard were avid dog fanciers and had many different dogs during their lifetimes.

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In 2016, the lovely star of silent film, Theda Bara (Cincinnati, OH) and her lovely Borzoi, Bella, will be featured on  posters, catalog, and other print materials associated with the show. Bella was so doted on by Miss Bara that she had it written into her contracts as often as possible that the dog would share her screen roles.

We really enjoy both the research that goes into finding interesting Ohio celebrities and the dogs that graced their lives— and in sharing those stories with the public and fellow exhibitors.