FCI-Standard
N° 77 / 06. 04. 1998 / GB
CONTINENTAL TOY SPANIEL
(Epagneul nain continental)
TRANSLATION : Mrs Peggy Davis.
ORIGIN : France, Belgium.
DATE
OF PUBLICATION OF THE ORIGINAL VALID STANDARD : 17.09.1990.
UTILIZATION : Toy.
CLASSIFICATION F.C.I. : Group 9 Companion and Toy Dogs.
Section 9 Continental
Toy Spaniels.
Without
working trial.
GENERAL
APPEARANCE : Small de luxe Toy spaniel, of a normal and harmonious build, with long
hair, moderately long muzzle shorter than the skull, lively personality, graceful
yet robust, proud carriage with an easy and elegant gait. His body is somewhat longer than high.
HEAD : In normal proportion
to the body and proportionately lighter and shorter than in the Spaniel of large
or medium size.
CRANIAL REGION :
Skull : Not too rounded
neither in profile nor from the front, sometimes showing a slight trace of medial
furrow.
Stop : Depression sufficiently
accentuate. In the heavier dogs, this depression
is less evident yet still defined; in the very small dogs it is clearly marked
without ever showing sudden break.
FACIAL REGION :
Nose : Small, black and
round, but slightly flattened on top.
Muzzle : Shorter than the
skull, fine, pointed and not too hollow on the sides; must not be turned up.
Nasal bridge : Straight.
Lips : Strongly pigmented,
thin and tight.
Jaws/Teeth : Quite strong, closing
well and normally.
Tongue : Must not be visible;
the fact that it is constantly visible or not drawn in when touched by the finger
is a fault.
Eyes : Rather large, well
open, in the shape of a large almond, not prominent, set rather low in the head,
the inner corner is at the intersection of the skull and the muzzle. Dark in colour and very expressive; eyelid strongly
pigmented.
Ears : Quite fine but firm.
Whether it is the oblique ear or the hanging ear, when examined by hand,
the cartilage must not end in too sharp a point.
The ears are set on rather far back on the head, sufficiently apart one
from the other, so as to reveal the slightly rounded shape of the skull.
·
Variety with hanging ears, called : PHALENE.
The ear at rest is set high, considerably higher
than the eye line, carried hanging and yet quite mobile. Garnished with wavy hair which may reach quite
a length which gives the dog a pretty appearance.
·
Variety with erect ears, called : PAPILLON.
The ear is set on high, the auricle (external
ear) well open and turned to the side; the inner edge of the auricle forming an
angle of approx. 45° with the horizontal. In
no case must the ear point upwards, which would be like a Spitz type ear and must definitely be rejected. The inside of the auricle is covered with fine
hairs, also wavy. The longest hairs extending
slightly beyond the edge of the ear; the outer face, on the contrary, is covered
with long hair forming hanging fringes extending well beyond the edges of the
ear. Cross-breeding of the two varieties
often produces semi-erect ears, with drooping tip; this mixed form of ear carriage
is a serious fault.
NECK : Of moderate length,
a little arched at the nape.
BODY :
Topline : Neither too short
or arched, nor saddled, without however being flat.
Loin : Solid and slightly
arched.
Chest : Wide, fairly well
let down. The circumference of the thorax
taken between the past two ribs must be approximately equivalent to the height
at the withers. Ribs well arched.
Belly : Slightly drawn up.
TAIL : Set quite high,
rather long, abundant fringe forming a lovely plume. When the dog is in action, it is carried raised
along the line of the back and curved, the extreme tip may touch the back; never
should it curl or lie flat on the back.
LIMBS : Legs straight, firm,
fine. The dog must not seem to be raised
up; seen either from the front or from back, the legs are parallel.
FOREQUARTERS :
Shoulders : Well developed,
well attached to the body.
Arm : Of equal length as the shoulder-blade,
normally angulated and well joined with it, well attached to the body.
Pastern : Apparent in profile.
HINDQUARTERS :
Hockjoint : Normally angulated.
FEET : Rather long, called
« hare feet » resting evenly on their pads. Strong nails, preferably black, lighter in the
dogs with brown or white coats (the white nails in white dogs or in dogs with
white legs do not constitute a fault if the dog is otherwise well pigmented).
The toes are strong with a tough pad, well furnished in between with fine
hair extending beyond the tip of the foot and forming a point.
GAIT
/ MOVEMENT : Proud, free, easy and elegant.
COAT
HAIR : The coat, without
undercoat, is abundant, glossy, wavy (not to be confused with curly), not soft
but slightly resistant to the touch, with silky reflections. The hairs are inserted flat; they are quite
fine, slightly curved by the wave. The
appearance of the coat is similar to that of the English Toy Spaniels, but it
differs definitely from that of the Pekingese Spaniel; at the same time it should
not have any resemblance to the coat of the Spitz. The hair is short on the face, the muzzle, the
front of the legs and the underneath part of the hock. Of medium length on the body, it gets longer
on the neck to form a ruff and jabot, descending in waves on the chest; forming
fringes at the ears and at the back of the forelegs; at the back of the thighs,
an ample culotte with soft hair. There
may be small tufts of hair between the toes and may even extend slightly beyond
providing they do not give a heavy appearance to the foot, but rather give it
a finer appearance by lengthening it. Certain
dogs in good coat condition have hair 7,5 cm long at the withers and fringes of
15 cm on the tail.
COLOURS : All colours are
admitted on a coat with a white background. On
the body and legs, the white must be dominant in relation to the colour.
The white on the head preferably extended by a more or less wide blaze.
A white marking is admitted on the lower part of the head, but dominant
white on the head constitutes a fault. In
all cases, the lips, the eyelids and principally the nose must be pigmented.
SIZE
AND WEIGHT:
Height at the withers : About 28 cm.
Weight : two categories :
1) Less than 2,5 kg for dogs and bitches.
2) From 2,5 kg to 4,5 kg for dogs,
from 2,5 kg to 5
kg for bitches.
Minimum weight 1,5 kg.
FAULTS : Any departure from the foregoing points should be
considered a fault and the seriousness with which the fault should be regarded
should be in exact proportion to its degree.
·
Skull flat, apple-shaded and bulging as in the small
English Toy Spaniels.
·
Stop too much or insufficiently accentuated.
·
Nose not black.
·
Muzzle arched or hollow.
·
Depigmentation of the lips.
·
Overshot and especially undershot mouth.
·
Eye small, too round, prominent; light in colour; showing
white when the dog looks straight ahead.
·
Depigmentation on the edges of the eyelids.
·
Roach- or saddle back.
·
Tail curly, resting on the back; falling on the side
(that is the bone and not the fringes which, because of their length, fall in
locks).
·
Forelegs bowed.
·
Pastern joints knotty.
·
Hindquarters weak.
·
Hindquarters, which, seen from the back, are out of
the vertical at the stifle, the hocks and the feet.
·
Single or double dewclaws on the hind legs are undesirable
and constitute a beauty fault. Their removal
is therefore advisable.
·
Feet turning inwards or outwards.
·
Nails not touching the ground.
·
Coat poor, soft or blown (puffed up); hair planted
straight or itself straight; woolly hair; undercoat indicating cross-breading
with the Spitz.
ELIMINATING
FAULTS :
·
Pink or pink spotted nose.
·
Excessive prognathism, overshot or undershot to the
point where the incisors do not touch anymore.
·
Tongue paralysed or constantly visible.
N.B. : Male animals should
have two apparently normal testicles fully descended into the scrotum.