FCI-Standard No 139 / 02. 04.
2001 / GB
IRISH
TERRIER
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN : Ireland.
DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE ORIGINAL VALID
STANDARD : 13.03.2001.
UTILISATION : Versatile farmyard dog, family pet, guard dog with utter contempt for
danger or hurt, hunter and gundog.
CLASSIFICATION FCI : Group 3 Terriers.
Section
1 Large and medium-sized
Terriers. Without working
trial.
The dog’s reputation for getting into scraps with others,
sometimes even in the showring, is undeserved.
Though the terrier may be fierce when the circumstances call for it, the
Irish Terrier is easily trained and a gentle pet, living up to his early
description as “the poor man’s sentinel, the farmer’s friend and the
gentleman’s favourite”.
Skull : Flat and rather narrow between the ears,
getting slightly narrower towards the eyes.
Stop : Hardly visible except in profile.
Nose: Must be
black.
Lips : Should be well fitting and externally almost
black in colour.
Jaw : Must be strong and muscular, of good punishing
length.
Teeth : Should
be strong, level, free from canker and the top incisors slightly overlapping
the lower.
Cheeks : Not too full.
There should be a slight falling away below the eye so as not to have a
Greyhound appearance.
Eyes : Should be dark in colour, small, not prominent
and full of life, fire and intelligence.
A yellow or light eye is most objectionable.
Ears : Small and V-shaped, of moderate thickness, set
well on the head and dropping forward closely to the cheek. The top line of the folded ear should be well
above the level of the head. An ear
hanging by the side of the head, like a hound’s, is not characteristic of the
Terrier, while an ear which is semi-erect, is even more undesirable. The hair on the ear should be short and
darker in colour than that on the body.
Back : Should
be strong and straight, with no appearance of slackness behind the shoulders.
Loin : Muscular and very slightly arched. A bitch may be slightly longer in couplings
than a dog.
Chest : Deep and
muscular but neither full nor wide. Ribs
fairly sprung, rather deep than round and well-ribbed back.
Shoulders : Must be fine, long and
sloping.
Elbows : Working freely clear
of the sides.
Forearm : Moderately long perfectly straight with plenty
of bone and muscle.
Pasterns : Short and straight, hardly noticeable.
Thighs : Powerful.
Stifles : Moderately
bent.
Hocks : Near ground
Feet : Should
be strong, tolerably round and moderately small, toes arched and neither turned
out nor in, black toenails most desirable.
Pads sound and free from cracks or corny excrescence.
HAIR : Should be dense and wiry in texture, having a broken appearance but
still lying flat, the hairs growing so closely and strongly together that when
parted with the fingers, the skin cannot be seen, free of softness and
silkiness and not so long as to hide the outlines of the body, particularly in
the hindquarters and free of lock or curl.
Hair on face of same description as on body but short (about
three-quarters of a centimetre long), almost smooth and straight, a slight
beard is the only long hair (and it is only long in comparison with the rest)
that is permissible and is characteristic. A “goats”
beard is suggestive of there being silky and bad
hair running through the coat generally.
Legs : Free of feather
and covered, like the head, with as hard a texture of coat as body but not so
long.
Height at the withers : Approximately 18
inches (45.5cm).
Weight : Dogs 27lbs (12.25kg).
Bitches 25lbs (11.4kg).
·
Nose : Any colour other
than black.
·
Jaws : Decidedly undershot
or overshot.
·
Colour : Any other than red, yellow red or red
wheaten. A small patch of white on chest
is permissible as in other whole-coloured breeds.
·
Feet : Corny excrescence or
cracks on pads.
N.B. Male animals should
have two apparently normal testicles fully descended into the scrotum.