Featured Pet Businesses
Pets Unleashed Pets Unleashed (Id 1120)
Pet Stores and Shops -  Australia
At Pets Unleashed we believe all pets should have access to quality, healthy & f
SportDog Banner SportDog Australia (Id 6658)
Dog Businesses -  Australia
SportDog - designs and manufactures innovative hunting products designed to help
Fido Fidos (Id 6644)
Dog Businesses -  Australia
Hydrobaths, dog baths, pet grooming products, flea control products, dog shampoo

Tibetan Mastiff - Do-Khyi

Tibetan Mastiff - Do-Khyi
  
The Tibetan Mastiff is among the largest of all dog breeds. Its sturdy bone structure and large, wide head makes it appear considerably more massive than other dogs of a similar height. It can reach heights up to 31 inches (80 cm) at the withers, although the standard English breed is typically 25 to 28 inch (61 to 71 cm) range. The largest of the breed weighs nearly 220 pounds (100 kg), but the English standard dogs are more typically between 140 to 180 pounds (64-82 kg). Its double coat is long and usually all black, although it can also have areas of tan or gold, and coat colors of Gray, gold, and brown are also possible.

Unlike many other Mastiffs, it has a smooth rather than wrinkled brow and lacks their large jowls.

Temperament
The native strain of dog, which still exists in Tibet (though sparsely), and the English breed are very different in temperament. The few individuals that remain in Tibet are ferocious and aggressive, unpredictable in their behavior, and very difficult to train. But the dogs bred by the English are obedient and attached to their masters.

As a sheepdog and guard dog, it is ferocious in its ability to tackle even wolves and leopards. As a domestic dog, it requires at least a yard; it is not an appropriate dog for an apartment. Still, the modern English breed is generally easy-going although mildly aloof around strangers. Through hundreds of years as a guard dog, the breed has developed a tendency to bark at sounds during the night, so leaving it outside at night with nearby neighbors is not usually recommended. The Tibetan Mastiff is usually good with children in a family home.

Like most herding breeds, they are intelligent and learn quickly. Obedience training is imperative, since this is also a strong-willed dog with powerful jaws, strong muscles, and a tremendous body. Socialization is also critical with this breed because of their natural caution around strangers and guarding instincts.

Health
Like most very large breeds, its life expectancy is relatively short, usually not more than 10 or 11 years. The breed has a higher incidence than normal of hypothyroidism, entropion or ectropion, skin problems including allergies, missing teeth, maloclusion (overbite or underbite), cardiac problems, progressive retinal atrophy (PRA), and small ear canals with a tendency for infection. As do most giant breeds, some suffer from elbow or hip dysplasia, although this has not been a major problem in the Tibetan Mastiff. Canine inherited demyelinative neuropathy (CIDN), a rare inherited neural disease, appeared in one genetic line in the early 1980s but it is believed that this problem has been eliminated and appeared in no other breeding lines.

History
This is an ancient breed, descended from very early large Tibetan dogs from which most, if not all, of today's Mastiff-type and Molossuses are descended. Some of the modern breeds thought to have Tibetan Mastiff ancestry include the Leonberger, the Newfoundland, the Kuvasz, and even the toy dog breed, the Pug, which itself was a well-established breed before the 1500s. Marco Polo encountered the large Tibetan dogs in his travels and described them as "tall as a donkey with a voice as powerful as that of a lion." They were used as guard dogs outside the sacred city of Lhasa.

The breed originated in Tibet as a herding dog and guard dog and it still makes an excellent sheepdog, but, by the early 19th century, this dog had become nearly extinct in its homeland. English breeders took an interest in it and developed the Tibetan Mastiff in their own country during the first half of the 19th century. King George IV owned a pair, and there were enough of the breed in England in 1906 to be shown at the 1906 Crystal Palace show. Subsequently, however, the breed lost favor and nearly died out in England, as well.

Today there are many active breeders, although the breed is still uncommon. The breed has suffered from inbreeding over many generations because of the small number of the original stock, but today's reputable breeders work hard at reducing the genetic problems.




<< Previous Thai Ridgeback | Back to Dog Breeds | Next >> Tibetan Spaniel


Pet Articles
Famous Cats Famous Cats
MTM kitten It is the corporate symbol of the television

American Shorthair Cat American Shorthair Cat
The American Shorthair Cat is the most popular and most

Dog Humour Dog Humour
HOW DOGS AND MEN ARE THE SAME Both take up too much space

SELL PETS AND PET PRODUCTS:

A free Australia Wide pet and pet products marketplace. Sorry, only registered breeders may sell puppies or kittens, pet shops may sell pet products only.

Start selling today!

PROMOTE YOUR AUSSIE PET BUSINESS

With thousands of visitors to My Pets every day, you can't go wrong having your Australian pet business listed here.

List your business today!

LIST YOUR INTERNATIONAL PET LINKS

In Addition to our Australian Pet Directory, we have a resources section for international pet sites.

Add a link to your site today!