White Oak Jack Russells

White Oak Jack Russells HOME RAISED SMALL JACK RUSSELLS delivering nationwide
(3)

09/15/2024

Everyone should see this. This x-ray is of a 2-week-old puppy. When you get your 8- to 10-week-old puppies, remember this image. Their bones don’t even touch yet. They walk around so cutely with their big, floppy paws and wobbly movements because their joints are mostly made of muscle, tendons, and ligaments, covered by skin. Nothing fits tightly together or forms a true socket yet.

If you let them run too much or don’t limit their exercise during this time, you’re not giving them a chance to grow properly. Every big jump or excited, bouncy run makes their bones hit each other. In small amounts, this isn’t a big deal—it’s normal wear and tear for any animal. But when you let your puppy jump up and down from the couch or bed, or take them on long walks or hikes, you’re harming those developing joints. Letting them scramble on tile with no grip also damages the joints.

You only get one chance to help them grow. A strong, healthy body comes from both good breeding and a proper upbringing—not just one or the other. Once they’re fully grown—around 12 to 18 months, depending on the breed—you’ll have plenty of time for more intense play and exercise. But for now, keep things calm while they’re still little, and give them the gift of a healthy body that can only be given once.

Bernadette gang They are ready to explore the world
09/15/2024

Bernadette gang
They are ready to explore the world

Happy September 1st
09/01/2024

Happy September 1st

Puppy fun at region 3
08/31/2024

Puppy fun at region 3

Experiencing a horse show weekend was incredibly advantageous for the socialization of puppies. I wholeheartedly believe...
07/29/2024

Experiencing a horse show weekend was incredibly advantageous for the socialization of puppies. I wholeheartedly believe that these are the most phenomenal kid puppies I have ever had the pleasure of raising.
It was so wonderful for the Jack Russell breed that people could see peaceful, sweet Russells to refute the belief that some people have. I received numerous comments that they had no idea these puppies could be calm and well-behaved.

Rough coat cuteness!
07/25/2024

Rough coat cuteness!



Adorable rough coat puppies ready for new zip code will deliver on the west coast.
07/18/2024

Adorable rough coat puppies ready for new zip code will deliver on the west coast.


06/26/2024
Who needs stuffed animals when you have real-life stuffed toy lookalikes? Rough Coat pups, you rock!
06/26/2024

Who needs stuffed animals when you have real-life stuffed toy lookalikes? Rough Coat pups, you rock!

06/23/2024

THE JACK RUSSELL: HISTORY WITH A WARNING

How did the Kennel Club come to add the "Parson Russell Terrier" to its roles 100 years after the Reverend John Russell died, and what does this story tell us about the role of all-breed registries in the world of honest working dogs?

▪️The Rise and Fall of the Fox Terrier▪️

The Reverend John Russell was born in 1795 and acquired his first white foxing terrier in 1815 from a milkman. Russell’s claim to fame is not that he invented the fox terrier, but that he was “the old man of terrier work” when the Kennel Club was founded in 1873.

Like most new organizations, the Kennel Club began on shaky legs, and sought to promote itself by trying to associate itself with big names as quickly as possible. Though John Russell had retired and sold off his hounds a few years earlier, he was still famous, and so he was tapped to judge fox terriers at the Crystal Palace Show of 1874.

Apparently, Russell did not much like what he saw, however, for he never agreed to judge a Kennel Club show again, and he refused to let his own dogs be registered.

Russell later described his own dogs as:

"True terriers…but differing from the present show dogs as the wild eglantine differs from a garden rose."

Working terrier men of the era agreed, and they too stayed away from the shows to the extent that by 1893 Rawdon Lee, author of Modern Dogs, noted the absence of hunt terriers in the ring:

"[Those terriers] best adapted for hard work… are cross-bred, hardy dogs, specially trained for the purpose, although many of the 'pedigree' animals will do similar duty to the best of their ability, but their 'pedigree' and no doubt inbreeding to a certain extent, has made them constitutionally and generally weaker than their less blue-blooded cousins."

Bam! The Kennel Club Fox Terrier had ceased to be a working dog in less than 20 years time!

▪️The Rise of the Jack Russell Terrier▪️

Dog dealers selling working terriers at the turn of the Twentieth Century sought to differentiate their working dogs from the non-working and over-large terriers paraded at Kennel Club shows.

Advertisements for working dogs no longer called them “fox terriers,” but instead offered up "Jack Russell" terriers, the name Robert Leighton was already calling them in his 1910 book, Dogs and All About Them.

By 1930, a survey of over 100 mounted hunts in the U.K. found "Jack Russell" terriers listed, as well as "white hunt terriers" and "Devonshire working terriers". When the term “fox terrier” was used, it was carefully proceeded by the words "cross," "cross bred," "non-pedigree," or even "mongrel".

No one was using a pure-bred Kennel Club dog!

World War II saw a decline in the mounted hunts, but things roared back in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, as easy access to cars made it easier to get out into the countryside.

In 1974, the Jack Russell Terrier Club of Great Britain was founded "to promote and preserve the working terrier known as the Jack Russell." In 1976, its U.S. analog was created -- the Jack Russell Terrier Club of America.

Both clubs have prospered and stuck to their original mission, and today the Jack Russell Terrier Club of America remains the largest Jack Russell terrier club in the world.

▪️The Kennel Club Steps In▪️

With an increase in the popularity of the Jack Russell terrier, a push was initiated to pull the “old” fox-working terrier into The Kennel Club.

In 1990 this goal was finally achieved with representatives from several smaller Jack Russell Clubs meeting to draw up a conformation "standard" that called for a dog standing 12-15 inches at the withers. The new dog was to be called the “Parson Jack Russell Terrier," a name invented special for the occassion.

The origin of the new Kennel Club standard is a bit vague. It is said to be adopted from one originally written by Arthur Heinemann, an American-born badger digging man and dog dealer from the 1920s, but no evidence to support this claim has ever been presented.

Gerald Jones, who hunted with Heinemann and knew him well, says Heinemann did not value the kind of larger dog saluted at the top of the Kennel Club’s standard:

"He always said there was nothing a good fourteen inch terrier could do that a good eleven inch terrier couldn't do better…. Some of his best workers were no more than ten inches."

And, of course, Heinemann, like every other digging man, was opposed to Kennel Club registration. Jones quotes Heinemann directly on this point:

"[I am] very much opposed to the modern show terrier and his type. Once you begin to breed it for show type, you lose the working qualities upon which you pride those terriers. I have been, I might say, the protagonist of the terrier bred for sport as against the terrier bred for show. I have no interest in cup hunting."

Russell and Heinemann may not have had any interest in cup hunting, but the Kennel Club hierarchy did, and so a few syncophants were rounded up, and the thing was done.

In 1999 The Kennel Club changed the name of the dog to the "Parson Russell Terrier" -– another name invented wholecloth and without historical roots.

The American Kennel Club followed the U.K. Kennel Club in embracing both the 12-15 inch standard and in embracing the various invented names and name changes.

In 2005, The Kennel Club added a bit more confusion to the story by changing the standard for the dog they were now calling the Parson Russell Terrier, extending it to encompass dogs ranging from 10 to 15 inches tall at the shoulders.

The American Kennel Club, however, has not followed the U.K Kennel Club in changing the standard, instead chosing to simply create another breed of dog (now in its Foundation Stock Service) called the "Russell Terrier."

The breed description of this dog claims it "originated" in the United Kingdom, but that it was "developed" in Australia -- a country which John Russell never so much as visited, which had no Jack Russells at all until the very late 1960s, and where the dog in question remains a pet and show dog that never sees a moment's work!

▪️Only Two Types▪️

How to sort it all out, then?

I think simplicity is best.

In my opinion, there are only two types of terriers in the world: those that work and those that don't.

The white ones that work, and which come from a long line of workers, are called Jack Russell Terriers, and they are called that out of respect for the working standard that the Reverend John Russell himself honored throughout his life.

What are we to make of the Kennel Club dogs? Simple: They are not Jack Russell terriers.

They are not Jack Russells in name, nor are they Jack Russell terriers in terms of performing regular honest work.

They are simply another small terrier, same as so many in the Kennel Club.

There is nothing wrong with that, but there is nothing very special either.

The good news is that with the name changes, no one will ever confuse these Kennel Club pretenders with the real thing – the real Jack Russell Terrier.

▪️A Lesson To Learn▪️

Is there a larger lesson to be gleaned from this history?

Indeed, I think there is, and it is this: No breed of working dog has ever been made in the show ring, while every working breed pulled on to the Kennel Club’s roles has been wecked or divided.

This, I think, is history with a warning!

—————

John Russell illustration by Kevin Brockbank
for the May 2011 issue of Dogs Today where this piece first appeared.

Happy Saturday!
06/22/2024

Happy Saturday!

06/20/2024

Got love on the brain? The thought of taking your relationship to the next level can be as thrilling as it is daunting, especially when there are so many amazing proposal ideas to consider. Perhaps the dreamiest of them all, a destination proposal combines a memorable setting with an absolutely unfo...

Smooth coat puppies. It’s a proven cross for extremely good temperaments. I have a lot of testimonials from this cross!
06/17/2024

Smooth coat puppies. It’s a proven cross for extremely good temperaments. I have a lot of testimonials from this cross!

Broken coat females, ready to go now. Absolutely the best personalities.
06/17/2024

Broken coat females, ready to go now. Absolutely the best personalities.

These two brothers are sure to win your heart over with their adorable looks and sweet dispositions.
06/15/2024

These two brothers are sure to win your heart over with their adorable looks and sweet dispositions.

Who's that girl! Ready for a new address next week. Free delivery next week on the west coast
06/10/2024

Who's that girl! Ready for a new address next week. Free delivery next week on the west coast

From yesterday outings, we had just mowed but they are so small the grass was still to tall for the smooth coat gang!
06/08/2024

From yesterday outings, we had just mowed but they are so small the grass was still to tall for the smooth coat gang!

Looking for a trusted source for Jack Russell puppies? Look no further! We are your go-to provider on the West Coast and...
06/02/2024

Looking for a trusted source for Jack Russell puppies? Look no further! We are your go-to provider on the West Coast and offer delivery services up and down the coast, as well as flight nanny options for those further away. This past month, we delivered puppies to Florida, Toronto, Canada, and Alaska. Check out our reviews on White Oak Jack Russell’s
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Eagle Point, OR
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