Alaskan
Malamute
| Alaskan
Malamute |
|
| Country
of
origin |
| United
States |
| Classification |
| FCI: |
Group
5
Section
1 |
| AKC: |
Working |
| ANKC: |
Group
6
(Utility) |
| CKC: |
Group
3
-
Working
Dogs
|
|
| KC(UK): |
Working |
| NZKC: |
Utility |
The
Alaskan
Malamute
is
a
large
northern
dog
breed
originally
developed
for
use
as
a
sleddog.
The
Malamute
is
a
descendant
of
dogs
of
the
Mahlemiut
tribe
of
upper
western
Alaska;
native
dogs
were
probably
crossed
with
larger
"white
man’s
breeds"
during
the
Gold
Rush
to
increase
their
size
for
use
as
heavy
freighting
dogs.
Their
breed
standard
calls
for
a
weight
of
75
to
85
pounds
(34-38.5
kg)
and
a
height
of
23
to
25
inches
(58-63.5
cm)
but
much
heavier
individuals
(120
to
140
pounds)
are
commonly
seen.
The
coat
is
a
dense
double
northern
dog
coat,
somewhat
harsher
than
that
of
the
Siberian
Husky.
The
usual
colours
are
various
shades
of
grey
and
white,
sable
and
white,
black
and
white,
red
and
white,
or
pure
white.
The
physical
build
of
the
Malamute
is
compact
and
heavy
bone
is
called
for.
Although
still
in
use
as
sleddogs
for
recreational
mushing,
most
Malamutes
today
are
kept
as
family
pets
or
show
dogs.
They
are
unable
to
compete
successfully
even
in
long-distance
dogsled
racing
and
their
usefulness
as
sleddogs
is
limited
to
freighting.
The
Malamute
temperament
is
friendly
and
affectionate
by
reputation,
but
they
are
known
among
dog
drivers
for
their
readiness
to
scrap
with
other
dogs.
Health
issues
in
the
Malamute
are
hip
dysplasia,
inherited
polyneuropathy,
and
the
usual
northern-breed
eye
problems
(particularly
cataract
and
progressive
retinal
atrophy).
The
breed
is
registered
with
the
AKC,
CKC
and
other
registries
and
is
also
recognised
by
the
FCI
(Group
5,
Breed
243).
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