|

The Cavalier King Charles Spaniel is a very
affectionate and loving dog, which requires them to be a close part
of your life. While your lap will be one of their favorite places,
Cavaliers are still very much spaniels, full of zest for life. They
love to go for walks, travel, or just relax on the sofa.
Grooming needs for the Cavalier are simple. A routine brushing and
bath will keep shedding to a minimum and tangles out of the ears and
feathering. Nails should be trimmed weekly along with hair between
the pads of the feet. This will help keep their feet clean.
Occasionally we have puppies and young adults available for special
pet homes. Only select breedings take place here at Wellington, with
the objective of producing quality dogs that exemplify the standard
in all aspects of breed type, temperament, and health. It is
important to recognize that if you decide a cavalier is the right
breed for your family, and you have selected a breeder, you may need
to wait for your puppy. You will find it worth your patience to
purchase your cavalier from a committed reputable member of the
Cavalier community.
All pure bred dogs have genetic health issues and in the Cavalier
breed the occurrence of Mitral Valve Disease (or MVD) is our largest
concern. It is our goal to plan selected breedings in an effort to
produce a higher number of cavaliers that do not experience the
onset of MCD until they are much older. These standards are also
aimed at slowing the progression of MVD once it is diagnosed.
A puppy in your home from a Wellington litter comes with the
knowledge that we are there for your consultation for the entire
life of the puppy. We are just a phone call away to help you with
any issue from care, training, or health concerns.
History of the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
The Cavalier King Charles Spaniel of today is descended from the
small Toy Spaniels seen in so many of the sixteenth, seventeenth,
and eighteenth century paintings by Titian, Van Dyck, Lely, Stubbs,
Gainsborough, Reynolds, and Romney. These paintings show small
spaniels with flat heads, high set ears, almond eyes, and rather
pointed noses. During Tudor times, Toy Spaniels were quite common as
ladies' pets, but it was under the Stuarts that they were given the
royal title of King Charles Spaniels.
History tells us that King Charles II was seldom seen without two or
three spaniels at his heels. So fond was King Charles II of his
little dogs, he wrote a decree that the King Charles Spaniel should
be accepted in any public place, even in the Houses of Parliament
where animals were not usually allowed. This decree is still in
existence today in England. As time went by, and with the coming of
the Dutch Court, Toy Spaniels went out of fashion and were replaced
in popularity by the Pug. One exception was the strain of red and
white Toy Spaniels that was bred at Blenheim Palace by various Dukes
of Marlborough.
In the early days, there were no dog shows and no recognized breed
standard, so both type and size varied. With little transport
available, one can readily believe that breeding was carried out in
a most haphazard way. By the mid-nineteenth century, England took up
dog breeding and dog showing seriously. Many breeds were developed
and others altered. This brought a new fashion to the Toy Spaniel -
dogs with the completely flat face, undershot jaw, domed skull with
long, low set ears and large, round frontal eyes of the modern King
Charles Spaniel (also called "Charlies" and known in the United
States today as the English Toy Spaniel). As a result of this new
fashion, the King Charles Spaniel of the type seen in the early
paintings became almost extinct.
It was at this stage that an American, Roswell Eldridge, began to
search in England for foundation stock for Toy Spaniels that
resembled those in the old paintings, including Sir Edwin Landseer’s
"The Cavalier's Pets." All he could find were the short-faced
Charlies. Eldridge persisted, persuading the Kennel Club in 1926 to
allow him to offer prizes for five years at Crufts Dog Show -
twenty-five pounds sterling for the best dog and twenty-five pounds
sterling for the best bitch -- for the dogs of the Blenheim variety
as seen in King Charles II's reign. The following is a quotation
taken from Crufts’catalog: "As shown in the pictures of King Charles
II's time, long face no stop, flat skull, not inclined to be domed
and with the spot in the center of the skull" and the prizes to go
to the nearest to the type described.
No one among the King Charles breeders took this challenge very
seriously as they had worked hard for years to do away with the long
nose. Gradually, as the big prizes came to an end, only people
really interested in reviving the dogs as they once had been were
left to carry on the breeding experiment. At the end of five years
little had been achieved, and the Kennel Club was of the opinion
that the dogs were not in sufficient numbers, nor of a single type,
to merit a breed registration separate from the Charlies.
In 1928 a dog owned by Miss Mostyn Walker, Ann's Son, was awarded
the prize. (Unfortunately Roswell Eldridge died in 1928 at age 70,
only a month before Crufts, so he never saw the results of his
challenge prizes.) It was in the same year that a breed club was
founded, and the name Cavalier King Charles Spaniel was chosen. It
was very important that the association with the name King Charles
Spaniel be kept as most breeders bred back to the original type by
way of the long-faced throwouts from the kennels of the short-faced
variety breeders. Some of the stock threw back to the long-faced
variety very quickly. Pioneers were often accused of using
outcrosses to other suitable breeds to get the long faces, but this
was not true, and crossing to other breeds was not recommended by
the club.
At the first meeting of the club, held the second day of Crufts in
1928, the standard of the breed was drawn up; it was practically the
same as it is today. Ann's Son was placed on the table as the live
example, and club members brought all the reproductions of pictures
of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries they could
muster. As this was a new and tremendous opportunity to achieve a
really worthwhile breed, it was agreed that as far as possible, the
Cavalier should be guarded from fashion, and there was to be no
trimming. A perfectly natural dog was desired and was not to be
spoiled to suit individual tastes, or as the saying goes, "carved
into shape." Kennel Club recognition was still withheld, and
progress was slow, but gradually people became aware that the
movement toward the "old type" King Charles Spaniel had come to
stay. In 1945 the Kennel Club granted separate registration and
awarded Challenge Certificates to allow the Cavalier King Charles
Spaniel to gain their championships. |