Top Notch Toys - December 2021

PAPILLONS ARE MORE THAN PARTS AND PIECES

by Charlotte Clem McGowan

P apillon people like to say that the Papillon is a do-it-all dog. Pa- pillons are gregarious, elegant, smart, and athletic dogs. They are happy in the show ring, performance ring, and in the homes and hearts of their owners. They can be trained to do all kinds of things. They will go with you on a five mile walk, play fetch or they will cuddle on the couch for many hours and snuggle in bed at night. They love their comfort. As a companion dog, they certainly excel. When judges come to this breed in the Toy Group and are learning about it, they will get various opinions on the “essence” of the breed. Hopefully, the list they get will be long and detailed but will also indicate that this is a breed that is a whole dog—beautifully typey, sound in all ways, and temper- amentally exceptional. The goal is the whole dog, but the pieces and parts need to be correct as well. TYPE POINTS Papillons have a number of distinc- tive type points. These are the lovely details that distinguish the breed, and when appearing in one dog, tell the world it is a Papillon. Papillons are dainty and fine-boned. You will not find a lot of breeds ask- ing for these traits. They are dainty and fine-boned, but not fragile. This is the ballet dancer of dogdom. The daintiness and fineness contribute to the breed’s elegance. Papillons have hare feet, another part of be- ing dainty and fine. The majority of breeds have round or oval feet. The hare foot is a bit longer with the center toes advanced.

they like people. They are lovely dogs to live with and they like other Papil- lons. One is nice... several are better. We say they are like potato chips— hard to have just one. SOUNDNESS AND BALANCE Every breed has a distinctive outline. The Papillon outline is slightly longer than tall, never square or cobby, but also not long or low. The standard calls for a neck of medium length. It does not say “short.” The Papillon, as an elegant, fine-boned dog, needs enough neck, properly set, to in fact be elegant. It should not be stuffy- necked or ewe-necked. Front and rear are well-angulated, topline is level, and legs are straight. The Papil- lon is a sound, well-made little dog. Straight legs front and rear means not East-West, not out at the elbows, and not cowhocked or spraddle-hocked. Sound is sound. Papillons are great stars in Agility because of their basic soundness and trainability. Papillon gait is free. Remembering that, in Europe, this is a Continental Toy Spaniel, the movement is light, free, and not restricted. Now we have considered the long list of traits we want in our lovely Papil- lon. Please realize that we are quite greedy here. We want it all. We want a beautiful, well-balanced, sound, graceful, elegant, and fine-boned dog with all the lovey type points of head, ears, coat, tail, and feet, and we insist on the wonderful temperament, char- acter, intelligence, and the ability to be a superb companion. We want the whole dog. Dear judges, do your best to pick the best whole dog.

Papillons are distinguished by their large, butterfly-like, fringed ears. Pa- pillon ears are large, broad at the base, round at the tips, and set at a 45-de- gree angle like the spread wings of a butterfly. The ears may be erect or dropped, but they are still set at 45 de- grees to thehead. InEurope, thebreed is called Epagneul Nain Continental or Continental Toy Spaniel. The erect ear is the Papillon (butterfly) and the drop ear is the phalene (drop-winged night moth.) In the US, our butter- flies and moths are all Papillons and judged together as one breed. Papil- lon ears are also fringed with silky coat. The ears are well-fringed, so with ears we want size, shape, set, and also fringe. The Papillon skull is somewhat small for the size of the dog and somewhat rounded on top. The muzzle is fine and tapered, and the muzzle is one-third the length of the skull, with a well-defined stop. The nose is black. The bite is scissored. Another type point is the tail, which should be long, set high, and well- arched over the back. The tail is an indicator of the degree of happiness. Papillons tend to register high on the happiness scale. Papillon coat is single, something not all that common in dog breeds. The coat should be silky, fine, and resil- ient, somewhat long without cover- ing the dog’s outline. Tails are well- plumed with long, silky hair. Hair can grow over the toes and be trimmed to a point to exaggerate the longer hare feet. Temperament is very much a part of type. Papillons tend to think a lot of themselves. They like showing off and

50 • T op N otch T oys , D ecember 2021

Powered by