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To Dock or Not To Dock?--
Or Can It Happen?
by Hermine Munro, reprinted with permission from the Empire
Kerry Club newsletter
Dog people in this country probably feel rather more closely
akin to those in Britain and its "colonies" than to
the rest of the world, where attitudes towards canines may differ
wildly from ours--i.e. dogs as foodstuffs in the markets of Asia.
Therefore, recent happenings in the United Kingdom involving the
historic docking of tails must make us ask, "Can it happen
here?" And perhaps it can, what with the rise of the animal
rights movement and our almost total ignorance of what's been
happening on the other side of the pond.
In Britain as of July 1, 1993 under the Veterinary Surgeons Act,
it became illegal for anyone other than a qualified vet to dock puppies'
tails. Kerry people would possibly argue that breeders and handlers are
capable of performing their own tail docking, but that is definitely not
the issue. With exclusive legal authority, the Royal College of Veterinary
Surgeons then publicly declared "unethical and unprofessional"
its members practicing docking, unless it is vital to the health of the
dog. Mr. Allcock, a British vet for 44 years, is quoted as saying, "Docking
of dogs' tails has been purely cosmetic, going up and down according to
fashion in the same way as women's skirts. It is a painful operation carried
out by lay people, often without the aid of painkillers. It robs the dogs
of their ability to communicate with other dogs, animals and humans, and
affects their balance."
Most British vets were all too ready to agree. An article entitled
"Vets in the Dock" in DOGS today, January '93 issue,
states that in a survey early this year, 92 percent of replies
from UK vets supported a ban on tail docking even though it is
a procedure for which they are paid a fee. A similar survey in
Australia found 86 percent of vets opposed to non-therapeutic
docking. According to the July AKC Gazette, docking has been banned
in Sweden since 1989.
Astonished by such devious and successful British anti-docking
tactics, Kerry people would probably agree with The Princess Royal,
HRH Princess Anne, who while addressing the British Veterinary
Association warned that the surgeons "were off the mark"
to call docking mutilation and that puppies don't really know
what is going on when their tails are removed. Her Royal Highness,
president of the Animal Health Trust, said that "instead
of trying to halt tail docking, the vets should be dealing with
more serious animal welfare issues."
According to the July 21st Daily Telegraph, dog breeders in
Britain are now fighting back. Out of a total 252,524 puppies
registered in 1992 with the Royal Kennel Club, 79,205 or 31.4
percent were from traditionally docked breeds. The Kennel Club
itself has stated that, "the procedure has not been shown
to be cruel and in certain breeds it is prophylactic, such as
for working gun dogs." It concluded that "the decision
is one for the owner and breeder while a ban could cause friction
between veterinary surgeons and breeders of docked breeds,"
adding with typical understatement: "Refusal by a vet to
dock puppies would inevitably harm relations." This seems
faint support from a Kennel Club which, however, like our AKC,
is primarily a registry body. The AKC, in a similar situation,
would no doubt be unable to be of any greater assistance.
A new group called "The Council for Docked Breeds,"
representing 47 out of the 185 listed varieties which traditionally
have their tails docked, accused the College of Veterinary Medicine's
ban of putting "moral pressure" on vets not to dock.
Peter Squires, Chairman of the Council and a Boxer breeder, said,
"People were misled. The moment the change in the law went
through, the college tried by the back door to ban tail docking.
This is disgraceful behavior." A member, Miss Sue Bradley,
said that when the Government proposed the change in the law,
dog breeders were not notified or consulted. "For some reason,
the Jockey Club and cat breeders were on the list but not us."
The Council for Docked Breeds is now raising money to pay legal
costs for vets who continue to dock and is also pressuring Parliament
for a change in the Veterinary Surgeons Act to permit qualified
lay people to perform the procedure. Can this be effective when
a survey conducted by breeders fighting the ban found that only
9 percent of Britain's 8,141 practicing vets say they will continue
to perform the operation?
Meanwhile, Mrs. Judy Anderson Clark, president of the Royal
College of Veterinary Surgeons (the organization imposing the
docking ban), said, "We have considered docking a unjustified
mutilation since the early 1970's and 90 percent of small animal
vets favored a total ban." Mrs. Clark concluded with, "I
hope to see lots of tails on formerly docked breeds at Crufts
in a few years time."
A question not raised is--what about the Standards of the docked
breeds? What would an un-docked tail do to these Standards? Would
they then have to specify how the long tail is to be carried?
An undocked Kerry tail (heaven forbid--ed.) might look pretty
much like a Portuguese Water Dog's whose Standard specifies an
un-docked tail "thick at the base and tapering, medium setting.
When the dog is attentive, the tail should be held in a ring,
the front of which should not reach beyond the forward line of
the hips." Also in present times, there must surely be breeding
reasons for the docked tail, as some dogs bred for certain qualities
of breed structure have definitely not been selected for the elegance
of their longest extremity!
Let's profit from this sneak attack by the British on the terrier
tail. Did you know what was happening over there? Can it happen
here? Not if we are informed and vigilant.
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