Dog Breeders Guide

Komondor

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Trainability: 3/10
Shedding: 1/10
Energy Level: 7/10
Guard Dog: 10/10
Good With Children: 1/10
Popularity: 3/10

Behavior

Komondors can be exceptional friendly dogs when they have masters who know how to show a regular, firm power over the dog, are standardized, prepared completely, and are raised with youngsters from the beginning. Komondors are seriously working flock guardians reared to be savagely defensive and sure, as they watch over their charges. In no time, the Komondor can show signs of rivalry even against the strongest foe. Since this breed is reproduced to work autonomously as a flock guardian it has a high dominance level. When they are raised to fill in as the flock guardian, they will be extremely safe with strangers and regional. This breed must be completely standardized with individuals and different dogs in a perfect world at an unanticipated age. They need complete and firm administration with clear guidelines they must follow rules and regulations, prepared by an efficient manager. This is because they may be exceptionally headstrong assuming that they are strong minded than the people around them. When we live with dogs, we turn into their pack.

Appearance

The Komondor is a brawny flock guardian with huge skeletal structure. The head is extensive and the gag is moderately short and dim. The almond-moldered eyes are dimly tanned and medium in size. Ears are a prolonged triangle fit as a fiddle with a marginally adjusted tip, mixing with whatever is left of the layer. The hanging tail is long enough to meet the pawn. The teeth meet in scissors or level bite. Its figure is completely secured with an exceptional felted and corded layer, which is 8 to 11 crawls (20-27cm) long, and dependably white. This thick, corded, white cover helps the dog mix well with the sheep and likewise aides to secure it from any predator and can be called upon to battle on his part as a flock guardian. The external layer wires with the undercoat to structure long lines that hang close by the dog. The layer of a puppy is moderately delicate, yet hints at corded-like twists. It can take to two years for the lines to structure totally and 5 years to achieve the fancied length.

Grooming

The hair of the dog should never be brushed. It is partitioned into strings and trimmed. It needs successive showering and takes a step back to dry. It sheds practically nothing.

History

The Komondor is has the origin in Tibetan dogs. Some think that the Komondor was carried to Hungary a thousand ago by migrant Magyars to watch huge crowds of steers and sheep. Then again, more current studies reveal that it originated from the Cumans. The name Komondor hailed from the name Koman-dor, significance dog of the Cumans. Komondor remains have been found in Cuman graveyards. The most recent composed reference is from the sixteenth century. The breed has spread all round the world starting in 1920 when it started to contend in dog shows.