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by sentinelharts on 28 September 2018 - 19:09
I also look at feet, to me its a very important part of the structure of a dog.

by mrdarcy on 29 September 2018 - 11:09
Now those are tight!!

by Western Rider on 29 September 2018 - 16:09
Fake photo that is a picture of a cats feet lol

by Koots on 29 September 2018 - 17:09
I think tight/small feet indicate skeletal AND ligament type of the dog. That is why I like to look at those feet.
Nice tighties there Sentinel, with good stencilling too!

by sentinelharts on 03 October 2018 - 08:10
here is the whole dog attached to those tight feet- in case anyone was skeptical
V Vilko von der Feuersaule IPO3, KKL
by ValK on 03 October 2018 - 14:10
wondering if these feet good?

by Hundmutter on 03 October 2018 - 15:10
This is not one of those 'long, flat' sets of feet; the toes are a nice enough length, Val, but they are a bit splayed. Maybe some extra running on different surfaces, e.g. sand etc, to tighten up the ligaments might be of help ?
We do need to watch out, however, people, - in looking for tightly arched feet of sensible length - that we do not breed them the other way, and get them too short and tight to be properly functional; "cat feet" are not correct to the Standard either.
by ValK on 03 October 2018 - 21:10
i'm curious what is wrong with broaden toes?

by Rik on 03 October 2018 - 21:10
some nice feet to feed my foot fetish.
Rik

by Jessejones on 04 October 2018 - 03:10
Tight-ish feet are nice and are part of the breed standard, but they should suit the dogs size and not be too small or too round, especially on the bottoms of the pads - slip prone.
Just like with humans...big people with small feet might look unbalanced (sorry big people with small feet!)
What would bother me more than hare feet or spread/splay feet are weak pasterns.
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