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by lckyglstar05 on 25 June 2009 - 06:06
As a puppy, she had blue eyes, which we thought was odd, but didn't think much of it and thought she would grow out of it, which she did.

But now she has hazel eyes and a greyish kind of coat, with an overwhelmingly large amount of white down the center of her back:
The vet has never said anything about her coat color, so we thought we were just being paranoid. We keep having people ask us what kind of dog she is, then follows up with "oh, is she a gsd mix?" She's not.
Finally a couple of days ago, a 7 month old puppy started coming to the park, and that's when we really saw the difference between the two. The other puppy is black. Ours is grey.
My dog is 64 pounds, eating every day, pooping twice a day, and has a lot of energy. She's always running around and in an active mood, so we don't believe she's sick. Is there an explanation for this?

by Rik on 25 June 2009 - 12:06
To me, it looks like your dog just didn't pull very deep color from her genetic background.
Rik

by Mystere on 25 June 2009 - 14:06

by VonIsengard on 25 June 2009 - 15:06
"People" are not educated on the GSD. I have been asked if my dogs are purebred, also because of their bitch stripe, because they are red, or because they are "too small" (my oldest is 75 lbs!). Your girl does not have great pigment, so what. Otherwise she looks like a perfectly nice, sound pet, and she is certainly a purebred GSD.

by jbaker1980 on 25 June 2009 - 16:06

by Mystere on 25 June 2009 - 19:06
I get the same with my male. He is a beautiful sable, with a magnificent head. The query is always,
(1) What breed? GSD
(2) But, part wolf, right? NO
(3) He doesn't look purebred. This is the Original and DOMINANT color.
(4) If he mated with my bitch, what color would the puppies be? Invisible, 'cuz it aint gonna happen.

by EuroShepherd on 25 June 2009 - 22:06
However, as for her being "gray" with hazel eyes....I think you probably have a blue and tan GSD, not a black and tan.
perhaps your breeder didn't know very much about the dogs they were breeding and that could be the reason why they didn't tell you, though I have seen ads by breeders who I'm certain knew they had blue pups or blue dogs and were not disclosing that in their advertising.
Blue is a dilute of Black, it is heavily faulted in the show ring. Some blues can have coat and skin problems but not all of them do. It's simply a recessive gene that does show up in GSDs and can be carried by parents who have normal black color. Blues come in different shades, some are so dark you wouldn't know they weren't black unless you put them right up next to a true black.
Hope this helps.
by lckyglstar05 on 26 June 2009 - 20:06

by killarneyhausgsds on 27 June 2009 - 18:06
Normal stripe although she looks a little blue to me. I have a Solid Black and always get the same question;
I didn't know a Lab's ears stood up!!!
She is a lab right?
I've never seen a Black Shepherds she must be mixed with something.
It gets old but each dog is different coloring, markings, and personality.
Leah

by windwalker18 on 28 June 2009 - 06:06
German Shepherds are Black and tan (bl/red, bl/cream)
Alsations are the ones who have longer fur on their neck and tail
Black ones are Belgians
White ones are Artic Wolf cross...
Police dogs are the ones like Rin-tin-tin (Bl/silver)
The realy long haired ones are Tervueren's
He has saved me SO much confusion in my years in GSD's I really should thank him for clearing it all up so easily!
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