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Yakutian laika dog
Yakutian laika dog




yakutian laika dog

In 2004, the Russian Cynological Federation RKF (the Russian kennel club), accepted the basic breed standard. They found the best dogs they could, and established a breeding effort that ultimately became successful. Thankfully, a number of dog enthusiasts tried to revitalize the Yakutian Laika at the end of the decade. In 1856, a survey of the Yakutian Laikas found that as many as 15,157 dogs lived in the Yakutia region, but the Yakutian Laikas eventually lost their importance, and only three or four thousand dogs remained by the beginning of 1990s. The dogs were mentioned by pioneering Cossacks in the 17th century as living along the “dog rivers,” but it wasn’t until Nicolaas Cornellisson Witsen published a book in 1692 that anyone saw a picture of the dogs because the Dutch traveler/scientist included engravings of Yakutians using Laika dogs as draught transport.

yakutian laika dog

The dogs lived as primitive aboriginal breeds lived, which is to say that they were rarely confined and mated freely.

yakutian laika dog

The Laika is a close relative of the Siberian Husky, and like the Husky, was used to pull sleds and hunt, in this case by native Yakut people in Russia, the first known people on earth to use sleds pulled by dogs.

#Yakutian laika dog full

You may never have heard of the Yakutian Laika, but when the breed graduates from the AKC’s Foundation Stock Service into the Miscellaneous Class, and then into full recognition, we think you’ll be hearing that name more often.






Yakutian laika dog