Last week I wrote about the Chessies at the Detroit Kennel Club Show.  There were many comments about the different colored Chessies so I thought I would write a bit more about Chessie coloring.

The American Chesapeake Club is responsible for writing the standard that is used to judge Chessies at AKC shows.  Color is described as follows:

COLOR The color of the Chesapeake Bay Retriever must be nearly that of its working surroundings as possible. Any color of brown, sedge, or deadgrass is acceptable, self-colored Chesapeakes being preferred. One color is not to be preferred over another. A white spot on the breast, belly, toes or back of feet (immediately above the large pad) is permissible, but the smaller the spot the better, solid colored preferred. The color of the coat and its texture must be given every consideration when judging on the bench or in the ring. Honorable scars are not to be penalized.

Disqualifications: Black colored; white on any part of the body except breast, belly, toes or back of feet must be disqualified.

The standard states self-colored dogs are preferred.  This means that dogs of all one shade are preferred with or without shadings.  A nicely put together dog with shading and masking can still do well in the conformation ring.

Here are some pictures of various colored dogs as they work:

Brown With Some Darker Brown Shading (Cutter, Freighter’s Dad)

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Medium Brown (Thunder, he is registered as just brown)

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Brown (Storm)

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Dark Brown

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Sedge With Masking And Shading (This dog is darker than the one shown on the ACC site, but due to the red in this dog’s coat, I believe it was still registered as Sedge.)

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Deadgrass With Slight Masking

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Tan (Freighter’s Mom Smokey)

Chessies are a working retriever and although color is described in detail, it is supposed to be given only a little weight in the overall judging of a dog.

The Positive Scale of Points According To The Standard

Head, including lips, ears and eyes 16
Neck 4
Shoulders and body 12
Hindquarters and stifles 12
Elbows, legs and feet 12
Color 4
Stern and tail 10
Coat and texture 18
General conformation 12
Total 100

As you can see, color is worth 4 points out of the total 100 when a dog is judged in the conformation ring.  Compare that to Coat and Texture which is given the highest point value which is 18 out of the 100 points.  Read the entire Standard, including Coat and Texture here.

Color may be worth the lowest value according to the standard, but it can be the source of a lot of controversy/discussion.  For example I was present when Tule, Smokey’s mother, was excused from the ring for being a color not specifically called out in the standard.  She is tan.  The color has always been acceptable according to the American Chesapeake Club; however, one judge in particular takes an exception to the color.  At the time Tule was entered in Best of Breed as a finished Champion, but it did not seem to matter that many other judge’s found her color acceptable, she was still excused.

Tule

I have also heard long time show breeders state that a tan dog should not be bred.  Perhaps that is why they are rare in the show ring.  There are some judges that seem to give an advantage to brown dogs over “colored” dogs in the ring.  This seemed to hold more true when Thunder was showing.  However, I think things are starting to change and it seems that brown dogs do not automatically have the advantage in the ring.

Local breed clubs should receive a lot of credit for this because the more conformation judges see quality dogs that are colors other than brown, I think the more likely it will be that they will look past color.  In past years, our Chessie club has participated in a Judge’s seminar put on by a local sporting dog club.  During these Judge’s seminars, conformation judges are shown various colored dogs and people knowledgeable in the breed go over structure, movement, coat, and color.  There is also a field demonstration so that the judges can see the dogs actually working.  This is an event that we have always wanted to attend with our dogs, but timing has just never worked out for us.

The Chessie Standard also says: The color of the Chesapeake Bay Retriever must be nearly that of its working surroundings as possible.

thatjenk asked if there was a preferred color for our climate or hunting environment.  Sorry it has taken me so long to answer, but I would say no, at least not for the hunter in this house.  He hunts in a variety of different situations where the hunter and dog need to be camouflaged.  Here are some examples:

Storm Hunting The River

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Storm In Corn Cover

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Thunder On A Foggy Morning With Tule Cover

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Thunder Among The Grasses

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Storm In The Duck Boat

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Thunder In A Blind

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Thunder In The Marsh

As you can see the brown blends, but so could the deadgrass or sedge.  I think most hunters would say that color is of less concern to them than the drive of the dog.  I would say however, that some hunters prefer a larger or smaller dog depending on where they hunt.  For example Thunder can cut through the thickest marsh due to his size; however, he might be a bit much to load into a river boat. 😆

Unfortunately, I am going to have to delay my Dog Show Basics post until next week, because I have run out of time this week.  Sorry.  This has been a big week for Freighter.  More on that tomorrow…

17 thoughts on “The Colors Of Chessies

  1. This is so interesting. I love learning more about the different breeds of dogs and the Chessie is one of my favorites. Thanks for sharing! 🙂

  2. Thanks for the informational post on Chessie colors. It’s funny how in the show ring the color only accounts for 4 points out of 100 and though low, even acceptable colored Chessies can be dismissed by partial judges!

  3. I love the brown shades of Chessies; their coats are so rich looking. And they certainly do blend well with most of their outdoor hunting locales! 🙂

  4. I loved looking at all the different colours of Chessies. I hadn’t heard of the breed until I started blogging and came across your blog so it’s really interesting finding out more about them.

  5. Great post! Thanks for detailing all of that (and I really dug all of the “environmental” picture)!

  6. I just love the dead grass color. I’m not sure I’ve ever actually seen one that color in real life.
    Blessings,
    Goose

  7. I’m just fascinated by this. I love that they come in a variety of colors….like Skittles, or labs. 🙂 Like labs I would probably need one of each color. 🙂

    Ut oh, sounds like little Freighter has been up to no good. 🙂

  8. Very curious about the white spot in Chessies. Vizslas can also have a small white spot on the chest or on a toe. Elsewhere is not permissible. This comes from breeding back to the pointer when vizslas almost went extinct following WWII.

  9. I really enjoyed learning all this today! The photos of your pups are extraordinary! Thank you so much!

  10. What a wonderful post! I think that all the colors are beautiful! I love the sage!

    Its nice to know that the judges are looking past color, in our breed the judges seem to be doing a bit more of this too, at least more so than about 4 years ago. It’s still hard though when you are surrounded by one single color, as I have learned. You kind of stick out like a sore thumb:) but the victory is that much sweeter when you win:)))
    Thanks so much for explaining more about the colors, I love learning about this!

  11. This is great! We got to learn more about the Chessies, their history and the colors as well as the AKC standards…. GREAT POST!
    Your friends,
    the collies and chuck 🙂

  12. What an interesting post, and as always, great pics to go with it. I never knew that Chessies came in so many different colors! How weird that the one judge excused Tule from the ring, even though she was a finished champion…? I guess they all have their opinions, but something like that must be frustrating.

  13. Thank you, I really enjoyed reading the many colors, just did not realize there were that many variations. I really wondered how the color mattered. As you say it is such a small number (4) but to some judges it means more. When I use to show Mica and Lexie a lot of local shows had not seen Landseers so she was not in the ring long. Mica however fits the standard very well, and did very well in the shows but being female if there were males as good they won automatically and we got best of oppposite sex. So Color and sex came up to be more important than the “numbers” would suggest. It was very difficult for a grey to win and at that time we did not often see brown.

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