The American staffordshire Terrier

The American Staffordshire Terrier is a really strong dog. The whole look of the American Staffordshire terrier is of power. It is a very muscular dog and agile. They are bigger in the bone structure, head and weight than their cousins the American Pit Bull Terrier. The muzzle is in proportion to the head and is medium in length, with rounded sides and have good closed lips. The jaws are very strong; their teeth should be able to do a scissor bite. Their eyes are lower down their face and are dark in colour and round. Their ears are high and if cropped are pointy, but un-cropped is preferred, and can hold half pricked. They are broad dogs and are chunky. Their coat is all colours and can be solid colour or patched. It is not desirable to have a dog that is more than 80% white. Their coat is thick, short and glossy. Its tail can be docked but if not then it should be short and taper to a point. It has a wide gate and sturdy legs that are in proportion to the body. This dog lives to about 15 years.

History: The American Staffordshire Terrier dog’s history started back in England in the region of Staffordshire. Here they crossed the bulldog with a mix of Terriers to produce the muscular dog we see today. In America the breeders change it slightly to be heaver with a more powerful head. This breed is bigger than its English cousins. It has been used over time as a fighting dog but with the ban in the 1900s two types where bred called, the show dog the American Staffordshire Terrier, and the fighting dog the American Pit Bull Terrier. These are now being seen as two breeds rather than the one breed. The American Staffordshire are now watchdogs, guard dogs and agility dogs. These dogs need firm consistent training to get them to see that you are the leader, this goes for all family members, as you must seem high in the pack order for this dog for you to have a happy and successful relationship.

Temperament. The American Staffordshire Terrier is outgoing happy and stable, they are intelligent and confident dogs excellent in nature and very good with children and adults alike. Although they are strong and powerful dogs they are normally trustworthy with children, although due to their strength and build they could accidentally knocked over small children. They are highly protective of their master and their home, again due to their overall appearance this makes them an excellent guard dog.

Health issues: The American Staffordshire Terrier are known to have hip dysplasia. Heart murmurs and congenital heart disease, skin allergies, tumours’, hereditary cataracts all so thyroid problems.

Grooming: The American Staffordshire Terrier dog breed is fairly easy to keep tidy. It needs brushing with a firm bristle brush weekly. It sheds normally and can be bathed as needed. A good rub down with a rubber brush adds shine to the coat. There are oils available to add shine to the dog as well.

Living conditions: The American Staffordshire Terrier breed likes warm weather but not hot. It can live in a garden or a house. It will be OK to have in an apartment, but you will have to pay attention to giving this breed good exercises. This dog needs long daily walks, and it needs to know that you are the leader or it can become hard to handle.

 

 

American-Staffordshire-Terrier

Litter Size Average of 5 – 10 Puppies

Pronunciation

American Staffordshire
Terrier

Description

The American Staffordshire Terrier (Am Staff) is
extremely strong for its size. Agile, very muscular and stocky with a broad,
powerful head. The muzzle is medium in length, rounded on upper side to fall
away abruptly below the eyes. The eyes are dark and round, low down in the skull
and set far apart. Pink eyelids are considered a fault according to the AKC
standard. The jaw is very strong. The lips are to be close and even, no
looseness or dewlap. The ears are set high on the head and can be cropped or
uncropped. Uncropped is preferred and should be short and held rose or half
prick. The teeth should form a scissors bite. Its coat is made up of thick,
stiff, glossy hair. All colors, solid, parti, or patched are permissible, but
according to AKC standard it is not encouraged for dogs to be more than 80%
white. The un-docked tail is short compared to the dogs size and tapers to a
point. Classed by AKC as “American Staffordshire Terrier” and by UKC as
“American Pit Bull Terrier.” The American Staffordshire Terrier, are
generally
of larger bone structure, head size and weight then their cousins
the American Pit Bull Terrier.

Temperament

The American Staffordshire Terrier
is an intelligent, happy, outgoing, stable,
and confident dog.
Gentle and loving towards people. Good-natured,
amusing, extremely loyal and affectionate family pet. It is good with children
and adults. Almost always obedient, this dog wants nothing more then to please
its master. It is an extremely courageous and intelligent guard dog that is very
full of life.
Over the past 50 years, careful breeding has produced
this friendly, trustworthy, dog who is an especially good dog for
children
. Courageous and a persistent fighter if provoked. Highly
protective of his owners and the owner’s property, it will fight an enemy to the
death if the enemy traps the dog in a corner and threatens its loved ones. This
breed has a very high tolerance for pain. Some un-socialized Staffs may be dog aggressive.
Socialize very thoroughly when young to curve any dog aggressive tendencies.
This breed can be difficult to housebreak.
It has given outstanding results as a guardian of property, but is at the same
time esteemed as a companion dog. When properly trained and socialized, the
Staff makes a great family companion. This breed is not for the passive owner
who does not understand that all dogs have an instinct to have a pack order.
They need a firm, confident, consistent owner who understands how to display the
proper leadership. The objective in training this dog is to achieve a pack leader status. It is a natural
instinct for a dog to have an order in their pack. When
we humans live with dogs, we become their
pack.
The entire pack cooperates under a
single leader. Lines are clearly defined. You and all other humans MUST be
higher up in the order than the dog. That is the only way your relationship can
be a success.

Height, Weight

Height: Dogs 17-19 inches (43-48cm)
Bitches 16-18 inches (41-46cm)
Weight: 57-67 pounds (25-30
kg)

Health Problems

Some are prone to heart murmurs,
thyroid problems, skin allergies, tumors, hip dysplasia, hereditary cataracts
and congenital heart disease.

Living
Conditions

Staffordshire Terriers will do okay
in an apartment if it is sufficiently exercised. It is very active indoors and
will do alright without a yard. This breed prefers warm
climates.

Exercise

Daily exercise is paramount.
Without it the American Staffordshire Terrier will become hard to handle. They
need to be taken on long daily walks/jogs or
runs.
While out on the walk the dog must be
made to heel beside or behind the person holding the lead, as instinct tells a
dog the leader leads the way, and that leader needs to be the human. Teach them to enter and exit door and
gateways after the
humans.

Life Expectancy

About 9-15
years

Grooming

The smooth, short-haired coat is
easy to groom. Brush on a regular basis with a firm bristle brush, and bathe or
dry shampoo as necessary. A rub with a piece of toweling or chamois will make
the coat gleam. This breed is an average shedder.

Origin

In the nineteenth
century in the English region of Staffordshire, crossing among the Bulldog and
various terriers developed the muscular, active, combative Staffordshire Bullterrier.
Brought to the United States, the breed was preferred by American
breeders who increased its weight and gave it a more powerful head. Now
recognized as a separate breed, the American Staffordshire is larger and heavier
than his British cousin, the Staffordshire Bull Terrier. After dog fighting was
banned in the United States in 1900, two strains of these dogs were developed, a
show strain and a fighting dog strain. The show strain was labeled the American
Staffordshire, while the fighting dog strain was labeled the American Pit Bull
Terrier. The two are now being recognized as separate breeds. Today the American
Pit Bull Terrier is being bred with the same gentle qualities as the American
Staffordshire Terrier.  They both make great pets with the right kind of owner.
The American Staffordshire Terrier was recognized by the AKC in 1936. Some of
the American Staffordshire Terriers talents are watchdog, guarding, police work,
weight pulling and agility.

Group

Terrier

Recognition

FCI, AKC, CKC, NKC, NZKC, CKC,
APBR, ANKC, APRI, ACR, DRA, NAPR