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Like the
Japanese poem “Haiku”, things
Japanese are often short and simple. The Nippo
standard also is brief and concise but written
precisely to the point, capturing the essence of
Japanese dogs. The pioneers of Nippo carefully
studied the characteristics of indigenous dogs
in the mountainsides of central Japan and stated
the essence of those hunting dogs in a short
statement of the Standard.
The following is a translation of the
explanation of standard,
with my comments on the explanation.
Essential Quality and its
Expression: When a Nippo judge is placing
shibas in a show he is
trying to ascertain the intrinsic qualities of
Japanese dogs as a whole rather than evaluating
separate parts of the dogs. The intrinsic
qualities are KAN-I, RYOSEI and
SOBOKU. KAN-I means the intense
strength of intrepid character and dignity.
Shibas may be fierce and brave without being
excessively aggressive to the state of noble
excellence. RYOUSEI means faithful and
obedient. Dogs should have total trust and
attachment to the owner, expressing full bond
and partnership. SOBOKU means the natural
beauty of seasoned maturity and modest
appearance. Its expression is the feeling of
refined simplicity and sober elegance.
At the Nippo shows, inner
qualities such as concentration, intellect, and
dauntless presence are considered the most
important aspect of Shibas.
As hunting dogs, Shibas
have to be self composed with full of
confidence. When required shiba has to be
courageous with quick and bold movements. Shibas
should have sharp and keen senses, quick and
nimble movements together with light, elastic
steps. Such expressions only come from shibas
with top physical condition and balanced body.
General Physical
Appearance: It is important to have distinct
masculine or feminine
appearance. The body is proportionately balanced
with compact frame. Muscles must be well
developed and a height to length ratio should be
100 to 110 with female having a little longer
body. In the Nippo shows, The Male
that could be mistaken for Female
in a first glance would never win and vice versa
for female. Unisex look is considered as
deterioration of the essence of Shiba.
The Male has to have
strong, intense eyes while female is more gentle
and graceful. The Male
has to have a thick,
stout muzzle while the
female muzzle is thinner and elegant. A
Similar statement could be
made for ears, neck, body structure, tail etc.
The key words are strength and dignity for
Male, gracefulness and
refinement for Female.
Proportionately balanced body means harmony of
head, neck, torso and four legs to express
physical and mental beauty. The
Shiba has to be functional as
a hunting dog with
sharp and keen senses having a
natural beauty emanating from
the balanced body. Nippo judges talk about
“dryness” of body as one of the most important
aspects of winning dog. It is a well-conditioned
body with developed sinewy muscles, which make
it possible to perform hard physical tasks
required for hunting. The allowable ranges of
height are 38 cm (14.96 in.) to 41 cm (16.14
in.) for Male and 35
cm (13.78 in.) to 38 cm (14.96 in.) for Female.
Ears: The size of ears
should be small and proportionate with head
size. They are scalene triangle in shape with
inside straight and outside somewhat round,
standing firmly and leaning forward slightly.
Small and proportionate with
the head size is
self-explanatory but important since some recent
shibas that have too
large a head
with too small an ear
that should be avoided. Triangle in shape does
not mean an equilateral triangle and outside
line should be longer and round while the
inside line more or
less straight. Standing firmly is another
important statement since one of the
characteristics of Japanese dog is standing
ears. Ears should be thick and folded like a
sack, this is called “Fukuro
(sack)-mimi
(ears)".
The ear position has to be neither too high nor
too low and the space between the ears should
not be too close or too far apart. Leaning
forward slightly means 90 degrees angle against
the forehead with back of the ears having 60
degrees angle.
Eyes: Eyes should be
set deep with strength. They are somewhat
triangular and slant
upward at the outside corner. Dark brown iris is
ideal. Black or light colors are not desirable.
Eyes express the inner qualities of shibas
mentioned in (1.) above and in my opinion, it is
the single most important part of Shibas.
The judging resolution states that dark brown is
best but brown is tolerated, however, points are
deducted on substantially lighter brown.
Yellowish and gray colors are major faults. The
shape of eyes for shibas is different from other
Japanese dogs such as Kishus and Shikokus.
Somewhat triangular means that the upper eye
line and lower eye line are curved at greater
angle than Kishus and Shikookus and slanted
gently upward. The extension of lower eye lines
should point toward the bottom edge of the ears.
Thin eyes as well as round eyes lack strength
and nobleness. Deep set eyes add strength to its
expression but bulged eyes are not becoming of
Shibas and must be
avoided. How eyes are set is closely related to
head size and shape.
Muzzle: A
Firm muzzle projects out of
full cheeks and the
bridge of the nose is
straight. The
Base of the
muzzle is round and stout,
tapering slightly to a
black nose. The Under
jaw should have thickness to give a
round appearance of the
muzzle. Lips are thin, tight and firmly straight
without any slackness. The
Stop is moderate. Teeth are
strong and complete with proper scissors bite.
Anything less than 42 teeth or markings on
tongue are not desirable. The above explanation
is relatively strait-forward
and easy to understand. Again, The Shiba
as a hunting dog must
have a strong muzzle
and teeth. Mr. Araki, one of the top breeders in
Japan, stresses the importance of eyes and
muzzle when breeding. He likes to see the base
of the muzzle round and tight. Some Shibas
have curved bridge and dipped nose tip, which
lack elegance and good taste. The relationship
of the top of head to stop and from stop to tip
of nose should be about 6 to 4. Limited number
of original breeding stock forced very close
inbreeding in the 1940’s and 1950’s and caused
inbreeding defects including missing teeth in
Shibas. Dentition
problems still persist even to this date.
Head and Neck: The
forehead is broad, the cheeks well developed and
neck sturdy and
powerful with moderate length and thickness.The
head and neck are dominant
parts of the total body and should be strong and
sturdy in harmony with other parts. Too large a
head with too thick a
neck that gives stolid impression is not
desirable, on the other hand, too small a
head and a
narrow forehead looks
coarse and lacks
nobleness. The
Forehead must be broad and flat and it should
not be pronounced, so called apple head.
Chest: The fore chest
is well developed, ribs are moderately
sprung in oval
shape (egg shape). The chest
depth is approximately one half of total height.
Well developed fore chest means wide chest with
shoulders pulled back. Barrel chest with elbows
pointing out is not desirable and too wide a
chest is not suitable for quick and nimble
movement required of shibas. The chest depth is
45% to 50% of the height and it should not give
either stumpy or leggy look.
Forelegs and Hind legs:
Forelegs are strait and spaced at chest
width, elbows
close to the body. Pasterns
have slight angle with paws knuckled up in
a tight grip. The
shoulder blades well developed with moderate
angle. Hind legs are muscular and well developed
with natural stance. The hook joint is
tenaciously strong with proper angle, paws
having firm grip. Propulsive force to move
forward is generated mostly by hind legs but the
distribution of body weight should be 60% on
forelegs and 40% on hind legs when standing
naturally. Any good hunting dogs should have
elbows close to the body with developed muscles
and tendons. A slight angle on pasterns is
important for nimble movements. Some shibas have
flat paws but it should be knuckled up in tight
grip. The hind legs must stand firm but elastic.
The bone quality should be dense and strong
rather than just thick.
Back and Loin: The top
line is straight from the shoulder to the base
of the tail. The loins are strong and should not
move vertically or horizontally at a trot. In
Shibas, a
weak back usually appears on
hip and buttock. Therefore, lower the
seven vertebras must be
strong and straight and the
hip should be thick and
sturdy. The top line should be parallel to
ground. The straight back gives a
strong impression worthy of
good hunting dogs.
Tail: The tail is
powerful with moderate thickness, either sickle
or curled. The tail should be long enough that
when pulled the tip of hairs should almost reach
to the hook joint. The sickle tail should point
forward and curled tail means loose curl with
strength. Tight double curled tails and short
tails are not desirable. The expression of tail
may some times separates the winner from the
loser in Nippo shows. A loosely curled tail with
beautiful urajiro is an impressive eye catcher.
Ideal curled tail means tail with space (size of
a Ping-Pong ball) at the middle. Sickle tails,
sashio, are getting rare even in Japan but
strong sickle tails are a
beautiful sight to see. On the other hand,
tightly curled and double curled tails are
unsightly and even ugly.
Coat: The outer coat
is stiff and straight having clear color. The
undercoat is soft and thick like cotton having
pale color. The tail hair is slightly longer and
stands open. Coat colors in Japanese shibas are
red, red sesame and black and tan with 80% being
red. Clear Urajiro
white should only appear on cheeks, lower jaw,
chest, belly, back of the legs and tail. An over
extension of Urajiro
white is not desirable. The quality and color of
the hair are important elements for expressing
the essence of Japanese shibas. The tail hairs
are the longest hair on shibas and the quality
of tail hairs represent the over all quality of
coat hairs and thus an important indicator. Both
color and quality of hairs are very important
aspect of external expression of Soboku quality.
It should be modest, simple and elegant. The
sesame means black-tipped outer hairs sprinkled
evenly throughout the body. Hard outer coat
stands open supported by dense undercoat. Flat
outer coat that looks wet is not desirable.
Sesames seem to have best quality hairs followed
by Black and Tans.
In my opinion, the conformation shows in the
past ten years have over emphasized pretty clear
Red, causing many
recent Shibas to have
good colour but
lacking bristle hard coat. It is note worthy to
mention that Nippo judges have recently become
more lenient on some gomage (black-tipped hairs)
in red colour.
Mr. Uki, Secretary General of
Nippo and a judge said one has to see good
Shibas to understand
Shiba Inu.
A Thousand words can
not express the esthetic beauty of a Shiba
even less the full explanation of a very difficult
standard.
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