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A longish neck which is arched and well-set is a thing of great beauty and also can catch a rabbit. The long skinny stovepipes which are the worst extremes of US show style aren't very functional, I agree.
My show dogs can catch a rabbit...functionally--most of them are fast and quick and I do lure course and race my dogs, but the main problem I have right now with my FASTEST and STRONGEST dog is that he's--not to put too fine a point on it--a few spanners shy of a tool bag.
He starts screaming the minute he sights the game...100 yards away!--giving the rabbit ample warning of his intent and location, and thereby allowing it more than enough time to make for the nearest patch of briar and dive to ground.
OTOH, some of my slower Whippets are stealthy, and will silently stalk until they are close enough to make a hard run at it, and have much better success.
The most effective rabbit-killing attribute of a Whippet, neck or no neck, is still located at the end of the neck, between the ears, in my experience. Some laughable little bits of muslin and ivory you wouldn't ever think would be stone cold killers may indeed be skilled at getting a rabbit into their jaws, while others who are 36 pounds of rippling muscle may be hopeless bumblers or more interesting in chasing than killing.
Looking back at the old photos of the working Whippets of yesteryear, they were tiny little roach-backed things--scarcely larger than an Italian Greyhound, and nothing anyone would breed for today--yet they must have hunted very well. It takes a very fast dog over distance to get an American Jackrabbit, but to get a regular rabbit--that's more a matter of skill, experience, good hunting instinct, quickness, and drive, from what I have been able to see over the years.
My show dogs can catch a rabbit...functionally--most of them are fast and quick and I do lure course and race my dogs, but the main problem I have right now with my FASTEST and STRONGEST dog is that he's--not to put too fine a point on it--a few spanners shy of a tool bag.
He starts screaming the minute he sights the game...100 yards away!--giving the rabbit ample warning of his intent and location, and thereby allowing it more than enough time to make for the nearest patch of briar and dive to ground.
OTOH, some of my slower Whippets are stealthy, and will silently stalk until they are close enough to make a hard run at it, and have much better success.
The most effective rabbit-killing attribute of a Whippet, neck or no neck, is still located at the end of the neck, between the ears, in my experience. Some laughable little bits of muslin and ivory you wouldn't ever think would be stone cold killers may indeed be skilled at getting a rabbit into their jaws, while others who are 36 pounds of rippling muscle may be hopeless bumblers or more interesting in chasing than killing.
Looking back at the old photos of the working Whippets of yesteryear, they were tiny little roach-backed things--scarcely larger than an Italian Greyhound, and nothing anyone would breed for today--yet they must have hunted very well. It takes a very fast dog over distance to get an American Jackrabbit, but to get a regular rabbit--that's more a matter of skill, experience, good hunting instinct, quickness, and drive, from what I have been able to see over the years.
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