I
I
Brief
history of The Dogo Argentino
It
was year 1925. My brother Antonio and I had yet to reach our eighteenth birthday
(he was a year older than me), and by that time we were both absorbed by a true
passion for dogs of all breeds, passion which was to remain constant through our
entire lives, since so it was, till his untimely death, and so it will be, God
willing, till the upcoming of my own.
I
have expressed to my own people my last will, which is to die with a Dogo
Argentino under my bed, having my grave, where my bones will lie, in the
solitude of the Andes, covered just with a rough cross, and the vigilant figure
of a Dogo guarding my sleep. They have shared with me every instant of my
troubled life, and it is my desire that they accompany me in my final resting
place.
That
passion we had since childhood took us to translate, dictionary in hand, the
book Notre Ami Le Chien, that
wonderful source of dog-breeding
knowledge to which we must all resort when we want to learn about the origins of
any European breed; literary wonder which my father had in his bookcase and I
keep as a precious and inherited treasure among the many hundreds of books
related to the topic that I still have and consult. More or less at that time we
started translating from English, specially the hunting and working breeds we
were interested in, from the Hutchinson
Dog Encyclopedia, which was also
in my father’s library, among hundreds of medicine books which he, as a surgeon
and university professor, studied continuously.
Our
love for dogs was so great that during the summers, in Santa Isabel, our villa,
we managed to borrow, feed and heal the appallingly skinny dogs from workers who
went to harvest the crops throughout the region. During those months we
dedicated ourselves to healing the animals’ wounds, cleaning them out of bugs,
fattening them, and at the end of the season, when their masters returned from
the harvest, we gave them back their dogs in such a fine condition that, had
they had a pedigree of any kind, they could have been exhibited in a dog show. I
mention these anecdotal memories, seemingly unimportant, because they reflect
our passion for man’s best friend, passion without which it is not possible to
confront and succeed in a task so hard, so full of setbacks, even painful, as
creating a new canine breed is.
It
was during that time when my brother Antonio developed the idea of creating, via
the crossbreeding of various existing breeds -finally they were 10, as we will
see further on- a strain of dogs capable of hunting in our farmlands and woods,
capable of racing towards the quarry and killing it, or at least grabbing it
till the arrival of the hunter. This idea appeared mainly due to the failure of
many European hounds which, by the nature of our very vast lands, the size and
strength of our wild boar, and other reasons which I explain in detail in my
other book El Dogo Argentino, were not up to the
task.
I
can still remember as if it had happened yesterday -and more than 50 years have
gone by- the day my brother Antonio told me about his idea, and his intention of
using the dog known as “Viejo Perro de pelea Cordobés” (Old Cordoba Fighting
Dog) as a basis for it. This dog was a descendant of Spanish mastiffs brought to
America by the colonists, crossbred with Bullterriers and other fighting breeds
for the sole purpose of dog fighting. The idea was to use the extraordinary
courage and fighting spirit of these dogs as a basis, adding other breeds which
could give them height, sense of smell, speed, hunting instinct, and above all
take away from them that “fighting among themselves” instinct which made them
useless for pack hunting. We wanted them to be friendly and capable of living
freely within families and in farmlands; to maintain the bravery of the
primitive breed but focused on a useful cause: big-game hunting as a sport and
as a means of controlling predatory species.
And
with that stubbornness which comes to us from our Spanish and Basque ancestors
(Nores Martínez, Garzón, Berrotarán, Bas) we put ourselves to work. And I say
“we” without false modesty, since from the very first day I was by his side, helping in everything and
fully identified with the goal he had traced for ourselves: Creating a dog
useful to man from the basis of those poor Cordoba fighting dogs, those
ferocious beasts sentenced for life to yoke and chain imprisonment, and to the
painful dilemma of having to kill or be killed.
I
want to state here again, as I did in my previous book El
Dogo Argentino, that I consider my brother, Dr. Antonio Nores Martínez, the
real creator of the breed in its genetic aspect, even if he could not see the
hunting Dogo with which he dreamed, due to his premature death. And I consider
this, because it was him who developed the original idea, and he continued
fighting for it for as long as he lived, putting in it all of his youth’s
passion. Later on, when he became a physician, he applied to it all his
knowledge of biogenetics, physiology and anatomy, which were so useful for the
development of the new breed.
I
am the witness of how a failure made him start the fight again with renewed
spirit. In front of the tricks of genetics or surprises of the road taken he
never gave himself up, and he always got back to the search for the path to
success through the mess of difficulties regarding height, color, jaw shape,
etc.. The scientific warrior, determined and even stubborn, faced the problems
once and again until victory was glimpsed, and with his experience and success, he taught me the wonderful
lesson of the one who knew himself a winner.
Says
Renan: “To create is to kill death”; that is why I have stated in my previous
book that my brother Antonio will perpetuate himself in the forthcoming years,
through the noble hunting Dogos he created.
I
will not say then, that I vindicate for him the creation of the breed, because
nobody could in good faith doubt it, but I feel his work has to be
known.
On
my behalf I want to say that, having assisted my brother in the genesis of the
breed, and with more than half a century “making Dogos”, watching, studying and
correcting their anatomy, making crossbreeds, hunting with them from the
Pilcomayo river to the Andes, breeding hundreds and hundreds of them, spending a
lifetime with them, selecting and sending them
to the five continents, keeping in touch with the many good breeders here
and overseas, and learning with pride about their performances in countries so
far away as Japan and Israel, I feel authorized to know my brother’s intentions
and what he thought about how a Dogo Argentino should be
like.
I
feel as a duty to establish, very clearly, the true history of the Dogo, the
breeds that took part in its conformation, what it was that we proposed to
ourselves, and the requirements or conditions that a Dogo has to fulfill to be a
typical example of the breed. This enhancement is in fact a ratification of what
I wrote in my first book. The fears I pointed out in the preface of the four
editions turn into reality many times when we see young men who ten years ago
had not seen a Dogo acting as judges in the shows, awarding prizes to specimens
which are a far cry from what a good Dogo should be.
This
book, which contains the step by step, true story of the development of the
breed, and the glossary of the standard, is dedicated to all the good faith
enthusiasts and judges who want to know how the Dogo Argentino should be. For
the others, those who crossbreed Dogos with Bullterriers to make them smaller
and fighters between themselves, this book is not intended, but I can offer a
piece of advice: Dedicate yourselves to the breeding of the Bullterrier in any
of its two varieties -white and colored Bullterrier or Staffordshire Terrier-,
breeds which were created for the pit (very noble and courageous ones, by the
way), so you can satisfy your low instincts that way, if that is what you want,
but, for goodness sake, do not destroy a breed which was created, after many
sacrifices, with the purpose of being useful
to man!
Since
1937 we are developing in the Patagonia, with true sacrifice, the hunting
instinct of the Dogo, while trying, at the same time, to eradicate that fighting
tendency of his ancestor. Instead, a few generations of Dogos fighting among
themselves will make them involution (and we have already seen it, painfully)
towards the useless Cordoba fighting dog, unsociable with his own species,
harmful towards domestic animals, and useless as hunters and guard dogs. Happily
there are, both in the country and abroad, many groups of judges and
enthusiasts, who know what a Dogo is and what it should be, and use it for big
game hunting and guard work. This will undoubtedly benefit the new generations,
and each one of them will be nearer to what our ultimate goal was, 50 years
ago.
We
have seen many field trials in Buenos Aires and La Pampa, and we have been
really impressed with the courage showed by some puppies while fighting wild
boar, making discipline and obedience demonstrations, and attack and defense
exhibitions (protection work).
ll
The
Old Cordoba Fighting Dog
From
the first moment my brother and I agreed
that the basis for the new breed had to be that fearless gladiator whom we had
seen fighting in the Cordoba of our childhood; a dog now fortunately extinct,
who had no further destiny in life than
fighting to death in the arena.
I
recall them, and my memory gets flooded with names from the past: Tom, Bull, Johnson, Dempsey; all of them
property of my uncle Oscar Martínez. For many years I trained them, most of all
Tom, who had such a huge strength
that he usually carried me virtually flying when pulling from the leash. He was
so strong that we used to make him carry wheelbarrows full of sand from our
grandparent’s house to the stream, about 100 meters away. And he did not pull
with a harness, but with a wide collar instead, which gave his neck a great
musculature. I also remember Caradura- Tom’s father-, owned by another
uncle of mine, Mr. Rogelio Martínez; Roy, of the Deheza family; Taitu, property of the Villafañe
family, tailors who lived in New Cordoba and who impressed us with their
training system: Couches hanging from the roof which the dogs, between them Taitu, used to bite and shake,
staying suspended in the air for several minutes. I recall several more: Pimienta, winner of many fights,
owned by Mr. Pepe Peña; Mancha, property of the Bas family;
Matón and Tunney, of my own; Yarará, of the Dalves family; and
finally Tomsito, who belonged to my cousin
Dr. Héctor Martínez; his legendary courage made him win many fights in the pit.
Obviously we have known many more, but their names and those of their owners are
lost in times gone by.
lll
The
Starting of the New Breed
These
dogs I have mentioned were the foundations. Being so young as we were, it was
very difficult for us to obtain the bitches, the place to kennel them, the food,
and the keeper, since our ongoing studies prevented us from being personally in
charge of all the minor details.
Our
uncle Oscar Martínez, whom we owe so much for everything he did for the breed,
lent us a large yard where we started taking the females we managed to get from
friends and relatives who sympathized with our project. We were able to gather
10 bitches in a relatively short period of time, sisters and daughters of the
dogs I have mentioned before. This number grew fairly quickly until we reached
around 30 mothers.
We
had already secured a place, but we still had the problems of finding a keeper
and getting the food. At that time, we were attending high school, day-boarding,
and we only had weekends to go to that laboratory where we started, more than 50
years ago, that long and passionate alchemy. For we had learned that “natura non
facet saltus”, and Mendel’s law was always to be fulfilled, slowly but
surely.
As
our father had taught us, based on his scientific expertise, creating a new
breed of any animal species is more than just the result of mixing randomly some
already existing breeds; you have to take into account a series of genetic laws,
such as those from the wise Augustinian monk, in order to reach the proposed
goal. You cannot infringe, without being punished, the preestablished, eternal,
and immutable laws of nature.
“Rome
was not built in a day”, says an old English proverb, and that, we found out
since the very first day. We knew the path we had started would be rough, long
and difficult, plenty of obstacles; we also knew it would demand many sacrifices
from us and from the ones who would follow us in our passion. But in our young
18 years everything seemed to be possible, and that youth was the great spur we
had which made us accomplish the most arduous tasks.
The
problem of feeding the bitches -sometimes 30 or more- was urgent; and I say bitches for
males we never had more than 2 or 3, since we brought them from outside whenever
we needed them for service. We fed them with our savings from the pocket-money
our mother used to give us on Sundays. We used this money to buy some big
cheeses (around 40 pounds each) which we got for 3$each in an old soap factory.
This cheese, mixed with other foods, made quite a good meal. But the real
solution was provided to us by the generosity of a noble Spaniard called Merino,
owner of a sandwich store (“El Buen Sandwich”). This man was a friend of our
father’s who, as far as I know, was his family’s doctor. One day, after visiting
our premises, he was so enthusiastic that he decided to spare for us several
bags full of leftovers from the manufacturing of sandwiches each Saturday. The
“fuel” to keep the boilers of the “factory” burning was momentarily
secure.
The
problem of finding and hiring a keeper was also a very urgent one, but finally
our father, with his characteristic kindness and that typical concern for
anything that was spiritually sound, solved it by paying the corresponding
salary.
We
were able to have, in different occasions, two or three different keepers.
Finally, when my brother Antonio went to study at the Rosario University, he met
Mr. Antonio Orelo, a Spaniard who worked as a male nurse in hospitals, and a
fervent dog-enthusiast.
While
my brother was away, I had to manage the kennel by myself. When he finally
returned home, he brought Mr. Orelo with himself, and he started working as our
kennels’ keeper. He did the job with utmost loyalty for many years. Later on, my
brother gave him two acres of land and a house in our villa Santa Isabel, where
he finally died and where his wife and some of his children still
live.
This
constitutes, to the best of my knowledge, a brief account of the way the breed
started, and of how we managed to solve, despite being so young, the three
biggest problems we encountered when trying to make my brother Antonio’s dream
come true: The place for the experiment, the people in charge, and the food for
the mothers and their litters.
IV
Breeds
That Took Part In The Formation Of The Dogo Argentino
Now,
the big problem arose: Which breeds would we select and put inside the melting
pot where the miracle of a new hunting breed had to be produced? Childhood’s
dream, which was to become real only after many years of hard-fought battle,
when the Dogo Argentino was finally accepted as a breed by the Sociedad Rural and the Federación Cinológica Argentina (1964), and, a year later,
by the Federación Cinológica Internacional (Belgium). Also the Kennel Club Argentino (1973), and
all the institutions with international jurisdiction which adhered to the
latter.
While
we were studying the different breeds which appealed to us as the most
appropriate for our purposes we were impressed, almost from the outset, by the
Irish Wolfhound. Everything we read,
regarding his great size, strength, speed and courage to fight wolves, caught
our attention, specially in the book “Chien a loupes Irlandais”. There I read
for the first time William Spencer’s poem in its French version (I translated
the English version to Spanish many years later). We were vividly impressed by
that which said:
En verité, c’etait un chien sans
pair
La fleur de toute sa
race
Si fidele, si brave: un agneeu a la
maison
Un lion a la
chasse.
Unfortunately,
after multiple searches we had to give up momentarily, as there was not one
single specimen in the country. Even today, the only specimens available here
are descendants of the ones I brought from USA and Canada many years later, when
I came back from my position as Argentine ambassador before the latter. Lately I
have been informed that a male specimen has been introduced from England by the
Argentine ambassador before that country, Manuel de Anchorena. They are very
expensive indeed. Some years ago, Dr. Hugo Miguel Arrambide brought me from
England an excellent female specimen, who died in Esquel without having
puppies.
Then
my brother decided on the Great Dane (or German Dogue), for
his great size; the Pointer, for his nose; the English Bulldog and the Bullterrier for their courage and
jaw; the Dogue de Bordeaux and the Boxer, for their courage too, and
also their intelligence and head shape; the
Pyrenean Mastiff -huge mountain
dog-, for his size, white color, rusticity, and good nose. There were also no
specimens of the latter breed in the country until I managed to import a couple,
years later.
In
what refers to the giant Irish Wolfhound -the tallest dog in the world-, which
constituted, due to all we had read, a golden dream for my brother and me, we
were only able to use him much later on, when life itself put me in the position
of being able to import them, as I stated above. However, in 1938 or 39 I got a
crossbred between the Irish and Great Dane with which I covered some
transitional Dogo bitches in Esquel and later on in
Cordoba.
In
order to make things clear we are going to deal separately with breeds in
particular.
V
Bullterrier,
Boxer, Mastiff and Bulldog
Those
were the breeds that had shaped the Old Cordoba Fighting Dog. That was the
conclusion to which Antonio and I arrived, after talking for hours with the
“Criollos” and Spanish descendants who roamed around dogfights and pits. The
Mastiffs had been brought by the Spaniards, who liked and encouraged dogfights,
on the previous century and even earlier. Proof of this lies on the fact that
they were used in America’s conquest, to pursue the indians, and in the conquest
war.
In
USA, Cuba and Brazil, they were used until the past century, for the hunting of
slaves who tried to find their path for freedom. In that respect, Dr. José
Antonio Güemez, history and philosophy professor at the Universities of Buenos
Aires, La Plata and Mar del Plata, stated in his book “Apuntes de Historia
Americanística”: “Another great advantage for the conquerors were the dogs.
Unknown to the indians in what referred to size and ferocity, some dogs wrote
pages of victories and horror. In the entry of Cortés -writes Sahagun- the
hounds they brought produced great fear; they were big, with their mouths open,
tongues pending, spiked collars, and they scared everybody who saw them. The
names of the most famous of them -Becerillo, Lencico, Bruto- were preserved by the chroniclers, and some
of their feats narrated as extraordinary things. That is why they earned salary,
and sometimes even more than the halberdier, be it for their intelligence, or
their ferocity. In the chronicles they are referred to as hounds or Alaunts. During some time I
investigated, trying to get a true idea of the dog the Spaniards brought for the
conquest and which scared the indians so much. The mystery -which bothered me
for many years- was solved by some Italian manuscripts, from 1445 and later, in
which, amidst images of war, an Alaunt dog was depicted, equipped
with a special harness and a backpack full of fire. This dog was released, in
full rage, against the cavalry. The shape and detail of this Alaunt dog are coincidental, in
every bit, with those of the Dogo Argentino, which has been produced, after
multiple cross-breeding, by the passion and love of the Nores Martínez family.
So you could say that, genetically, it has been possible to reconstruct a type
of dog that was thought to be extinct”.
So,
there is no doubt that the Mastiff existed in our country, and by extension in
Cordoba, since the times of the Colony; and this is established by a reputable
historian.
The
Boxer, Bullterrier and English Bulldog mixed in their blood at the end of the
past century and beginning of the actual one.
When
we started the mix to shape the new dog these three breeds, Boxer, Bullterrier
and Bulldog, were pretty common in Cordoba, and it was easy for us to get some
pure specimens to put inside the test tube. I remember one Bullterrier, called
Centauro, whom the Major Sebastián
Baltazarre had brought from La Plata. As he had to travel to Uruguay in 1930 for
political reasons, his wife gave me the dog, who stayed definitively in our
hands. He serviced several bitches in our kennel. Mrs. Fanny Howard Baltazarre
always kept in touch with us by mail, since she loved that dog very much. Centauro had an athletic build, and
he was much taller than the Bullterriers we see today.
My
brother managed to get another Bullterrier we called Donkey, whose pedigree name was Don
Quijote de La Mancha; we used him in different times for stud services
in our kennel. There was also some blood infusion from a deaf Bullterrier, whom
we used due to his extraordinary bravery, but the disastrous consequences of
this troubled us for many years.
Several
Boxers serviced female crossbreds between Old Cordoba Fighting Dog and Pointers,
Danes, Bulldogs or Bullterriers. I particularly remember one, very brave, owned
by our relative, Dr. Juan C. Cafferata (Jr.), who came to live with us when his
parents went to Buenos Aires due to political duties. Dr. Cafferata had the dog
living in his grandfather’s yard, and he made him fight. Since he was so
courageous, we used him in the breeding process. Another Boxer who had a fair
amount of responsibility in the formation of the breed was one owned by our
uncle, Dr. Enrique Martínez. When he was elected for governor in Cordoba, in
1928, and later on Vice-president of the country after Beiró’s death, he had to
establish himself in Buenos Aires, so he decided to leave the Boxer with us.
This dog gave us several litters. Both Boxers were much taller and stronger than
the stylized specimens we see nowadays in the show-rings.
Probably
other Boxers had something to do with
our Dogos by that time, but I really cannot recall their names or
origins.
After
that, a beautiful Boxer from Neuquén was used, servicing several Dogo bitches,
but that belongs to the second and definitive era of the Dogo, after the death
of my brother, when the breed became for all purposes extinct in Cordoba, and I
had to reconstruct it in the Patagonia with the specimens my brother had brought
me until 1955 and the ones I had taken to Esquel and other places in southern
Argentina since 1937.
VI
English
Bulldog
We
used only very few specimens of this breed, first of all because it was already
part of the Old Cordoba Fighting Dog, and also, because they produced prognatism
(undershot bite), and small size in our dogs.
It
needs to be emphasized that, from the very first moment, my brother and I were
concerned that our dogs should have good height. That was the main reason to use
the blood of three giant breeds: Great Dane, Irish Wolfhound and Great Pyrenees.
Whenever we saw our Dogo becoming too short, we included some of this giants.
Notwithstanding the inconvenients mentioned above, the Bulldog blood contributed
with a strong jaw and tenacity for the fight, among other characteristics of
this noble breed.
I
remember one of the first Bulldogs we used , brindle and with a good pedigree,
property of a Mr. Brusco, who lived in a beautiful house in the Chacabuco
Boulevard. He was a friend of my brother’s, and he lent us the dog several
times. We had the dog for services, under the condition of returning him on the
same day. He had a bad temper, and he made an unfriendly snore when breathing.
Splitting him from a bitch in heat was truly a titanic feat. He was an
extraordinary specimen of the noble breed.
After
that I took a Bulldog to Cordoba; he was imported from England by Dr. José Arce,
and given to me as a gift. The dog’s name was Churchill John Bull; he had a white
coat and was a typical specimen of the breed, good-natured and gentle. I carried
another Bulldog to Cordoba later on, whom I left with my brother since I was by
then embarked in my law career in Capital Federal. I bought this dog from Mr.
Benito Demaría, a significant breeder who during many years was the only one to
present Bulldogs in the shows at the Kennel Club or the Sociedad Rural. This dog
was also white.
Finally,
there was a last white Bulldog, not so pure, called Boy, who serviced some of the
bitches. He was obtained by my brother, but I cannot remember either his origin
or previous owners.
This
shows four different bloodlines of English Bulldog running through the veins of
our Dogos, adding up, of course, to what was already inside the Old Cordoba
Fighting Dog.
VII
Great
Dane
The
first Great Dane who started shaping the Dogo was Ney, property of my father. He was
the son of Sultan, owned by Mr. Gastón Degoy,
who had a small hotel in Santa Rosa de Río Primero (Cordoba), where my father
and I used to stay when hunting partridges. Ney’s mother was Tigresa de Basqueville, property of
our uncle Mr. Rogelio Martínez; she had a good pedigree. She was a typical
specimen for those times, brindle in color. Sultan, on the contrary, was
harlequin, not very tall, but still among the standards for the breed. I don’t
know whether he had a pedigree or not.
We
also used the services of another harlequin Great Dane called Prince, property of our cousin Dr.
Rodolfo Martínez, who was later to become Secretary of Education before the
OEA.
Another
harlequin Great Dane we used was Fox, the biggest Dane I have ever
seen in my life, both here and abroad. This dog was owned by Mr. Carlos Cuadro
del Viso, and he was the son of a couple imported by a man of German origin whom
we called, for reasons I do not know, “Mr.” Scherer. This man was, for some
time, the director of Cordoba’s Zoo.
Later
on, after I returned from a long journey throughout the world, Mr. Cuadros was
so kind that he gave me the dog, whom I then took with me to Formosa, where I
went to live for some time for job reasons. It seemed that the dog had gotten so
attached to me that he had even become hostile towards his owners. It was
understandable, though, as I usually fetched the dog for long strolls in the
park or stud services. Finally, in 1937, I took him with me to Esquel, where I
had been promoted to District Attorney. I also carried several female Dogos,
Pointers, etc., who served as the basis for the first Dogos from Chubut. My
brother kept bringing new specimens in his trips to Esquel. In one of those
trips he brought me a female Great Dane, Countess. I have many pictures from
her, some of them teaming with a Saint Bernard (Cadete) to pull a dog sleigh with
which my little daughter used to wander those landscapes covered with snow, in
that beautiful Andean village, during the winters.
Countess,
Fox,
and the Irish Wolfhounds, were responsible for the good size of Esquel’s Dogos.
Countess herself gave us many
litters, and died of old age in the mountains.
We
used another harlequin Dane, with pedigree, to service some of our bitches. He
was owned by Mr. Juan Minetti (Jr.), who lent him to us in several occasions.
Years later, thanks to the kindness of Mr. Ludi Ranochia, from Castex, La Pampa,
and the mediation of Mr. Enrique Nervi, I obtained a superb specimen of
harlequin Dane, called Noble, whom I used when the Dogos
from Esquel started to lose height and weight. This dog produced a little white
dot in some eyes of certain offspring, which took me several generations to
erase. But his height and overall strength were very useful to me in the
reconstruction of the breed, as it will be seen in the corresponding chapter.
The
Great Dane also had some indirect influence in the early developments of the
breed. This was through two dogs: One was a crossbred between Dane and Irish
Wolfhound, property of the Ricciardi family. The other, around 1935, was the
famous Yarará, an “almost Dogo” who had
such a height that it was clear he had blood from the giant breed. Yarará was more than 30 inches tall
and heavy. He still had many characteristics of the Old Cordoba Fighting Dog,
but his biotype was that of the future Dogo Argentino. He was owned by Mr. Raúl
Dalves, police officer in Esquel since 1935, who had obtained him from my
brother Antonio. By the way, it was Dalves himself who encouraged me to ask to
be transferred from Formosa to Esquel to continue my law career, which happened
in 1937. I was then designated as District Attorney in that wonderful town,
where I lived more than half of my life. My friendship with Mr. Dalves has
extended in time with the affection that bonds me to his children and
grandchildren.
Yarará
was one of the cornerstones of the breed in Esquel. In this way, I pay homage to
that great wild boar hunter, who had such extraordinary power, height, weight
and stamina, strengthened by long runs through mountains and valleys. He
serviced many of our bitches, among them Ibote, Bugati, Ñata, Paloma. He died
very old in Rawson, and is buried in a place where the Police’s headquarters now
stand.
VIII
Pointer
One
of the first Pointers we put in the breed was
Zug de Tregroas, imported from
France by engineer Miguel Arrambide, around 1927, jointly with a female
called Hantippe de Saint Fargot. Arrambide
gave them as a gift to my father, of whom he was a friend. He was also friend of
us; a gentleman, in sport and in life; legendary figure in Cordoba, of whom I
keep the best of memories. He joined us in memorable partridge hunting journeys,
in the fields of Cordoba, south of Santiago del Estero and Santa Fe. Those
Pointers, who had cost him a real fortune, brought with themselves the titles of
French and European champions, both in structure and work. I myself hunted with
Hantippe for several
years.
In
this breed we also used the stud services of
Crack, a white and chocolate
Pointer, son of the former couple, belonging to Arrambide, as well as Champion, black and white, and Cup, white and chocolate, with whom
my father and some brothers hunted for many years. These dogs were registered in
the Sociedad Rural Argentina, after which, Dr. Rafael Magnelli Ferrari, a known
pointerman who did very much for the breed, traded with my father a son of the
aforementioned couple for a puppy son of
Dados Pigal and Mora, two dogs imported by him. That
puppy was also introduced by us in the breeding process, and years later Dr.
Magnelli Ferrari -who was the founder of the magazine called “La Diosa
Cazadora”, which later evolved into the magazine “La Diana”- gave my father a
son of You de Grand Charmon, a French
champion Pointer imported by him. And with my brother we also utilized this new
Pointer blood-line to introduce it in our melting pot.
Much
later on, we used blood from a nearly all-white Pointer that I got from Mr.
Julio Alberto, who sent it to me as a gift to Esquel.
In 1937 my brother brought to Esquel an
excellent Pointer, Tom, who was son of Diana, sent to my father in Cordoba
by Dr. José María Cullen. Diana was daughter of Lord, a dog who had won several
field trials and structure shows, and was considered to be one of the best
Pointers of his time in the country. Tom gave us many litters with great
nose, and I credit him for the good temper of the Dogos I found when I
established myself in Esquel, 20 years later. These dogs, in spite of my
continuous traveling to Esquel and all my contacts, were the result of natural
selection, enforced by hard work in the mountains, hostile climate, the hard and
even cruel life they faced, the snow and the icy water rivers, which they swam
across, the fangs of the wild boar, and
the claws of the puma. This natural selection is an indispensable ingredient
that goes along with the human work. No doubt Mr. Solanet would not have been
able to create his magnificent “Criollo” horse had he been not helped by the
harsh climate for example, which was the same as that where the Dogos were
forged.
These
are , briefly, the different lines belonging to the best stocks of Pointer blood
which we used for the Dogo.
IX
Irish
Wolfhound
As
I have said before, this dog represented, both for my brother and me, the “non
plus ultra” of all breeds. We admired it and read about it from the book Le Bon de Vaux, which finally turned
into our dog bible. We had the obsession of getting a specimen of the breed, but
despite exhausting all our resources, writing to the Kennel Club, the Sociedad
Rural Argentina, and friends from all over the place, we found no trace of it in
the country. Apparently, no one had ever introduced one of these dogs in
Argentina, and that obviously had to do with their high
price-tag.
One
day, while skiing at the Otto mountain, Bariloche -the Catedral was not yet in
use- I made friends with Dr. Antonio Parodi Cantilo, married to Alicia Lalor,
who owned the Tunkelén Hotel, neighbor to the Llao-Llao, later on expropriated
by the government. Alicia Lalor’s father owned several estates in the southern
part of Cordoba (General Viamonte and Laboulaye), where my father, Arrambide and
I used to go every winter to hunt red partridge, which existed there in fabulous
quantities. I soon discovered that the couple was going to Europe in a pleasure
trip, and as I knew they were enthusiasts of pure-bred dogs, I urged them to buy
a male Irish Wolfhound, which was our golden dream. There was a circumstance in
my favor: Alicia Lalor was of Irish origin, and they would be visiting Ireland.
When they finally came back they brought a female, Diana, and even if it was not
exactly what we had hoped for, it was no doubt a step
forward.
Since
there were no males of the breed in the country, they decided to service her
with a Great Dane they had, property of Mr. Luis Ricciardi. I followed the
traces of two of their sons: Nahuel, owned by Mr. Luis Ortiz
Basualdo, and Don Patricio, property of Duke
Jones. Both dogs developed themselves in their corresponding estates in the
margins of the lake Nahuel Huapi, in the area which limits with the Huemul
peninsula, Neuquén. They reached exceptional size, mainly Don
Patricio, who was an impressive specimen; and both evolved into such
good hunters that they finally surrendered their lives fighting against wild
boars in the mountains. Mr. Luis Ortiz Basualdo, who, as well as his daughter
and grandchildren, was a great friend of mine, lent me his Nahuel, whom I took to Esquel and
used for stud service on several transitional Dogo bitches, with which I
introduced at least 50 % Irish Wolfhound blood. Later on, he lent him to me
again, and I sent him to my brother in Cordoba, where he stayed for several
months servicing some bitches which by then were already fixing the desired
biotype. We then returned Nahuel to his owner, who some short
time later told me that as soon as the dog arrived he went out in a wild boar
hunt where he got killed by one of the hogs.
This
was the first Irish Wolfhound blood that entered into the shaping of the Dogo
Argentino, admittedly not pure.
Years
later I established myself as crime judge in Buenos Aires, and moved to a big
house with a great yard in Palermo Chico, in the intersection of streets Juez
Tedín and Bustamante. I took with me a couple of Irish Wolfhounds, which had
been imported from the US and previously owned by Mr. Natalio Botana. Mr. Botana
had already died, and I managed to get the dogs through one of his sons. Finally
our long-cherished dream became real. My brother sent me several Dogo bitches,
which were serviced by Max
de Wopourmil -that was the male’s name- and I coupled the bitch with a
male Dogo called Pancho, who was also sent from
Cordoba by my brother. The litters, with the sole exception of one puppy who was
taken to Ecuador by the Cultural Attaché at that country’s embassy, Dr. León,
were all sent to Cordoba to my brother’s hands. Both Irish Wolfhounds are
registered in the Kennel Club Argentino.
Years
later, while I was doing some paperwork concerning the importation of two Irish
Wolfhounds in the American Kennel Club in New York, I was asked if I knew
anything of Botana’s dogs. I informed them that I had had them for some time,
and that both of them had already died. I was careful not to tell them how I had
used them , since among such breeders it is a big offense to crossbreed the
dogs.
In
1948 I traveled from New Orleans, where I was studying at the University of
Tulane, to New York, and tried to buy a couple of these dogs, or at least a
male, but I found it was very difficult to get one, and besides, the official
price for the breed was beyond my financial capabilities. Meanwhile, my brother
was very worried because the Dogos, perhaps due to inbreeding, were losing
height, which we both thought was crucial, since the Dogo was essentially a
big-game hunting dog, destined to fight with wild animals of much greater size.
As such, he urged me to try to take back to Argentina a male Irish Wolfhound or
at least a Pyrenean dogue, that white giant from the Pyrenean mountains we
admired so much.
I
contacted some friends, among them Dr. Frederik Reiter, who took me to Mrs.
Butcher’s kennel. She had won the trophies for Pyrenean Mastiff in the
Westminster show, that great event which takes part every year during February
in the Madison Square Garden in New York. Once there, I bought the couple of
Pyrenean Mastiffs whose blood runs through the Dogos veins, as I will show in
the corresponding chapter.
Finally,
life’s ups and downs allowed me to obtain a couple of Irish Wolfhounds of my
own, which constituted the 4th. and 5th. blood streams from that breed that took
part in the development of the Dogo.
Destiny
made me abandon for some years my judiciary career and I resigned my position as
President of the Federal Court of Appeals in Capital Federal to hold as
Argentina’s ambassador in Canada. Shortly afterwards, I bought a couple of these
dogs, with champion parents, and I made themselves champions too. The male, Gelert of Tipperary, was proclaimed
International champion, since he became American and Canadian champion. The
bitch, Sheelagh
Allana of Ottawa, who was younger, became Canadian champion. Both
dogs, who were extraordinarily beautiful, were registered in the Kennel Club
Argentino, and they participated in several shows, where they always drew the
attention due to their aristocratic appearance. They won several prizes, as many
of their purebred sons also did. Some of their descendants are still wandering
the Patagonia.
At
the end of this chapter I show data taken from the Harp
and Hound, official magazine of the Irish Wolfhound Club of America,
which testifies for the quality of the two specimens I
imported.
Gelert
serviced several bitches in Cordoba -where I stayed for a year when back from
Canada-, and when I established myself in Santa Rosa I took them with me. They
finally ended their days in Esquel, servicing other Dogo bitches. Their pure
offspring showed good results when hunting guanacos and ñandú (American ostrich); they were not
good for wild boar, puma and red fox, for the reasons I state in detail in the
first chapter of my previous book about our Dogos.
In
the 1952, vol.III, N°2, spring issue of
Harp and Hound magazine, page 48,
under the heading “Harpings...”, there is an article written by Mrs. Margaret L.
Fess, where she speaks about the dogs I bought in the US and took to Canada in
the following words: “ The two hounds acquired by Argentina’s ambassador in
Canada are Gelert of Tipperary, son of American
champion Cyllikity of Ambleside and the
female champion Rathain Lorna of Ambleside, and Sheelagh Allana of Ottawa, daughter
of champion Corina of Enfelcarne”. Three years
later, in vol.VI, N°1, winter 1955, page 12 on, Mrs. Fess states: “Both of the hounds of Dr. Nores Martínez
share their bloodlines with the two most famous American champions. The
international champion Gelert of Tipperary is littermate of female champion Tralee of Ambleside, who was elected
hound of the year, twice best in show, and best Irish Wolfhound in the last
specialty show, all of it in 1954. Sheelagh Allana of Ottawa is
littermate of champion Makilacudy, who has been elected
best of breed in the last 3 shows in the Madison Square
Garden”.
This
means to say that both Irish Wolfhounds whose blood took part in the development
of our Dogo Argentino are not only sons of champions and champions themselves,
but they also have littermates which became the best dogs in the
US.
This
certifies our determination to use, in every breed, the best possible
bloodlines, regardless troubles or expense.
X
Dogue
de Bordeaux
This
breed had also caught our attention, and after reading its description and that
of their qualities, we decided to introduce it in our
creation.
The
problem was, as usual, finding them in Argentina. Luck helped us once more. My
father had an estate in Falda del Carmen, near Alta Gracia, a property I
inherited many years later, when he died. The man in charge of it was a Pole
called Nicolás Milkevich, who, by that time, lived alone in a small house inside
the estate. He was a refugee from World War I, and his family had stayed in
Europe; some years later my father managed to bring them to Argentina through
official negotiations.
During
partridge season we used to go hunting every Sunday; birds seemed endless at
those times. On one of the occasions, we arrived rather early, and when we
reached Mr. Nicolás’s house we saw a dead adult puma, hanging from a carob tree,
near the water mill. Nearby, lying under the sun, we saw a pair of fairly big
dogs, with huge heads and traces of recent fights, like skin tears and blood
stains. We talked promptly to our father, asking him if he knew which breed the
dogs were, to which, without hesitation, he answered that they had to be Dogues
de Bordeaux, since they were identical to the ones he had seen in Europe and
especially in France, at dog shows and in family houses as guard dogs.
As
soon as we returned to Cordoba we looked up for information in our books. That
search convinced us that our father was right, since the photograph in the
article was an exact reproduction of those two dogs, especially the typical
heads.
It
goes without saying that the following Sunday, as soon as we arrived to the
ranch, we asked Mr. Nicolás for a puppy, which we were soon able to take home
since the bitch was by then pregnant. We took him to our villa Santa Isabel;
once there my father named him Kaiser and used him as guard dog for
many years. We also took him to our yard in several occasions for stud service
on our incipient Dogo bitches.
Mr.
Nicolás also had a seemingly pure Bullterrier or Old Cordoba Fighting female
dog, who was always on the leash as she was aggressive towards domestic animals.
We also serviced her with the Dogue de Bordeaux, and then we took a male puppy
which we later used for our purposes.
Afterwards,
during my trips abroad, especially in France, where I had the chance to see so
many Dogues de Bordeaux, I became convinced that those specimens were almost
pure, even if I cannot determine whether they had pedigrees or not. What they
told us was that they had been obtained from a Frenchman who lived in Alta
Gracia for some time and who had brought them from Buenos Aires. Apparently,
when he left Alta Gracia he gave them to Mr. Nicolás. A few years ago I had the
pleasure of seeing in Paris, in Place Pigalle, an old man walking every
afternoon with a beautiful specimen of this breed, which reminded me of our
Kaiser, whom my father loved so much.
The
Dogue de Bordeaux gave us good heads and strong jaws, as well as good height,
but they also transmitted a yellowish tinge in the coat, very difficult to
eradicate, due to which my brother used them conservatively in stud services.
But there can be no doubt that this breed has contributed to the development of
the Dogo Argentino.
XI
Pyrenean
Mastiff
As
I have stated in a previous chapter, when I failed to bring from the US an Irish
Wolfhound I met Mrs. Marjorie Butcher, and bought from her two beautiful
purebred Pyrenean Mastiff puppies, from champion parents.
They
were named Cote de Neige Van du Nord and Cote
de Neige Pavanne, but we decided to call them Napoleon and Josefina, for the sake of
simplicity. I brought them with me when I came back to the country, and I
registered them at the Kennel Club Argentino, which means they were the first
specimens of the breed arriving to Argentina. We liked them very much because of
their excellent nose, size, temper and rusticity. Regarding their smell sense, I
will recall an episode we witnessed and which made my brother Antonio a great
enthusiast of these mastiffs. We were walking from our parent’s house to my own,
which I was building 1 km. away, in our villa Santa Isabel. Napoleon was with
us. Suddenly, the dog started sniffing like a Pointer or Setter behind the
partridge, and then he began running towards a group of fruit trees. We thought
it might be a hare, but few seconds after losing sight of the dog amidst the
trees and pastures we heard him barking, and also some human screams. We ran and
found a young man cornered by the mastiff against a peach tree, trying to fend
off the dog with a sack half-full with the product of his theft, begging us to
call the animal back. Fortunately he had not been bitten yet. Of course we let
him off with his peaches, not without telling him that next time he wanted
some he might better ask for them, since
we always used to give fruit to all the kids who went to our house daily. One of
the sweetest memories I recall from my childhood is that of my mother giving out
fruits among the poor people of our neighborhoods.
Back
to our subject. We serviced many of our transitional Dogo bitches with that
Pyrenean Mastiff. By that time, we had already left the yard our uncle had lent
us, and we had established the kennel in my father’s estate, in the southwest
part of Santa Isabel. We called it “Puesto de Adé”, in reference to a workman
who had lived there in times gone by. After servicing several bitches and
rendering us excellent litters, the male mastiff died; the mastiff bitch had
passed away a year before. I took several descendants to La Pampa, and later to
Esquel. Piri was a good crossbred who lived
many years in an estate called “El Refugio”, property of Edelmiro Ardohain, in
Doblas, La Pampa. He left us very good puppies. I gave out other similar
crossbreds in different estates throughout the province; the great many big
Dogos which are seen there nowadays, good hunters, and some of them having
rather long coats, trace their origins to that first couple of Pyrenean Mastiffs
we introduced. I also took them to Esquel, where they performed well due to that
strong and heavy coat. The only defect the Pyrenean brought us was the aberrant
finger, which at first was double, and which is typical of the breed. Lately,
this does not happen anymore, as the new dog establishes itself and absorbs the
old original breeds.
The
bitch also gave offspring with Dogos, so finally two different blood streams of Pyrenean Mastiff have contributed
to the development of the Dogo Argentino.
XII
And
the Dogos Finally Developed
Be
it because in La Pampa the European wild boar was very abundant and our
friendship with Antonio Maura, owner of Parque Luro, allowed us to hunt as if it
were our private land; be it because in Cordoba the wild boar never existed; be
it because Antonio became discouraged when he saw that neither family nor
friends, not even his sons, showed any interest in the new breed; or be it
because he foreboded his early, incoming death, the truth is that my brother
brought, between 1953 and 1956, his best adult Dogos and even entire litters to
my villa in Santa Rosa (La Pampa). These dogs I either gave out among friends or
kept for myself.
Among
these adult Dogos, he brought me Tupac and
Inca. These dogs took part in two public fights in the city of San Luis,
in 1953; Tupac with a puma and Inca with a wild boar. We had some
trouble with the authorities because of an indictment for “cruel acts”, and in
order to make the exhibition we had to change the original location, which was a
theater, to a beautiful estate, very near the city, property of the then
Captain, and today Colonel, Amieva Saravia. The demonstrations finally took part
as they had been advertised through the radio and newspapers. They were
sponsored by the Sociedad Rural Argentina and the Kennel Club de San Luis, and
they were meant to show the efficacy of the new breed in the fight against the
predatory species which by that time were decimating sheep flocks and ravaging
colts and calves.
By
the way, let it be said that the people of San Luis had found such a big, fierce
and courageous puma that he defeated Tupac without any doubt, and I had
to take him out of the cage in order to save his life. The dog did not give up,
and behaved as the history of the breed demands. Inca, on the other hand, easily got
hold of the wild boar.
Along
with these dogs, my brother also brought me several bitches, among them Pora, Ayuhue, Penca, Mahuida, Blanca,
Chicha, Guayrá, Araí, Yasi, Iboté, etc. From then on, I have my own book
with the genealogy of the breed, which starts with Penca’s litter, February 3rd., 1954,
going on from parents to sons. By now, there have been 1031 puppies, counting
the litter from Huecuvú del Chubut and Pudú
del Chubut, born July 9th. of
the current year. Among those 1031 Dogos born in my hands, we find the 41
Basic Registries and the 26 1sts. which, registered in the Federación Cinológica
and the Sociedad Rural Argentina, constitute the origin of the pedigree Dogos we
see nowadays.
As
such, during those years I multiplied the Dogos a great deal, and gave them out
in different estates, so they could develop as hunters. But soon I had to face a
tremendous problem, which was that half of the puppies were born deaf. Aside
from the genetic problem, it was also a moral and touching issue, since by the
time we realized they were deaf the puppies were usually two months old, and it
was really very painful for us to sacrifice them after we had already became
fond of them. My brother and some colleagues studied the case, and concluded
that the reason for this defect was not only the deaf bullterrier we had used
years before, but also the issue of inbreeding.
My
cousin, Captain Justiniano Martínez Achával, left with me for several months his
Dogo Yagan, an excellent hunter which my
brother had previously given him as a gift in Cordoba; very powerful indeed, but
rather short in height. This dog serviced several of my bitches, and gave me
very good puppies, among them Yacaré, whom I gave to Mr. Martín
Valerdi. Yacaré was a powerful and courageous
dog, but he did not prevent me from getting deaf puppies, since it was the same
bloodline. I carried Alicacha, one of his sons, to
Esquel. Alicacha died in Corcovado, in an
estate within the mountains called La Diana (owned by Major Sustaita), after
fighting both a wild boar and a puma on the same day. A littermate was kept by a
sergeant of the army who, upon retirement, went to live in Cordoba, where he
took this dog, called Tip. This Dogo bears the number 41
in my books. Before passing away, Alicacha left me very good puppies,
whose blood participated in the reconstruction of the
breed.
It
was evident that we had to introduce new blood streams, or the Dogo as a breed
would come to an end, since deafness was becoming more and more frequent.
Happily, I had brought with me from Cordoba several Pyrenean Mastiffs, offspring
from the ones I had previously imported, and also, several pure Irish
Wolfhounds, whom I had also brought from the US and Canada. All of these animals
provided me with fresh blood for the Dogos. When I established myself
definitively in Esquel, at the beginning of 1957, I took with me a large pack of
my Dogos, along with the Irish Wolfhounds. Those ten years which run from 1954
to 1964, when the breed was officially recognized by the Federación Cinológica
Argentina and the Sociedad Rural, were decisive for it.
When
I arrived in Esquel I lodged the dogs in a country house, property of my old
friend and cattleman Mr. Antonio Criado. I also lived there myself, until we
finished our “Condor’s Nest”, over the slope of the Z mountain, in that
city.
When
that finally happened, I moved there with 20 Dogos, male and female. They were
to produce, in a few years, all of the Dogos with pedigree, according to the
documentary proof available at the time this book is being written
(76/77).
Before
leaving for “Condor’s Nest”, I gave Major Sustaita 5 Dogos which he took to his
estate “La Diana”, in Corcovado, where wild boars and pumas were ravaging cattle
and sheep. They hunted very much and very well, guided by Jaramillo, the
foreman, but two of them, Alicacha and the
bitch Kelghy, died in fierce fights
against these animals. Several descendants of these Dogos, distributed among
nearby estates, also passed away on the line of duty.
So
I worked with those Dogos I had brought from La Pampa, adding several ones I
kept finding in different estates around Corcovado, Trevelin, Tecka, etc. These
were fairly pure descendants of the ones I had taken in 1937 (twenty years
before), when I first arrived in Esquel.
With
these dogs, who had been hunting in the mountains for 20 years, plus the ones I
brought, plus some Pointer, Pyrenees, Dane, Irish Wolfhound and Boxer blood, I
was able to end the inbreeding problem, open up and reconstruct the breed, which
was on the verge of extinction, eliminate the deafness problem, and once again,
give the animals good size.
In
Zapala, Neuquén, I found a good, very big Dogo, who was discovered by my cousin,
Dr. Rodolfo Martínez. He was owned by Dr. Posse, who had obtained him as a puppy
from some friends in Uspallata. This dog serviced several of my bitches
too.
Another
serious problem I encountered with the Dogos my brother took to La Pampa and
which I later brought to Esquel, was that of aggressiveness between each other.
I will never forget an embarrassing situation which my brother and I had to bear
with when hunting with Mr. Antonio Maura and Mr. Miguel Uranga, the man in
charge of Parque Luro. The Dogos had caught a wild boar about 100 meters ahead
from us; we rushed, guided by the hog’s screams. When we arrived, the boar was
gone, as the dogs had started fighting among themselves. With the education and
the new blood, contributed by the Pointer and Irish Wolfhound (which gave them a
better temper), plus the 20 years of “functional gymnastics”, hunting boar and
puma in packs over the mountains and the marshes of Fofo Cahuel, I managed to tame them, taking
away from them that fighting ancestor. A couple of excellent Dogos helped me
very much in this task: Jack, an old dog who was hunting in
an estate in Corcovado, owned by Mr. Corro, foreman of Dr. Venturino; and a
bitch called Lilý, very big and very good hunter,
given to me by a close friend, Mr. Juan Goya (Jr.). Lilý gave me very good
puppies.
As
a result, we obtained good hunting, docile dogs, not aggressive among themselves. A friend of mine, Mr. Elías
Owen, landowner and Dogo-enthusiast, told me some time ago that in his estates,
no Dogo is ever kept chained. He knows very well the efforts we have made to
make it possible to have Dogos coexisting in a house, without fighting each
other. This explains why we feel so bad when we see them being used in dog
fights, either pure or crossbred with Bullterrier. This destroys our hunting
breed, causing a regression to the Old Cordoba Fighting Dog, which hides
underneath the roots of the Dogo.
In
this way, in about 10 years, I managed to reconstruct the breed with renewed
vigor; and through adequate training, and continuous hunting and fighting with
wild boars and pumas in cages, I was able to present a pack of 67 specimens in
1964, required for the official recognition of the breed by the previously
mentioned entities. These Dogos are the ones who shaped the pedigree, from whom
all of the existing Dogos come from. It starts with Kob de Las Pampas, carrying number 1
in the Registros Genealógicos Base (Base Genealogy Registries), and
ends with Tanuki del Chubut, who carries
number 41. The Registros Genealógicos
Primera (Genealogy Registries -First) start
with Conajen del Chubut (N°1), and end
with Felder del Chubut, who carries
number 26. The Registros
Genealógicos closed with them. Then
I opened the Registros Genealógicos
Definitivos (Definitive Genealogy Registries), with a litter from Mayoco del Chubut (Registro Provisional
-temporary entry- N°8) and Barda del Chubut (Registro Provisional -temporary
entry- N°7), born October 3, 1969,
as it is stated in the Federación
Cinológica Argentina. Number 1 in that litter is Camarucho del chubut; N°2 Cacique del Chubut, and the two
bitches, Challa del Chubut and
Pirren del Chubut, carry numbers 3 and 4 of the Definitive
Registries.
When
I made a trip to Cordoba in 1957 -my brother had already died- , I tried to find
purebred Dogos to take south, but it was impossible, since not a single specimen
of the near-extinct breed could be traced. I was informed that a Mr. Villegas
could have one, but by the time I was able to find him the dog had already died.
I was also told of a Mr. Meyer, who had sent a puppy to la Pampa in the past,
through my brother (Iboté). I contacted him, only to
find out he no longer had Dogos. As such, I returned from the trip without being
able to find a single purebred Dogo in all of the Cordoba province. It was
evident that after my brother’s death no one else in Cordoba had been interested
in the breed.
In
1961 my younger brother, Dr. Francisco Nores Martínez, located Mr. Pacuzzi, who
had a female Dogo -Paloma- with puppies from a male -Añá-, property of Mr. Palau Posse,
who was spending the summer in Tanti (he lived in Buenos Aires). My brother got
me two male puppies from that litter, whom I named Uturunco and
Lanín; they carry numbers 4 and 5 in the Base Genealogy Registries.
These two Dogos are the only ones registered as Base who do not come from
Esquel. Uturunco and Lanín had three littermates who were
taken to Buenos Aires, to the country house of a Mr. Paz; all of them died
without leaving puppies. Paloma also died shortly afterwards,
and Añá ended in Dr. Arrambide’s estate
in Laboulaye, in the south of Cordoba. I do not know if he left any puppies or
not, but if he did, they could not have been registered, since Añá was not. In this way, around
1960, the last Dogos existing in Cordoba disappeared.
Afterwards,
my brother Francisco took some Dogos to Cordoba, in several trips he made to
visit me; and he either kept them for himself or gave them out among friends. I
have in my books, among others: Guampa, from my old Kob
de Las Pampas and Chicha, a gift from my brother
Antonio. He also took Lepá, an adult bitch, from Chala del Chubut and
Koby del Chubut; Ñanco del Chubut, Solitario del Chubut, and
Suncho, all of them adults; and several puppies from different parents.
I personally took Neuquina and
Tupac to Mr. Sosa Senestrari; and Tabaré, Alikol, and others I cannot
recall, to my nephew Patricio Bustos Fierro. My own Toro
del Chubut also spent several months servicing bitches.
Uturunco, by now very old, was also taken to Cordoba, where his health
got better with the rest and the milder climate; he was able to produce several
litters.
There
were also some specimens taken from Santiago del Estero. These dogs were
descendants of several Esquel Dogos who were taken to that province by the then
Captain, and today Lt. Colonel, Adolfo Phillipeaux. All of these animals, plus
many others which might have come from other places due to the Dogo “Boom”,
originated all of the Dogos which have proliferated in that mediterranean
province.
In
1961 I received a letter from Mr. Amadeo Biló, which I keep in my files, telling
me about his failures hunting wild boar with Great Danes and Boxers, and asking
me for several Dogo puppies. In that way, I started my relationship with that
great Río Negro hunter. Of course, I promised him the dogs he wanted, and I did
it with great pleasure, since he would use them for hunting, which is the
breed’s specific function. In winter that year, 1961, I went out hunting with
Biló and my friend and breeder Mr. Elías Owen. We took Kob
and Chicha, which were mine, and Lanín and
Uturunco, property of Mr. Owen. We hunted 8 wild boars in a single
afternoon. Mr. Biló was marveled by the way the Dogos hunted, and by the end of
that year we gave him his first dogs, Day de Trevelín and
Dele de Owen. Shortly after I gave him Lenga, Pampa, and other female
puppies, with whom Biló started his own breeding kennel, called “Malal Conajén”
( in Mapuche tongue: Corral of the Brave).
Day
de Trevelín
was the Dogo who died in Choele Choel; he was filmed by Americans, and his death
was mentioned by Argentine and foreign newspapers. The Secretary General of the
OEA said of this dog, in a letter he sent me and which I published in my book El Dogo Argentino, that “he is wrapped
in the shine of legend”.
Those
dogs we sent him from Esquel, plus several ones I gave him later, produced the
famous Biló’s Dogos, which spread throughout the shores of the Negro, Colorado,
Neuquén, Limay rivers, etc. Biló used them to hunt with many European and
American hunters, and their fame
expanded abroad. I have read in foreign magazines articles written by Mr. Jack
Parry and others; especially the Post
Tribune, May 23, 1965, and Field and
Stream, November 1967. In these, they praise the Dogo Argentino in a way I
have not seen in my life. It is evident that the Americans know very well the
meaning of the phrase “To tell, to sell”, whether it is a dog, a car, or a razor
blade.
Many
couples and trios of Dogos have gone from Esquel to USA, Holland, Germany,
Italy, Japan, Yugoslavia, Spain, and every country in Latin America. A few
months ago, a couple, made up of a bitch of my own and a male provided by the
breeder Jorge Wade and his wife, were sent to Israel. These two dogs have now
come to San José de Costa Rica for two years, due to the fact that their owners,
Mr. Jonathan Bilak and wife, have been hired to work in a cultural program.
After that, they will go back to Israel.
As
we now know that other puppies have been exported from those nations to further
countries, and as we also know of fellow native breeders who have already sent
dogs abroad, we can say that our Dogos are now spread around the world, with the
support provided by the recognition of the breed by the International
Federation.
In
1973, in a show which took place in Dortmund, West Germany, the bitch Pampa del Chubut, whom I had given
to Dr. Erich Schneider Leyer, obtained the title “Weltslegerin”, that is to say,
World Champion.
By
the time this book is being printed, International Champions Tilcara de Norez Martínez and Duda
de Tilcara have participated in the International Dog Show in Mexico,
obtaining both of them the titles of World Champions, male and female
respectively. Tilcara is son of Facundo del Chubut and Mahuida del Chubut, both born and
raised in Esquel, and Duda
de Tilcara is daughter of Tilcara de Norez Martínez. So,
regarding the three World Champions this breed has already produced, we find
that one of them was born in Esquel -Pampa del Chubut-, and the
remaining two are sons and grandsons of Dogos from Esquel.
I
did not want to tire the reader, entering into more details, names and facts,
but I believe that with what has already been said, I have accomplished my goal,
which was to establish, very clearly, how the Dogo was created; which its
origins were; the ten breeds which took part in its development; and finally,
how we managed to reconstruct the breed when it became nearly extinct. I believe
I have done this in a way that nobody could, in good faith, be mistaken about
it.
Captain
Graham, who re-created the old Irish Wolfhound breed in the last decade of the
19th century, was able to do so in ten years, with some pure specimens he found
in the Irish mountains. But it was easier for him, since it was a breed with
more than 600 years of existence. We ourselves had to face the challenges of a
new breed, even though it is also true that the modern means of communication
allowed us to get the specimens we needed in little time, in spite of the long
distances inherent to our huge country.
Here
is, then, the authentic history of the Dogo Argentino, to enrich the knowledge
of so many admirers of the breed. A dream from our youth which, while becoming a
reality, is getting out from our hands, day by day. The breed is taking a life
of its own; and blessed be it for that! It was only yesterday, when it seemed an
unrealizable youth’s dream; at that age when ideals were dreamed as reality, or
reality lived as a dream, until life itself confronted us with that
reality.
Those
dreams from the past, and this present reality, are protected by a group of
enthusiasts which maintains, with patriotic fervor, the destiny of the first
national breed, the Dogo Argentino, which, as Dr. Gallo Plaza stated, “Is a new
breed which reflects the fidelity, courage and persistency that America demanded
for its epic past of conquest and liberation, demands for its grave present, and
will demand for the fulfillment of its promising
future”.
Transcription
of an article published by “Clarín” journal
Buenos
Aires, January 9th, 1978
The
Dogo Argentino, canine breed obtained in our country via crossbreeding, has
readily showed his abilities as a hunter. But now, through a peculiar
experience, he has showed another skill: being an excellent alpinist. His
capacities to climb and adapt to a different environment were demonstrated days
ago in Junín de Los Andes, when Lieutenants Juan Carlos Ribo and Horacio Vicek,
assigned to the RIM 26 (Regimiento Infantería de Montaña -Mountain Infantry
Regiment-), climbed the Lanín volcano in the company of a Dogo named Olaf. The noble and intelligent
animal, owned by Vicek, went all the way up with the climbers, showing his
versatility.
The
ascension
Officers
Ribo and Vicek started the ascension with Olaf through the sector known as “La
espina del pescado” (The fishbone), but before getting to this point they had to
cross a thick forest situated between Gendarmerie’s post in Paso Tromen, and the
place chosen as the start of the climb. Olaf
guided both of them through this section, showing unmatched tracking
skills.
Later,
when in the mountains, the dog behaved himself as if he had always lived in that
environment, avoiding obstacles and the sharp stones which characterize that
type of land. It is worth mentioning, to further appreciate the dog’s
capabilities, that the trip started in complete darkness, which tested both his
sight and smell senses.
Some
time later, the officers told, the Dogo stopped in his tracks in an alert
position, and started growling. There was no chance of finding a wild boar in
the area they were treading; the mystery came to an end when they reached a
shelter at 2500 meters (around 8120 feet). There, they found two persons who
were also trying to climb the Lanín, who had stopped for some rest. Both
officers and Olaf did the same, resuming the trip
at 08 AM next day.
Between
glaciers
There
are 1500 meters (around 4870 feet) from the place where they met the fellow
climbers to the top of the mountain, a stretch which is considered the most
difficult part of the ascension for this particular peak. It is a sector covered
by glaciers, huge masses of ice, full of cracks. Considering the risks they were
about to face (falling inside the cracks is usually fatal), Ribo and Vicek
decided to tie themselves with a cord, leaving Olaf
to care for his own. Even then, confronted with great and unforeseen
difficulties, the Dogo Argentino behaved magnificently, climbing backwards on
some occasions, due to the impossibility of doing it the right way. Finally, at
4.30 PM the day after, the brave trio, made up of two men and a dog, managed to
reach the summit. The temperature was - 20° C
(around -20° to -30° F). Tough test, for an animal accustomed to warm
climates; Olaf however, after eating his meal,
decided to jump several times, as if celebrating his feat. The prize was a sip
of beer, shared with his master and officer Ribo, whom afterwards decided to
start the descent. They previously examined the dog, finding that he had several
cuts in his feet, from which he bled slightly.
Injuries
notwithstanding, as soon as Olaf understood they were going
down, he adopted a vigorous walking rhythm, which was followed by his human
partners with due effort. They arrived at the base of the volcano at night, so
once again, the Dogo turned himself into a proficient guide amidst the darkness,
until they reached Tromen’s post, front-line of civilization in an otherwise
hostile environment.
Conclusions
The
Dogo Olaf demonstrated several remarkable
aspects about himself:
1. He
showed to be stronger and more versatile than the average
dog.
2. He
was able to march several hours without eating, since during the ascension he
did not have any food at all.
3. By
scenting the presence of people which were 2 miles away, he proved to have an
incredible nose.
4. He
showed ability to tolerate very low temperatures.
5. He
exhibited a remarkable insensibility to pain, walking with his four feet injured without uttering a complaint
(proverbial characteristic of the breed).
6. Exceptional
fighting spirit.
7. Fidelity
to his master, even after making exhausting efforts.
8. Flexibility
to adapt himself to any environment.
All
of these aspects show the worthiness of the Dogo Argentino, not just as a
hunting dog but also as an animal with many other applications. As for the fact
of reaching Lanín’s summit, it is to be said that a similar feat has been
intended with dogs from other breeds, sharing successes and failures. On the
occasions in which they succeeded, however, the animals were always object of
extreme cares, having their feet protected with special boots, their necks tied
up with collars and chains, and being fed high calorie foods and
vitamins.
The
Dogo Argentino did not need those cares to reach the top of the mountain,
showing it is not arbitrary to consider his breed as the best in the world
Conclusions
With
this authentic, true and objective history, written, as the old judges required,
“a verdad sabida y buena fe
guardada”, I have tried to give a trustworthy idea of how our Dogo Argentino
was born and shaped, leaving out, “brevitaris causa” (as we judges say
when we do not want to be repetitive), many names and details which would make
the reading tedious. I have just wanted to enhance objectively the information
about the new breed which I give in my first book El
Dogo Argentino, so as to dismiss any doubt which our breed’s lovers might
have.
It
is written for those who destine the Dogo Argentino for the purpose my brother
Antonio and I envisioned more than half a century ago; a courageous, big-game
hunting dog, friendly with children and sociable with his own species, and an
incorruptible guardian for our homes.
It
is therefore perfectly clear, ratified and documented in a way which is easily
verifiable, that the breeds which have contributed with their bloods to shape
our actual Dogo are 10, as follows:
1. Old
Cordoba Fighting Dog
2. Boxer
3. Pointer
4. Bullterrier
5. English
Bulldog
6. Mastiff
7. Dogue
de Bordeaux
8. Great
Dane
9. Pyrenean
Mastiff
10.Irish
Wolfhound
It
is to be said before ending, that the different breed specimens we used to shape
the Dogo Argentino were purebreds, most of them with pedigree, and many of them
descendants of champions from the best bloodlines in the world. In this way,
each specimen has left the trace of his blood, mingling the more typical
characters of each breed with those of the developing one. This helped us very
much to obtain the multiple characteristics we sought for.
