Portuguese Podengo Breed Magazine - Showsight

HOW THE

GOT ITS NAME Podengo

T he word “Podengo” was used in Portu- gal at least as early as the 16th century to refer to pack-hunting dogs. The full name then was Podengo de Mostra (the Mostra part referring to a pack). Over time, this was short- ened to Podengo and referred to multi-sensory, endurance- trotting, pack-hunting dogs. The Portuguese do not have a word for hound, so use the word Podengo as a specific term for the kind of primitive, prick-eared hunting dogs that were distributed around the Mediterranean basin 2,000 years ago by the Phoenicians. Podengos (Medio and Pequeno) hunt rabbits, which in Portugal live mostly in rock crevices and thick briars rather than in underground warrens. The Medio works in tandem with the smaller Pequeno—whose job is to flush rabbits from crevices and dense briars as well as to chase, track, kill, and retrieve the rabbit. The larger and sturdier Podengo Grande hunts boar and stag, although it will make short order of any rabbit that crosses its path as well. In England, they have taken to calling the Podengo, Warren Hounds , but we prefer the real name—Portuguese Podengo. There are three types of Podengos: Pequeno, Medio, and Grande. In the United States, the Medio and Grande size are considered one breed based on the fact that you can get both sizes in a litter and on the overlapping of the size standard. So, for our purposes in the US, the breed is split in two, known as the Portuguese Podengo Pequeno and the Portuguese Podengo (Medio & Grande). The Pequeno, or “small” Podengo, is not a “go-to- ground” dog, but rather a fearless flusher of rabbits from dense brush and crevices. Back in the 15th-18th centu- ries, this trait made its ancestors ideal ratters, and they served that purpose by sailing with the Portuguese explor- ers on their voyages of discovery. As a result, the Poden- go spread its genetic influence around the world and also picked up some influences from other breeds, which have by now largely disappeared, making the breed true to the Podengo type. So that’s what’s in the name!

The Portuguese do not have a word for hound, so use the word Podengo as a specific term for the kind of primitive, prick-eared hunting dogs that were distributed around the Mediterranean basin 2,000 years ago by the Phoenicians.

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