• @lvoss:

    The very curly tails that most people are used to in the domestics is a trait that has been selected for by breeders since they were first imported in the late '30s onward. If you look at the pictures of the early imports you will see that there was a large variety in the amount of tail curl.

    Interviews with native people suggest that the very tightly curled tails are not preferred for hunting in bush because if they do not uncurl readily when snagged they lead to tail injuries and amputation.

    Not to mention catching stuff like a big paperclip! I noticed someone has a pic in the gallery of a dog with grass? caught in her tail? Can you just see a dog running through the brush carrying sticks, vines, and leaves in it's tail 😉

    The curliness of the tail is really not all that important of a trait to "be" a basenji. It should curl up over the back..but a curlier tail doesn't make a dog a more 'perfect' basenji. As Lisa said, it is a trait western breeders liked, so they selected for it. Same has been said for small ears….


  • As for examples of the alternative colors,

    Black, brindle, and white as Andrea has said is the most common as it is a combination that will naturally result because we have both tris and brindles. A very good picture of one can be seen if you click on Tazi at this website, http://www.ktcampbell.com/taji/family_tree_fs.html

    Nyanabiem is a mahogany, http://basenji.org/african/Nyanabie.htm

    There are examples of true creams and some blues though it is difficult to see what is really meant by blue on this website, http://www.newworldbasenjis.net/OldAds.htm

    Siri's breeder wanted to register her as a blue fawn as she is really a dilute red not a cream. Her picture is at, http://basenji.org/african/Siri.htm

    As for sable, there is much debate on what is actually meant by this term. Some will say dogs with a black saddle are sables others will tell you it is dogs who have black tips to their red hair. A good example of a saddle can be seen at http://basenji.org/african/B_Tena.htm


  • IMO the curly tail is just SOOOOOO cute!! 🙂


  • This is true…C3PO has a lot of African in him & his tail is not as curly as Topaz. His tail is a sort of loose swirl kinda like his personality 😃


  • vegas and sunshine's daddy Bojak's Undercover Kojak is listed as a sable. as far as i can tell he is a really dark chesnut. i know he was the #3 or 4 basenji one year and still is very high on the AKC stud list. found a picture of him here
    http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o164/Ambered_photos/PedigreeKojak.jpg

    maybe there are some black tips that i cant see?

    wow! i never saw siri before, absolutely gorgeous!


  • @Ambered:

    vegas and sunshine's daddy Bojak's Undercover Kojak is listed as a sable. as far as i can tell he is a really dark chesnut. i know he was the #3 or 4 basenji one year and still is very high on the AKC stud list. found a picture of him here
    http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o164/Ambered_photos/PedigreeKojak.jpg

    maybe there are some black tips that i cant see?

    wow! i never saw siri before, absolutely gorgeous!

    I can't imagine why he would be listed as a sable…that must be a mistake. For one thing he looks like a typical red/white, and for another thing, an "off" color dog has never been that high in the standings, nor stud list. He may be a tri factored red...which means he carries the tri genes. Often red dogs that are tri factored have black hair on the top of their tail, behind their ears, and sometimes throughout their coats when they are puppies. By the time they are grown, they are solid red.


  • Thanks for all of the great responses, this stuff is really interesting to me. I think its a shame that some colors seem to get lost because of early preferences. Its also too bad most of the pictures are black and white which makes it hard to see the colors.

    As far as the curly tails, I would imagine that they would be troublesome in the woods because mine have very tight curls and they can't walk under the playstation controller wire without almost pulling the whole thing with them. 🙂


  • @goldenfri:

    As far as the curly tails, I would imagine that they would be troublesome in the woods because mine have very tight curls and they can't walk under the playstation controller wire without almost pulling the whole thing with them. 🙂

    It's funny, our two more African B's can make their tail go completely limp. Eating, or sleeping seem to be when they do it the most. The others, the tail is so curled, no way it ever goes limp.


  • @Ambered:

    vegas and sunshine's daddy Bojak's Undercover Kojak is listed as a sable. as far as i can tell he is a really dark chesnut.

    I saw "Jack" many, many times over the years and he was most definately a red with no sabling. 🙂


  • Cream puppies were born in many of the litters of the earliest imports. The creams were not albinos but were instead cream with white markings in the same areas you see in other colors. But the dogs did have pinkish noses and greenish eyes and early breeders found that unattracted. Thus the creams were not used for breeding.

    The blue tris came from tris (Black, tan, white) who carried the cream gene. The color was frowned upon by breeders of that era and thus creams and blue tris have been virtually eradicated from the breed. Such a pity as I find both colors very attractive and I would love to have one someday.


  • @YodelDogs:

    The blue tris came from tris (Black, tan, white) who carried the cream gene. The color was frowned upon by breeders of that era and thus creams and blue tris have been virtually eradicated from the breed. Such a pity as I find both colors very attractive and I would love to have one someday.

    me too! i also love the "brown paperbag" basenjis. reds with no white on their face….soo cute.


  • It's funny, our two more African B's can make their tail go completely limp. >>Eating, or sleeping seem to be when they do it the most. The others, the >>tail is so curled, no way it ever goes limp

    Jazz is not African, and her tail is tightly curled most of the time. But she does frequently uncurl it.

    i also love the "brown paperbag" basenjis. reds with no white on their >>face….soo cute.

    I prefer a white-less face. I guess that's why I love Jazzy's look so much. She just has a little white around her nose. Seems to make the eyes stand out more.


  • Dr. Tracy told me one time…'everyone likes the face markings that their first basenji has/had' I like a medium/thin white blaze, not too much...not too little...just like Querk's 🙂 His daughter Luna, has a little to much for (my) perfection...and Bella (avitar) has not quite enough 😉


  • Dr. Tracy told me one time…'everyone likes the face markings that their >>first basenji has/had'

    Do you think that is by chance? Or perhaps the pups were selected because of the look?


  • @JazzysMom:

    Dr. Tracy told me one time…'everyone likes the face markings that their >>first basenji has/had'

    Do you think that is by chance? Or perhaps the pups were selected because of the look?

    Well, most of people that I know didn't exactly select their pup out of the litter…it was a directed select by the breeder. We knew we were getting one of two boys out of a litter of four...and we ended up getting Querk (tinkey winkey!)...we probably would have chosen his brother Po, if the choice had been ours, because Po was a little more laid back 😉 Po had very little white on his face, and I think that if we had him, we would probably prefer very little white on the face 😉

    I think you just learn to prefer the face that you adore first 😉


  • haha, i think you are right. fender has a symmetrical white streak-my absolute perfect. when i went to meet him i had not seen a picture, i saw him and knew it was fate. lol.
    "love at first sight"


  • I used to have a preference for a blaze, Nicky my first basenji has one, but now I don't think I really have any perference for face markings. I love each ones idividuality of markings. In fact their little differences are very endearing to me. Nicky has a nice medium symmetrical blaze, Rally has a salt and pepper blaze that is only just barely visible, Rio has a thin blaze that runs just a little off center, Sophie's is turning into a thin symmetrical blaze. I love Ringo's little milk mustache plain face which is very similar to Heart the red girl from our last litter who has a very lovely face. Zeke, Cole, and Ramses all have the broad blaze that runs very high up. Each one is appealing for different reasons. It is just like I love the other quirks of their markings. Like each of my dogs with the exception of Ringo who only has a lightening bolt of white on his neck each have a point where their white comes up higher onto the neck, on the broad blazed boys this white actually met their blaze when they were pups but faded with time. Nicky has an island of red his right rear sock. He also has a Georgia Peach spot in his collar of white. We named Heart because she was born with a heart of red in her white collar, it looks like just a spot now but was pretty heart shaped when she was born. I think I am just rambling now so I will stop.


  • I prefer a plainer face…
    My Mom prefers more white...
    the dogs we had when I was growing up generally had medium to thinner blazes..
    I can remember one dog..
    dont' remember his registered name..
    just that I called him Fan.. the Fantastic Elastic Man! LOL
    And he had a bit more white than our Rocket Man has...
    for me.. that is plenty white..
    I like my plain "Benny" face!
    Aside from the whippet and puppies..
    I have 4 intact r/w males with NO blaze and no white on their faces..
    MO, (our website cover dog) has the most white in the house!

    FYI.. "paperbag brown" actually was a term coined for a tan/white basenji...
    meaning that the dog is not the correct color.. as a red basenji should
    be chestnut red, not tan.


  • Perhaps only slightly diverting.. I heard that you are not supposed breed a BW to a brindle.. is that true and why?

    and it is a shame about the other colors - I really like the creams.:/


  • The only reason why some people do not want to breed a black to a brindle is because you won't know if the black puppies in the litter carry brindle since black stripes on black background looks the same as black. In some dogs, you can see the stripes in strong sunlight.

    I personally believe there are far more important factors that a breeder needs to consider than to make a breeding decision based on color. I bred my black and white girl to handsome Avongara trindle. I kept a black and white girl. I don't think she is hiding brindle stripes but we won't know until she has pups.

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