Chihuahua Gifts
Our web site has a great range of chihuahua gifts for every chihuahua owner. Our range of products includes Chihuahua Throws, Chihuahua Cushions, Chihuahua Wall Hangings and Chihuahua Shoulder Bags.
Click on the following link to view our range of Chihuahua gifts:
http://www.abentleycushions.co.uk/products.asp?search4=chihuahua
General Information On Chihuahua
Chihuahuas belong to the toy group and are used as companions and seen in the show-ring.
Chihuahuas have a high and sometimes delicate metabolism, i.e. they can be prone to hypoglycemia, so it is better to give two to three small meals per day rather than one large one. They can eat dry food as well as tinned food and seem to enjoy crunching up the hard biscuits - a practice, which is good for their teeth.
Chihuahuas are extraordinarily long lived, 20 years not being uncommon and some are reported to live as long as 24 years.
A litter will normally be 2 or 3 puppies.
The Chihuahua has a colourful, almost hair-raising past. The breed may go as far back as 5th century Mayan Civilization. Pyramids in Chichen Itza, Yucatan, have carvings of small Chihuahua like dogs. At the Monastery of Huejotzingo, between Mexico City and Pubela, there are more Chihuahua images in the Toltec stones used to build the monastery. These date from the 9th century. It is known that a small dog called a ´Techichi´ was an important part of Toltec and Aztec cultures. Techichi were the pets of the wealthy and were an essential facet in the religious practice of these ancient Indian cultures. The dogs were cremated with the dead in order to take on the deceased’s sins so that the person could enter the next world without angering the gods. The dogs were also supposed to guide the deceased through the underworld and fight off evil spirits. Some people believe that the Chihuahua is the product of breeding between the Techichi and a small, hairless dog from Asia that would have entered the Americas across the Bering Strait. Whatever the origins, the devastation of the Central American civilizations was reflected on the dogs and this small, religious figure of the canine world was nearly lost. Chihuahua is a state in Mexico and it is from this state that the modern Chihuahua was first exported to America. Theory has it that the modern breed developed from the ancient strains of the Techichi, mixed with small dogs of Mexico, Arizona and Texas. First exported to the U.S. in 1898, Chihuahuas were shown in 1901 and given AKC recognition in 1904. The breed rapidly gained popularity and is much loved pet all over the world today. In the US both varieties can appear in the same litter but in the UK, the smooth and long coats are quite separately bred and a bitch would be very unlikely to throw two types in a single litter.
Chihuahuas have a distinctive skull that is very rounded or ´apple domed´ with or without a molera (persistent frontal fontanel.) The cheeks and jaws are lean, while the nose is moderately short. In the dark coated dogs, the nose should be black but the nose can be pink in blonde dogs. Large, erect ears flare out at a 45-degree angle from the skull. Quite full, yet not protruding eyes should be set well apart and be dark in dark coated dogs, ruby in lighter coated dogs. The bite of the teeth should be level. As the head is held high, the neck is slightly arched and set on sloping shoulders. In males, the back should be shorter than in the females. Legs are straight and the hindquarters are muscular with the hocks set well apart. This should allow for a gait with a great deal of reach and drive. The back should remain level as the dog moves. A sickle shaped tail or a tail that loops over the back, with the tip just touching the back is the desired tail appearance. The feet should be dainty, set below slender ankles, and the toes should be well divided. The ears should be dripping with fringe, a substantial ruff must encircle the neck and the legs should be well feathered. The tail should be plume like. Any coat colour is acceptable, sol
The long coated Chihuahua should have a flat or slightly wavy coat, preferably with an undercoat. The ears should be dripping with fringe, a substantial ruff must encircle the neck and the legs should be well feathered.
These dogs measure between 15 to 23cms at the withers and weigh between 1 to 3kgs.
There are some hereditary pitfalls with this breed, as with any breed. Almost all small breeds have a tendency to get subluxating patellas, probably due to stress injuries from leaping off the furniture - enormous jumps for such tiny creatures. Many small dogs also have weak tracheas. Chihuahuas, more particularly, suffer from cleft palate, hydrocephalus (excess water on the brain) and hypoplasia of the dens - a lack of development in the second vertebrae, leading to skull instability. Haemophilia, a blood clotting disorder carried by the females and manifesting in the males, also occurs.
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