BARNBURNER PATTERDALES

An all working Patterdale Terrier site!

Our dogs are bred for our own hunting needs and not for profit. Our number one goal is to produce  Patterdale Terriers that exceed the breed hunting standards, and preform in any given situation.  Our dogs are bred for hunting ability and that alone. 

We are from  Iowa and have been hunting and breeding Patterdales for over 15 years now, and have enjoyed every minuite of it!  If you would like to contact us you may reach us with the info below, or use the blog link above.

Hunt Well!

 

Paul McNeer     burnermail@aol.com

Aaron Strawn     tinystrawn@aol.com

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History of the Patterdale Terrier

The Patterdale Terrier of modern times refers to the mainly black smooth coated fell terrier first popularised by Cyril Breay from Kirkby Lonsdale and Frank Buck from Leyburn in Yorkshire during the early part of the 1950s. At that time, any "typey" fell terrier being shown in the Lake District was called a Lakeland Terrier, or simply called a coloured terrier, whether or not they were from Ullswater county. In the early 1960s, Brian Nuttall of Holmes Chapel began breeding dogs that he acquired from his grandfather and from Breay and Buck blood lines. These dogs were carefully linebred. Nuttall blood lines are still considered to be of the highest quality and adds a bit to the price of a puppy. The modern Patterdale Terrier is to fell terriers, what the Jack Russell Terrier is to hunt terriers—the indisputable leader in numbers and performance as a breed.

Patterdale terrier were developed in the harsh environment in the north of England that is unable to sustain agriculture and too hilly (in the main) for cattle. Sheep farming is the dominant farming activity on these hills. Since fox are perceived by farmers as being predatory on sheep and small farm animals, terriers are used for predator control. Unlike the dirt dens found in the hunt country of the south, the rocky dens found in the north do not allow much digging. As a consequence, a Patterdale terrier needs to be able to bolt the fox from the rock crevice or dispatch it where it is found. Because of the difficulty in digging in the north, northern dogs such as the Patterdale and fell terrier tend to be "as tough as nails." The use of "hard" dogs to hunt foxes in this way was made illegal in England and Wales by the Hunting Act 2004, as it runs counter to the code of practice[1] under the Act.

The Patterdale Terrier was recognised by the United Kennel Club on January 1, 1995.

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