Small dogs: the ultimate country house companions
Rory Knight
Bruce
Rory Knight
Bruce January 25, 2024
https://www.thefield.co.uk/features/small-dogs-the-ultimate-country-house-companions-52124
From treasured terriers to cherished corgis, these
precious small dogs are the ultimate country house companions, says Rory Knight
Bruce
By their
pet dogs let them be known; chatelaines of great houses, keen hunters and
countrywomen to their boots. They run shoots, fending off their husband’s
soaking wet spaniels and labradors, relegating them to the boot room or outdoor
kennel. Meanwhile, their own small dog sits on a cushion in pampered splendour,
every bit as regal as the breed of King Charles II himself, licensed since his
day to enter any public place, hostel or inn, without hindrance or reproach.
Not for
these pampered pets the boot of the car or some draughty outhouse. These small
dogs of the heart stay firmly by the hearth. They are as treasured as the time
the poet Alexander Pope gave a lapdog puppy in the 1730s to Frederick, Prince
of Wales, with the epigram on the collar: ‘I am His Highness’ dog at Kew; pray
tell me, sir, whose dog are you?’ Their owners defend them mercilessly, and are
not unknown to spoil them rotten.
Once,
staying with Lady Powell of Bayswater in Lazio, we drove in her Fiat 500 into
Rome with her wirehaired dachshund on her lap, his paws blithely on the
steering wheel. We visited the Uffizi Gallery and later lunched on a splendid
terrace. At all times the dog came too. When Noël Coward wrote Mad Dogs and
Englishmen, he should have mentioned women as well.
The
pampered small dogs beloved by the whole family
So, who are
today’s chatelaines who have such pampered pooches, sometimes to the dismay of
their husbands but, more often than not, equally beloved by them? Lottie
Sheridan, honorary secretary of the Crawley and Horsham hunt, grew up with her
parents’ black labradors, while for her husband, Lanto, it was retired
regimental wolfhounds and Norfolk terriers. But when it came to finding a
canine companion for their two young children, it was to Corwen in North Wales
that they ventured to secure Puff, a tricolour Pembroke corgi.
“He went in
their pram as a child and certainly won’t go in the boot of the car, preferring
instead to sit in the front beside me,” says Lottie Sheridan. “In bed, if you
move even ever so slightly, he growls.” But Puff, whom she says is a big dog
with short legs, has no lack of admirers. “Everybody falls in love with him and
we have never had any trouble finding dog sitters,” she continues. “He
definitely rules the roost, and my husband adores him. He is a living teddy
bear and, despite two square meals a day, is a brilliant hoover under the
children’s high chairs. He is no fat old ladies’ dog and is sporting and fun.”
Also in
Sussex are former Southdown Master Gary Lee and his wife Fee, now respectively
chairman and secretary of the popular South of England Hound Show. Their pretty
downland farm near Ditchling boasts a herd of red deer, pedigree Sussex cattle,
horses, sheep, a bull, two farm collies, a shooting labrador and Cricket, a
three-year-old chihuahua. “He is not a handbag dog,” says Fee Lee. “He is never
happier than being on the quad bike. When it starts up he bounces up and down
as if to say ‘I’m on the bus’.”
When the
favourite spot is not on the bed but under the duvet
A friend
brought a box to Lee’s tack room one day after she had lost her beloved fox
terrier. “I thought there would be a hat inside but there was this bateared
face. I have become 100% smitten. He comes with me to the hairdresser and the
Chinese nail bar, whose owners look at him with interest.” Cricket is equally
at home on the Red Funnel ferry to the Isle of Wight, where the Lees’ also have
a house. But his favourite spot? “Not on the bed,” says Lee. “Under the duvet.”
Fee Lee
with Cricket, a small dog with a big personality
Today,
every Dandie Dinmont on Earth can trace their pedigree to the Bowhill kennels
and the founding sire, Old Pepper, who was believed to have been abandoned
there by poaching gypsies in the 1830s. Many Dandie owners have black-and-white
tartan waistcoats for their dogs and the same tartan shawls for themselves when
they are going on official walks. This is because in 2015, Richard, 10th Duke
of Buccleuch, head of the Scott Clan, gave permission for the Dandies to adopt
Sir Walter Scott’s private black-and-white tartan. To this day not only are the
terriers the only ones to be named after a literary figure but also the only
ones with an official clan tartan.
“They do
not like rain and so I have to stand outside with an umbrella while they do
their business”
“They have
their own sofa and chairs in the kitchen. At night they sleep on the bed and
like to be in the middle. Unlike other small dogs, they do not moult,” says
Flanders. “They do not like rain and so I have to stand outside with an
umbrella if it is raining while they do their business.” He has done much to
promote the endangered breed, with no more than 100 Dandies being born each
year. They have sponsored football matches, and there are Dandie Dinmont
sausages and vintage whisky. If Flanders offers up The Lord My God My Shepherd
Is, Clementine will put her paws up in the air in prayer. Although the puppy,
Lilibet, has claimed three pairs of walking boots and a television remote
control, Flanders is clearly devoted to the breed.
Philippa
Tyrwhitt-Drake and her trio of Lucas terriers
When three
is never a crowd: Philippa Tyrwhitt-Drake and her trio of Lucas terriers
Harmonious
coexistence is also the watchword at Bereleigh, the Hampshire downland estate
of Bill and Philippa Tyrwhitt- Drake, with its renowned partridge and pheasant
shoot. Philippa has had Lucas terriers for about 40 years and the three
currently in residence seem to get on perfectly well with the master’s golden
retriever, Turney. “They can be snappy and a bit tricky but for the most part
they are calm and very good companions,” she says. “Bill never had small dogs
in the house before I arrived but he has definitely come round to enjoying
their company; they are sporty and, on the whole, surprisingly obedient.” They
all sleep in the back hall, while the youngest, Maisie, at just one, will
hopefully be trained to pick up, with help and advice from the knowledgeable
pickers- up who work on the estate.
Like Dandie
Dinmonts, Lucas terriers, which are a cross between a Sealyham and Norfolk
terrier, were bred originally as working dogs. Sir Jocelyn Lucas, after whom
they are named, wrote their definitive history in Hunt and Working Terriers
(1931). As well as rats and rabbits for quarry, they have also proven to be
fine mousers. You cannot, however, mate a Sealyham with a Norfolk today to
produce a Lucas terrier. All Lucas’ have to go back to Sir Jocelyn’s original
‘Ilmer’ bloodlines, so named after his original kennels near Watford in
Hertfordshire.
A small dog
with a mighty snore
When
Kishanda Fulford, chatelaine of Great Fulford in Devon, went to collect her
18-month-old, pre-owned pug Daisy, she imagined she was getting the real thing.
She was soon disabused of this notion when the Kennel Club replied to her:
“Colour of coat not recognised.” This has not, however, dimmed her love and
affection for this slightly hybrid pug, with a touch of auburn in her coat, now
aged nine.
As a
writer, most recently of a fast-paced book, The Spite of Fortune, about a brave
Fulford heiress who battled to reclaim her plantations in America and the
Bahamas, Fulford spends much of her time at her plantations in America and the
Bahamas, Fulford spends much of her time at her writing desk in part of a
cavernous kitchen that would not be out of place in Mervyn Peake’s Gormenghast.
And Daisy, on her own velvet cushion, sits on the desk as well.
“She lives
in the kitchen and sometimes on our bed,” says Fulford. “I love her snoring: it
is soothing.” Fulford’s grandmother kept pugs when she was a child, so this has
been a reuniting with the breed. How has her husband Francis, a life-long
labrador man (one of whose famous earlier labradors, Fritz, he once took to
lunch at a private dining club in the City of London where the club’s owner
pronounced him “better behaved than many of my members”), coped with a pug
around the house? “Daisy is best friends with Francis’ newest labrador, Sheba,”
says Fulford. “It also helps that Daisy likes shooting.” At elevenses, when
Fulford joins the guns, Daisy will happily sit on a recently shot pheasant to
keep warm.
One size does not fit all
As a breed,
pugs have been fashionable since the late 19th century. At Glyndebourne in
Sussex, they have for generations been treasured pets and there are plenty of
pug statues in the garden. At one open Pug Dog Club day, I witnessed a pug in a
matador’s outfit dancing to flamenco music. The late Sir George Christie had to
intervene when he spotted the owner trying to dig a hole in the pristine lawn
to erect a Spanish flag. In his bestselling book Why We Love the Dogs We Do,
Stanley Coren attempts to find the dog that matches the human personality. ‘One
size does not fit all,’ writes Coren. He suggests that important ladies of
fashion and wealth prefer small dogs, citing Queen Victoria and her King
Charles spaniel, Dash. The monarch was a copious writer of diaries, and one
entry reads: ‘I dressed dear sweet little Dash for the second time after dinner
in a scarlet jacket and blue trousers.’
Small dogs,
then, do make the ultimate country house companion. For years at home, we had
Pekineses who, when allowed out among the sheep, would round them up with all
the vigour of a Lakeland sheepdog. But nothing, as I have said, could rival for
pride of place and roost ruling than Lady Powell’s wire-haired dachshund. She
would cook with it, sitting by the stove with it on her lap, a cigarette,
stirring spoon and glass of wine in hand. As befits her wide circle of
political friends who came to her wonderful villa, some of her other dogs were
named after politicians. There was a Nicholas (Soames) and a Norman (Lamont).
But keeping guard on a chain not doing much at all was an Italian shepherd’s
dog, favoured in Italy as guard dogs. His name was Tony
Blair.
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