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Bauernhoffen
"Best
in Blacks"
Mrs.
Fredric A. Bauer
Woodstock, Georgia
There
is no more Bauernhoffen.
A
short while after sundown, on the 24th of September 2003, Henri
Bauer died and quietly closed the door on one of the last American
kennels to breed the German Shepherd Dog as it should be.
They
say there are no good American German Shepherd Dogs, that breeders
who show in AKC events have ruined this finest of breeds and if you
want a good dog you have to get one from a kennel that imports dogs
from Germany or Czechoslovakia, one whose dogs are, at most, a
generation or two away from their European forebears. That may
be true today, now that Henri's gone. It wasn't true
yesterday.
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Yesterday,
a small, 80-something live-wire of a woman in jeans and a T-shirt
would peer down the driveway to see who was causing the dogs to make
all that ruckus and, seeing you let yourself in at the metal farm
gate, would call out a welcome in her high, light voice.
"Well, where have you
been?" she'd say, laying aside the ever-present scoop or the
water hose, and then, as if what really mattered was that you were
there, "Do you remember that litter Delilah had? Come see
them!" And soon you would find yourself up to your elbows
in a tumble of dark, big-boned pups eager to meet this new and
interesting person.
Those
pups would grow up to be the dogs that would always draw me back to
Bauernhoffen: dark and richly colored for the most part, with
strong, flat toplines, sturdy hips and calm, confident eyes;
dogs who walked up on their toes, not down on their hocks, ears
erect without any need to make them so, ready to repel invaders or
to accept you if you were acceptable to Henri.
Near
them, watching over them like the lord of the kennel, Aaron would
put his huge paws up on the fence bar and silently wait for the
tribute of a good rub and a scratch while out in back, the old dogs
living in retirement would enquire now and again who had come to
visit. In the kitchen, the old bitches waited to mob you once
they had gotten a good sniff and, if you were lucky, there would be
a brand new litter in the whelping room, little black bears with
eyes still sealed shut, shakily exploring the parameters of their
small, enclosed world. And out in the runs along the drive,
the adults would be settling down from the excitement of another
visitor with (a source of even more excitement) the strange black
male that had come along, too, now safely ensconced in a fenced area
under the trees where they could watch him and mutter among
themselves what they would do to him if they could just get at him,
grandson of Henri's Adam or not.
It
was Henri's world, a good world, where the dogs harked back to a
time before Lance of Fran Jo, whose effect on the American GSD was
disastrous, and the emphasis was on health and longevity,
conformation, and temperament. The order can be rearranged
anyway at all since they are all of equal importance, though
temperament may have a slight edge since that governs the dog's
relationship with us. But it never made much difference at
Bauernhoffen because there was seldom a dog there who watched you
with hesitant eyes; I remember only one in the ten years that
I knew Henri Bauer.
She
cared, that was the thing. She cared first about her dogs,
about breeding the best, and then about the people who took her dogs
away with them. Nothing gave her more pleasure than the calls
and letters bragging on "the best dog I've ever owned" and
few things raised her temper like hearing that one of her dogs was
mistreated. If there was any way she could manage it, that dog
came home. When my Thunder died of that cruelest of diseases,
Ehrlichiosis, a disease carried by ticks or, in his case, by the
tiny larvae of flukes that live on river snails, Henri tried her
damndest to give me another puppy, any puppy I wanted, to make up in
some measure for my losing him. It was just the way she was.
Henri
knew what she was striving for but she wasn't above asking for
advice. And being her, she went straight to the best source
there is, Dr. Malcolm Willis, the undisputed authority on the
genetics of the German Shepherd Dog, and their correspondence led to
even finer dogs bearing the Bauernhoffen kennel name. They
have been guard dogs, herding dogs, police dogs, tracking dogs and
guide dogs. But for many of us, they have been the best thing
of all: companions.
It
has been said that the best place to bury a good dog is in the heart
of his owner, though who owns and who is owned may be questionable
after a time. Over the years, there have been many good dogs
carrying the Bauernhoffen name who were given that final, best
resting place. So, since Henri had no use for services or
memorials, maybe the one place she belongs now is in the hearts of
her friends, those who have had that once-in-a-lifetime dog come to
them from her
heart
and hands.
Gil.
Ash
Proud
owner in her lifetime of two Bauernhoffen dogs, Thunder and
Traveler.
Pat
Hartman
Proud
owner of two Bauernhoffen blacks, Max and Allie.
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