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What is AKC Obedience?

  • Demonstrating the usefulness of a dog as a companion to humankind, AKC Obedience is a sport with rules, regulations, judges, conditioning, training, placements and prizes.

  • Dog and handler teams are judged on how closely they match the judge's mental picture of a theoretically perfect performance as they execute a series of specified exercises.

  • Accuracy and precision are essential, but the natural movement of the handler and the willingness and enjoyment of the dog are very important.

  • Helen Whitehouse Walker devised the first obedience "test" in Mt. Kisco, New York in 1933 to show the intelligence of her poodles.

  • The first AKC licensed obedience trial was held in 1936 with approximately 200 entries in 18 trials.

  • Each level of obedience competition - novice, open, and utility - requires mastering a specific skill set, which increase in difficulty, before advancing to the next level.

  • Novice Class demonstrates good canine companion skills such as heeling, both with and without a leash, coming when called, standing for a simple physical examination, and staying in both a sit and a down position with a group of dogs.

  • In Novice Class, dogs earn an AKC Companion Dog (CD) title after receiving a qualifying score under three different judges.

  • Open Class is more challenging as more exercises are done off leash and retrieving and jumping challenges are added.

  • In Open Class, dogs earn an AKC Companion Dog Excellent (CDX) title after receiving a qualifying score under three different judges.

  • Utility Class, which includes scent discrimination, directed retrieves, jumping and silent signal exercises, is the most challenging class.

  • In Utility Class, dogs earn an AKC Utility Dog (UD) title after receiving qualifying scores from three different judges.

  • Upon completion of the UD title, dogs may earn the Utility Dog Excellent (UDX) by receiving 10 passing scores in both Open B and Utility B at the same show.

  • The Obedience Trial Championship (OTCH) title is often referred to as the "PhD" for dogs, is the highest obedience honor a dog can receive.

  • To obtain an OTCH title, a dog and handler team must earn 100 points by placing first, second, third or fourth in the Open B or Utility B class and a first place in Utility B and/or Open B three times.

  • In 2002, "Hobi,"a Shetland Sheepdog, earned 1,235 OTCH points to be the top OTCH-pointed dog in the country. "Hobi" also holds the most lifetime OTCH points record with 16,711.

  • To compete in the AKC National Obedience Invitational dogs must be the top OTCH and OTCH- pointed dogs in each breed.

  • The AKC National Obedience Championship title (NOC) is awarded to one dog each year.

  • Only dogs winning the AKC National Obedience Championship are permitted to have the prestigious NOC letters precede it's name in AKC records.

  • There are eleven NOCs in the thirteen-year history of this event, two dogs having won the award twice.
   
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