Bird Dogs / Pointing Dogs / English Pointer

English Pointer

The aristocrat of pointing dogs, bred purely for finding and pointing birds

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25-28 inches, 55-75 lbs
Lifespan: 12-17 years
Supreme Bird-Finding Ability

Breed Origins

The Pointer, often called the English Pointer to distinguish from other pointing breeds, traces its origins to 17th century England. The breed was developed from Spanish Pointers brought to England around 1713, following the War of Spanish Succession. English breeders refined these heavier Spanish dogs by crossing them with Foxhounds, Greyhounds, and Bloodhounds to create a faster, more athletic hunting companion.

By the mid-1700s, the English Pointer had evolved into the breed we recognize today—a lean, powerful athlete built for speed and endurance. The breed was specifically developed for bird hunting before the advent of wing shooting, originally used with nets and falcons. As shotguns became the primary hunting tool in the 18th century, the Pointer's exceptional ability to locate and freeze on birds made it the premier upland hunting dog.

The American Kennel Club recognized the breed in 1884, making it one of the original AKC breeds. The Pointer has maintained its position as the ultimate bird dog, valued for its unmatched speed, range, and pointing instinct.

Development as a Hunting Dog

The Pointer was bred with a singular purpose: finding and pointing game birds. Unlike versatile breeds developed to perform multiple tasks, the Pointer was refined over centuries to be the ultimate specialist in locating birds. English sportsmen prioritized speed, range, and an intense, stylish point over retrieving ability.

The breed's development emphasized several key traits: a wide-ranging search pattern to cover vast acreage, exceptional scenting ability to locate birds from great distances, and an intense, rock-solid point that holds until the hunter arrives. The characteristic "Pointer pose"—with one foreleg raised and body rigid—became the iconic image of bird hunting.

American field trial enthusiasts further refined the breed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, developing dogs with even greater range and speed suited to the expansive bird fields of the American South. Today's Pointer is considered by many field trialers to be the pinnacle of bird dog performance.

Historical Timeline

1650s

First pointing dogs appear in English sporting art

1713

Spanish Pointers brought to England after the war

1876

Westminster Kennel Club's first Best in Show was a Pointer

1884

AKC recognition as founding breed

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