Bird Dogs / Retrievers / Chesapeake Bay Retriever

Chesapeake Bay Retriever

America's toughest retriever, bred for icy Chesapeake waters

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23-26 inches, 55-80 lbs
10-13 year lifespan
Intense, protective, tireless

Health & Wellness

The Chesapeake Bay Retriever is generally a hardy, healthy breed with a lifespan of 10-13 years. Their development as working dogs in harsh conditions selected for physical resilience. However, like all breeds, they are susceptible to certain hereditary conditions that responsible breeders screen for.

Hip Dysplasia

A malformation of the hip joint that can cause arthritis and lameness. The American Chesapeake Club requires breeding dogs to have OFA or PennHIP evaluations.

Prevention: Only breed dogs with good or excellent hip scores

Progressive Retinal Atrophy (PRA)

A group of degenerative eye diseases that lead to blindness. DNA testing is available for prcd-PRA, the form found in Chessies.

Prevention: DNA test breeding stock; avoid breeding carriers to carriers

Exercise-Induced Collapse (EIC)

A genetic condition causing muscle weakness and collapse after intense exercise. More common in Labs but also found in Chessies.

Prevention: DNA testing available; affected dogs can live normal lives with managed exercise

Degenerative Myelopathy (DM)

A progressive spinal cord disease causing hind end weakness, typically appearing after age 8. DNA testing is available.

Prevention: DNA test breeding stock; at-risk dogs should be monitored

Recommended Health Testing (ACC Guidelines)

  • Hip evaluation (OFA or PennHIP)
  • Elbow evaluation (OFA)
  • Eye examination (CAER)
  • PRA-prcd DNA test
  • EIC DNA test
  • DM DNA test (recommended)

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