
You may be in for a surprise then! Walking around Terrier benches (especially Westie and Fox) you usually run in to clouds of chalk, have met it around other terriers too, with white or mainly white coats. Whatever the rules, lots of people dont stick to them, I am afraid. Hpwever, to be fair, I find coat preparation less offensive and likely to put of my dogs than the common Terrier practice of allowing dogs to "spark" agianst each ofther, or others, to get them worked up before they go in the ring. At a recent open show we were set up next to some terriers, and shortly before they went in they were all got out of the cages, not just to be groomed or excercised before showing, but apparently to set each other off in barking, growling, etc. This set of one of my firends Spaniels, still in his cage, and the terrier owner, seeing how upset the spaniel was, and how it set there own dog on its toes, actively enoucraged it to get right up to the cage, causing a complete frenzy in the other dog - it may be desirable for some terriers to go in the ring in a highly excited state, but not a apaniel! My pugs were puzzled, but un fazed, however had they shown signs of distress I am not sure what I should have done.
Getting back to poodles, some judges do take a hard line about the hairspray, and demand that top knots are token down if obviously lacquered. If I remember one judge a couple of years back (might have been at crufts) ran her fingers through the Standard Poodle top knots, caused a bit of an uproar among the competitors, and foreign handlers dont see what all the fuss is about.
From my own point of view, I appreciate that if it is a rule, then it has to be followed, but I dont see why it is a rule. After all, what changes the appearance or texture of a coat more than clipping, yet this is mandatory in lots of breed presentation. Coming to showing dogs after years of showing horses, this prohibition came as a real surprise. With horses, we coudll use anything we wanted!
bye
Gwen