
I have seen RR lurchers, also Kelpie lurchers, Aus Cattle dog lurchers, AFGHAN lurchers!!!!!!!......
Yes, the Heartbeat lurcher, Alfred, this time round is a beddy x whippet. I think the one before that was a beddy x grey or even possibly a deerhound x grey..
I actually WOULDNT recommend a beddy x whippet to people not used to lurchers, for all they look cute and scruffy!
I have one here, and yes admittedly he also has working bearded collie and greyhound in his breeding, but i also know a lot of first cross beddy/whippet owners.
They are thinkers, they are VERY smart, quicker off the mark and with a damn long memory. The bedlington side (bear in mind please, these are rarely show bred bedlingtons, or show bred whippets, but WORKING bred ones!), is a sharp terrier, not given to starting fights, but he will get stuck in if he fancies it! They are VERY game, and feisty, energetic dogs.
The whippet is slightly less sharp than the bedlington, but not much! They are also rather sensitive, even the working bred ones and most of he beddy whps i know are quite sound phobic over certain triggers (wheely bins, thunder, fireworks, loud shouting).
If you want an easier going lurcher type dog, i can highly recommend the grey/saluki cross, as a rescue. I have one, and yes she is a bit nervy, but she is a quiet, easy going dog, and has been one of the easiest dogs ive ever owned (despite *that* incident with a cat and a parked car *ahem*).
Golden retrievers have a good reputation, HOWEVER, plan one of them carefully and shop around because there are thousands of people cashing in on this good reputation, with the result that there are some VERY dodgy temperamented Goldies showing up.
Have you considered a tibetan terrier, mid sized and scruffy? (not ACTUALLY true terrier either).....
FWIW, im with the 'get a long coated dog and leave its coat alone' brigade im afraid.
Cutting long coats may seem like ti will save work. Sadly it wont.
A long coat cut shorter is still as dense as it was when it was long, so that isnt going to cool the dog down. Cutting a hard coat like a beardies will make it go softer -- this maens it will tangle MORE, hold MORE mud and be harder to look after.
Regular brushing, not bathing very often, will keep a beardies coat in good condition, drying the dog off when wet will help too. This will keep the natural oils, prevent the coat becoming soft, and the regular brushing thins out the hair as well as detangling, removing dirt and spreading the oils around the coat.
Em