Dutch Kennel Club
Raad van Beheer op Kynologisch Gebied in Nederland is the official kennel club of the Netherlands. Founded in 1902, it currently represents around 200 breed clubs with 150,000 members, and is a member of the Fédération Cynologique Internationale.
History
The first dog shows in the Netherlands were organised by the Dutch Society of Agriculture, the first show taking place in 1892 in Rotterdam with an entry of 217 dogs. Later shows and field trials were also run by the Nimrod hunters' society, Cynophilia, and the Kynologenvereniging Nederland.In 1902 it was decided to set up a new organisation, the Raad van Beheer op Kynologisch Gebied in Nederland, to consolidate the dog registration and pedigree systems, and regulate showing and field trials. A studbook was set up named the Nederlands Honden Stamboek. A number of pre-existing breed clubs and local groups applied to the new kennel club for recognition.
The Raad van Beheer joined the Fédération Cynologique Internationale at its inaugural meeting in Paris, 1911, and hosted its first conference in Amsterdam in 1912.
At the beginning of the year 2000, the Raad van Beheer abandoned the structure of a society with an elected board of directors, in favour of a union of breed clubs and local groups.
Kennel club membership
As of 2013, there are roughly 200 breed clubs, 70 local groups, 10 "special" clubs and 12 sighthound clubs. Approximately 500,000, or 1 in 3 dogs in the Netherlands, are registered with the DKC; 42,000 new-born puppies were registered in the studbook in the year 2012, with 260 breeds registered annually. In total, 330 breeds are recognised.Native breeds
One of the primary aims of the Dutch Kennel Club is to promote the 9 native dutch breeds:- Dutch Shepherd
- Schapendoes
- Saarloos Wolfhound
- Dutch Smoushond
- Dutch partridge dog
- Kooikerhondje
- Stabijhoun
- Wetterhoun
- Dutch Tulip Hound
Breeding regulations