Dog Shows More Than Just a Beauty Pageant

Linda Seabury and her husband share the same passion for showing their dogs

Share
Dog Shows More Than Just a Beauty Pageant
Copy

Linda Seabury and her husband, Fred Matuszewski enjoy showing their dogs in competitions. Seabury shares the details about being in the ring during an AKC Confirmation Show and discusses what to do — and what not to do — during an event.

A condensed version of her conversation is below; the full interview can be found here.

Seabury has a Glen of Imaal Terrier named Brigid, while her husband owns Mickey, an Australian Terrier.

Seabury says that dog shows are more “than just a beauty pageant.”

“When you have a dog that ends up going through all the dog showing, they (judges) are checking it against the standards for that breed,” she says. “And out of that, you end up with dogs that would be the best for reproducing.

“You know, I’m boyfriend shopping.”

Unlike other sports, dog showing is very subjective, Seabury says.

“When you go to a baseball game, if somebody hits a home run, it’s a home run,” she says. “In this sport, you will have a judge who looks at a group of dogs, and they’ll decide, ‘Yeah, this one may have that fault, that one has that, but I like this one better.’”

It is important for the dogs to have proper diets, exercise and training. Good grooming is a must. Their behavior in the ring will also be judged, and there is a protocol to follow.

“So you go in, you know that you’re first going to stack your dog, the judge will come along, kind of look, then they’ll tell you to go around,” Seabury says. “In our case, both dogs are dogs that go onto the table.

“As you put them on the table, you learn, put the front feet right at the edge of the table, because that way the dog is less likely to be moving around. There’s everything from, “What’s the distance across the top of the head, what’s the shape of it? What’s the distance from the set of the eyes versus the nose?”

Judges at the competitions are trained and tested on each breed.

Seabury said she sees the same people and dogs at competitions in the area, and confesses that she is envious because she has a partner who is also interested in showing dogs and is just as passionate about it.

“We’ve had people ask us, “Is it tough when both of you go into the ring at the same time?” Seabury says. “It’s like, ‘No.’

The only thing we have to watch is, that we can never have Bridget walking behind Mickey, ‘cause then she wants to run up to her and play.”

Seabury said it is not about the humans — it is about Brigid, Mickey and the other dogs. And, that humans and dogs are all having fun.

“If you’re not having fun, don’t do it,” she says.

Gillette Stadium — rebranded ‘Boston Stadium’ for the tournament — will host multiple marquee matches just 25 miles from Providence, as Rhode Island eyes a potential team basecamp at Bryant University
While she’s optimistic about the future of Rhode Island schools, Education Commissioner Angélica Infante-Green says she’s concerned about potential ICE raids in schools and the impacts of declining enrollment
Can Rhode Island Republicans win back the governor’s office? And a top Providence chef’s lament about the need for more downtown vitality
The Atlanta-based Centurion Foundation said it is hoping to complete its financing in mid-January for a deal to buy Roger Williams Medical Center and Our Lady of Fatima Hospital
Restaurants Oberlin and Gift Horse are staples of the post-lockdown downtown Providence food scene
“La Cuesta Mágica” at Teatro ECAS, the Bristol Christmas Festival, and a conversation about news media in the misinformation age. Plus: Concerts by Ocean State Media favorites Nova One, Hawk in the Nest, Jake Blount, and the Vox Hunters