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Our Dachshunds of Many Colors


Auslagen miniatures specialize in a rainbow of colors with the dapple pattern. We strive to learn as much as we can about our breed to be able to pass on to others the best knowledge out there. By passing correct information to you we are giving you years of wiggly tails and sloppy kisses.

The Basic Dachshund


In the states Dachshunds come in two sizes. Miniatures weigh 11lbs. and under standards 16lbs. to 32lbs. by our rule book. There are two basic colors black and tan then the reds with all their dilution's. Chocolate and tan, isabelle and tan, blue and tan, weaten, and now the newest creme's. The basic patterns consist of brindling, dapple, double dapple, pibald and sable. They come in a coat type for everyone smooth, wire and our favorite long.

Note:
General Undisputed Advise. Dachshunds may be difficult to house break. This is an understatement. The owners need to be willing to spend lots of time showing the door to the brutes. We here have had great luck with the crate and exercise pens found in all pet stores... and egg timers. Also to note, our breed is especially good with children to the point of guarding them with their lives.

Breed Descriptions


Dapple and Merle
The color "dapple" in dachshunds is the same apparently and genetically as the merle of collies, Australian Shepherds, and other breeds with the merle color.
Description of Color
The appearance of this pattern is like splashing or swirling of paint over all normal colors of dachshunds. Some dappling is very bright and noticeable. Other dogs have a dull color to the dapples. Still other dogs have so little of the dapple pattern that it is not easily seen, for instance on the underside of the dog. You will recognize a dapple dachshund most easily when it is one of the "and tan" colors: black and tan, chocolate and tan and blue and tan.

Black and tan dapple dachshunds have a dapple pattern that looks silvery in color, and was once called "silver dapple." The color for these dogs is now marked on AKC papers as "black and tan dapple."
Chocolate Dapple
The dapple pattern on a chocolate and tan dapple dog is lighter than the dark chocolate background but is still a shade of light chocolate. Darker spots that are the color of the "normal" coat may appear on the lighter dapple area. There will be black spots on black and tan Dapples and chocolate spots on the chocolate and tan dogs. A dog with limited dapple pattern may have a single small streak of the dapple color and be hardly noticed.
Red Dapple
Even expert may not notice dapples at all in an adult red dapple. When dapple occurs on a red dachshund, it appears as a lighter swirl in the coat that disappears (more or less from dog to dog) as the dog matures. The only giveaway for an adult red dapple may be the telltale blue eye or eyes that sometimes occurs when dapples (of all colors) fall on the eye. A blue eyed Dachshund is always a dapple but may also express another pattern simultaneously, such as the piebald pattern or the brindle pattern.
Double Dapple
Double Dapple is the color of a dog that is a result of breeding two dapple dachshunds (sometimes referred to as "single dapple" in discussions such as this) or two double dapple dachshunds or a single dapple and a double dapple.

When you breed two single dapple dachshunds, the color possibilities are solid, single dapple, and double dapple. When you breed two double dapples, you can only produce double dapples.

When you breed a single dapple to a double dapple, you can produce single dapples and double dapples. The reason for these possibilities is that the single dapple is a heterozygous dapple and the double dapple is a homozygous dapple. The heterozygous dapple can pass a solid gene or a dapple gene for any given puppy. The homozygous dapple can only pass a dapple gene.

Double dapple puppies will always have white markings, many in the same pattern that you would associate with a Collie type dog (band around the neck, white on paws, nose, and tail tip.) The white may be more or less extensive. The double dapple dachshund usually has blue eyes but may have one or both dark eyes.
Lethal Genes
Lethal genes occur in many kinds of animals and are often associated with white coloration. Lethal genes in any animal may cause death (before or after birth), deafness or blindness. The blindness and deafness may be partial or complete.
There are lethal genes associated with double dapple. Not all double-dapples have these problems and it is believed by some to be more of a problem in some lines than in others. The problems associated with lethal genes in double dapples are: varying degrees of vision and hearing loss, including reduced or absent eyes. Interestingly, if a blind or deaf double dapple is bred to a normal dog, the lethal traits are not passed on to the offspring, however all of the puppies of a double dapple will be dapple.
Lethal genes are not unique to the dachshund, but are found in merle to merle breeding in Collies, Australian Shepherds, and Great Danes. Merle is genetically and apparently the same as Dapple color of Dachshunds. The lethal white problems of Dalmatians are common, complicated, and difficult to understand but also involved deafness. Overo pattered Paint or Pinto horses when bred together can result in a certain percentage of lethal genes. In the case of horses, "lethal white" actually results in death as the gene causes an intestinal defect. Even pigeons have a color that when two are bred together is associated with lethal genes.
The breeding of double dapples is risky and controversial. We believe it is possible to breed healthy double dapples and that it is worth the risk.
Remember that single dapple dachshunds do not have lethal problems and if single dapple is bred to a solid (any non-dapple) there are no problems associated with single dapple dachshunds.
Double Dapple Defects
WARNING
There are lethal genes commonly associated with double dapple. Not all double-dapple have these problems and it is believed by some to be more of a problem in some lines than in others. The problems associated with lethal genes in double dapples are:
  • Varying degrees of vision and hearing loss, including reduced or absent eyes.
As mentioned above, if a blind or deaf double dapple is bred to a normal dog, the lethal traits are not passed on to the offspring, however all of the puppies of a double dapple will be dapple.
If you decide that you want a double dapple puppy, be prepared for possible problems that may not be easily diagnosed at a young age.