The Club has several annual awards that are presented at our
Annual General Meeting.
The following criteria are effective as of February 17, 2007, In
order to be considered applicable toward annual trophies and
awards, the owner must be a member in good standing of
the BCLRC, is an active participant in Club affairs and is in
good standing with the CKC. If a member’s membership has
lapsed because of dues being in arrears, their activities may not
be considered towards these awards. Only Labrador Retrievers are
eligible for annual awards. The dog must by owned or co-owned by
the member applying and possess an individual CKC registration,
Event Registration Number (ERN) or Performance Event Number
(PEN). Unless otherwise noted, only accomplishments earned in
Canada will be considered.
BCLRC Annual Awards
Show Puppy
This award is based on all wins by the Puppy before the age of
twelve months and will be counted in the calendar year in which
he/she reaches one year of age. Show Puppy of the Year will be
determined on the basis of wins in Canadian Kennel Club (CKC)
conformation shows. The highest number of points attained at a
show to will go towards the annual number of points. Ten bonus
points will be awarded if the wins occur at a breed
specialty.
For the BCLRC specialty, the puppy will also earn 1 bonus point
for each puppy defeated, not including the puppy being
considered.
Points:
Best Puppy in Breed 5 points
Best Puppy in Group 15 points
Best Puppy in Show 25 points
Specialty bonus + 10 points
BCLRC specialty bonus + 1 point per dog defeated
As an example, if a puppy wins Best Puppy in Show, the dog will
be credited with 25 points for that show, not 5 + 15 + 25. If the
show was a breed specialty (e.g. Island Pacific, Labrador
Retriever Club), an additional 10 points will be earned for a
total of 35 for that show.
Show Open
This award is based on the largest number of Labradors defeated
in Breed competition in licensed CKC conformation shows.
Breed Level
Only Labradors with the following placements may count defeats as
follows:
Winners Dog/Bitch, - count all Labradors of the same sex defeated
in class competition
Best of Winners - count all Labradors of both sexes defeated in
class competition
Best of Breed - count all Labradors defeated in the
competition
Best of Opposite Sex - count all Labradors defeated of that
sex
At the BCLRC Specialty Show recognized placements will be the
above plus the following:
1st in Class
Best Canadian Bred
Judge’s Award of Merit
Group Level
Three (3) points will be awarded for each breed defeated. ie: If
12 breeds compete in the group then:
1st in group would defeat 11 breeds and get 3 x 11 = 33
points
2nd in group would defeat 10 breeds and get 3 x 10 = 30
points
3rd in group would defeat 9 breeds and get 3 x 9 = 27 points
4th in group would defeat 8 breeds and get 3 x 8 = 24 points
Best in Show One Hundred (100) bonus points will be awarded.
In determining the number of dogs defeated DO NOT count the dog
being considered for this award and remember to subtract for
absentees, if known.
Field Open
This trophy will be awarded to the Labrador that earns the
highest number of Open points in CKC field trials. Fifty bonus
points will be awarded to a dog that has qualified for the
National Retriever Championship stake.
Field Amateur
This trophy will be awarded to the Labrador that earns the
highest number of Amateur points in CKC field trials. Fifty bonus
points will be awarded to a dog that has qualified for the
National Retriever Championship stake.
Field Qualifying
This trophy will be awarded to the Labrador that earns the
highest number of Qualifying points in CKC field trials.
Derby/Junior
Qualifying
The "Sting" trophy will be awarded to the Labrador that
has earned at least 10 junior Qualifying points in CKC field
trials.
Field Puppy
This trophy will be awarded to the Labrador puppy which won first
place at the puppy stake run at the club’s field trial
event.
Hunting Dog of the
Year Donated by Bonnie & Gord McGhie
Awarded in celebration of the First Dog in Canada to earn the
title GRAND MASTER HUNTER, "ALICIA", CHOICE ACTION
ALICIA, WCX, GMH Trained and Handled by Geoff Cake.
To be awarded annually to the Club Member's dog accumulating
the highest number of hunt test points from Canadian Kennel Club
approved hunt tests in one year. Points are based on the
following formula and applied to qualifying legs and titles
awarded from January 1 to December 31st in any one year. Only
legs and titles completed in the calendar year count for points
that year. There is no carry over of points from one year to the
next. Legs for a title may be earned in more than one year but
only those legs and titles earned in the year under consideration
are considered for the trophy.
Junior Hunter qualifying legs count for 1 point
per leg to a maximum of 4 points.
Junior legs completed beyond the first four are no longer
counted.
The Junior Hunter Title is counted as 1 point. Maximum Junior
Hunter Points are 5 points.
Senior Hunter qualifying legs count for 2 points
per leg to a maximum of 8 points. Senior legs completed beyond
the first four are no longer counted. The Senior Hunter Title is
counted as 2 points. Maximum Senior Hunter Points are 10
points.
Master Hunter qualifying legs count for 3 points
per leg with no maximum points in any one year. Master points
earned after the Master Hunter Title is earned will continue to
count for 3 points except for those earned within the same year
as the Grand Master Title is earned (see below). The Master
Hunter title is counted as 3 points. No maximum Master Hunter
points until the Grand Master title is completed.
Grand Master Hunter Master Hunter qualifying
legs will continue to count as 3 points each until the calendar
year when Grand Master Title is earned. Any Master legs earned
within the same calendar year as the Grand Master Title is earned
will count for 5 points per leg. Grand Master Hunter Title is
counted as 5 points. The calendar year, following the year that
the Grand Master Title is earned, the Grand Master dog is no
longer eligible to compete for this trophy.
It is possible for a dog to count as many legs and titles as they
qualify for in any one calendar year subject to the above
maximums for each title. Examples of how this point formula works
include:
If a dog qualifies for all the legs for a Junior and Senior Title
in one year, the dog would have 14 or 15 points depending if they
completed 3 or 4 Junior legs.
A Senior plus Master Title would be worth 28 points if all legs
for both titles were completed in one calendar year
Five legs plus a Master title would add up to 18 points
If 2 more Master legs are completed along with the Master legs
and title above it would add up to 24 points.
A dog who completes the last three legs need to earn a Grand
Master Title would receive 5 points for each leg earned in the
year of the title plus 5 points for the title for a total of 20
points.
If a tie in points occurs, the dog earned the highest title in
the year will be the winner. If that does not resolve the tie, it
will be shared jointly for the year.
If the BCLRC Society makes a decision not to continue to award
this trophy as stipulated here or if the society/club is
dissolved, the trophy will be returned to Geoff Cake. If that is
not possible, it will be returned to Gord McGhie. If that is not
possible, it will be returned to Barry Kolodychuck. Any changes
made to the awarding of this title will need to be approved by
Geoff Cake. If that isn't possible, approval for change will
follow the order above
Obedience
The annual Obedience award is based
on the CKC point system with the addition of points being recognized in
Novice.
Novice Points
Open and Utility Points
198 – 200 –
4 points
200 –
8 points
195 ½ - 197 ½ - 3 points
198 – 199 ½ - 7 points
190 – 195 –
2 points
195 – 197 ½ - 6 points
180 – 189 ½ - 1 point
190 – 194 ½ - 5 points
170 – 179 ½ - ½ point
185 – 189 ½ - 4 points
180 – 184 ½ - 3 points
175 – 179 ½ - 2 points
170 – 174 ½ - 1 point
In the event of a tie, the highest
individual qualifying score will be used, with a Utility score being
worth an additional 3 points, Open 2 points and Novice 1 point. For
example, if two dogs have a total of 100 points and the highest
qualifying score is 198, the dog that obtained the score in Open will
receive 102 points and the dog that obtained the score in Utility will
win with 103 points.
Versatile Dog (Teak
Award) Donated by Heather Ferguson
This trophy is to be awarded to the dog that actively
participates in the most different types of events.
Gordon Ferguson's Teak was primarily a field dog. She was
high point qualifying dog in Canadian Field Trials for 1998. She
did, as an aside, therapy work, obedience, agility, flyball,
carting (draft dog). She had just started tracking and at home
was an assistant dog for Heather's late father, picking up
things he dropped, getting drinks from the fridge - she could
open and closed the door plus alerting if he fell. The challenge
was, as it was felt by many handlers that field dogs could only
do field, that it would be too confusing and beyond their focus
to do other things, as well as reducing their ability to compete
in Field Trials.
The original intent was to have a field dog that showed
versatility in other events, at least two, in order to qualify.
The dog does not have to be primarily a field dog, as long as the
dog is actively participating in multiple events. Participation
is defined as showing/competing in sanctioned shows, tests,
trials or matches by Canadian organizations (i.e. CKC, AAC,
CARO). It also includes taking classes, seminars and training
towards skills such as search and rescue.
A title is not a prerequisite and doesn't influence the award
system. Example: Dog A may title in show and compete in obedience
and field work, but Dog B participates in show, field, obedience,
and agility then dog B is the more versatile. Events of the same
type are considered to be one, due to the similar nature of the
skills required. Field work (field trials, hunt, working
certificate) are considered to be one event. Obedience work
(traditional obedience, rally, canine good neighbour) are also
considered to be one event. It is also for Canadian events
only.
When presented the Club agreed to honour the spirit of the award
and follow the guidelines laid out. If no Lab meets the
qualifications of participating in three separate events then it
is not to be presented for that year. These criteria are not
subject to change, as per the donor, Heather Ferguson (June 04,
2006)
Oban Challenge Donated by Cheryl Young
The award is offered in memory of the exceptional performance in
2005 of CH Makaila’s Black Saxon, JH WC CD, call name
"Oban" owned by Sandra and Paul Bunt. Oban was lost in
a tragic accident late that year before he was three years old
after having earned his CD, JH and CH within a 12 month period.
This award is an achievement award presented by the BCLRC as an
annual award when a Labrador Retriever owned by a member of the
Club displays performance excellence and versatility of skills,
typical of the Labrador breed, as follows:
Before the age of three years, the dog earns titles in three
separate disciplines at events sanctioned by the CKC in
Conformation, and Hunt Test or Field Trial, and Obedience. All contributing legs and points must be
achieved within a 12 month period.