Other names: Bourbonnais Pointer, Bourbonnais Pointing Dog.
The Braque du Bourbonnais is a breed of gundog, of a rustic appearance, sometimes born with a short tail, with a coat ticked with liver or fawn.
Origins
It had been described for the first time during the Renaissance (Natural History from Aldrovandi, Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris). In danger of disappearing, it thrived again after World War I with the creation of the first club, in 1925.
Disappearance
After World War II, the number of births decreased and the club became less active until it ceased to function. From 1963 to 1973, there were no dogs registered in the LOF (French studbook). The reason for this is probably a selection on secondary characteristics (colour of the coat, short tail) instead of the hunting capabilities and general construction of the dog; this led to having a Bourbonnais less suitable for hunting than other breeds.
Recreation
In 1970, Michel Comte decided to look for the last dog that had some Bourbonnais blood. He found only mixed breed dogs, which had some characteristics of the Braque du Bourbonnais (size, the shape of the head, short tail). After some more or less inbred litters, he registered his first Bourbonnais on the LOF (under Titre Initial procedure) in 1973, 1974, and 1975; from then, several breeders joined him, who, from those dogs, created their own lines, and the number of births increased.,
In 1981, the Club du Braque du Bourbonnais was recreated. Michel Comte was its president until 2001. From this moment, the successes of the Bourbonnais in field trials made the breed thrive.
In 1988, the first Bourbonnais was introduced in the USA. Since then the breed has been growing in that country, which became the second producer of Bourbonnais pointers after France.
Appearance
Head
Rounded in every direction, with lateral sides rounded, with parietal bones and zygomatic arches well developed. The axes of the skull and muzzle are parallel, or slightly divergent towards the front.
Coat
Two coat colours exist in the Bourbonnais, each of them having a specific name because the colour is specific to the breed:
-Liver also called wine dregs or faded lilac.
-Fawn also called peach blossom.
Big spots are tolerated on the body if they are not bigger than the palm of a hand. On the head, the two eyes must not be inside the same spot.