A Restoration‑Based, Lineage‑Verified Working Standard
The Full Blood Elkhound Standard restores the original northern landrace dog as it existed for centuries across Norway, Sweden, and Finland — before show‑ring alteration, cosmetic exaggeration, and modern phenotype drift. This standard is rooted in function, heritage, genetic continuity, and working capability, not in conformation‑ring interpretation.
A Full Blood Elkhound is defined by lineage, structure, temperament, and purpose — all preserved through a multi‑generation restoration architecture.
This is a living working standard, not a cosmetic one.

1. Identity and Lineage Requirements
A dog qualifies as a Full Blood Elkhound only when it meets all of the following:
- Verified multi‑generation Full Blood lineage
- No modern show‑line dilution
- No cosmetic breeding influence
- No popular‑sire effect
- Preservation of rare maternal lines
- Inclusion of Norwegian and Jamthund Return genetics only through structured restoration architecture
- Alignment with the historical northern working phenotype
This standard is lineage‑anchored, not registry‑anchored. The dog must reflect the heritage population, not the modern show‑ring derivative.
2. Functional Structure
The historical Elkhound was shaped by necessity — not aesthetics. Every structural trait served survival and working function.
General Form
- Compact, muscular, balanced frame
- Strong, weight‑bearing bone
- Deep chest for lung capacity
- Correct proportions for stability and endurance
- Strong, tight feet with durable pads
- Weatherproof double coat suited for northern climates
Head
- Broad, wedge‑shaped head
- Strong muzzle with correct taper
- Dark, intelligent eyes
- Ears erect, mobile, and proportionate
Body
- Level, stable topline
- Deep ribcage with long ribbing
- Strong loin without exaggeration
- Tail carried in a natural northern curl, not exaggerated or over‑tight
Movement
True northern movement is efficient, not flashy.
- Long, ground‑covering stride
- Balanced reach and drive
- Endurance‑based gait
- No exaggerated lift, animation, or show‑ring flourish
This is a working gait, built for distance, terrain, and stamina.
3. Temperament and Working Mind
The Full Blood Elkhound temperament is a functional trait, not a cosmetic one.
Core Temperament
- Calm, stable, and judgment‑based
- Deeply bonded to family
- Intelligent and independent
- Confident without aggression
- Steady around livestock, wildlife, and children
- Capable of making decisions under pressure
Working Mind
The historical Elkhound was a thinking dog, not a reactive one.
The Full Blood Standard preserves:
- situational awareness
- problem‑solving
- controlled independence
- quiet confidence
- emotional stability
This temperament is essential to the dog’s heritage role.
4. Coat and Climate Adaptation
The coat is a functional survival system, not an aesthetic feature.
- Dense, insulating undercoat
- Protective outer guard hairs
- Weatherproof in snow, wind, and sub‑zero temperatures
- Seasonal shedding aligned with northern climate cycles
Color variations consistent with the historical landrace are accepted.
5. Genetic Integrity and Population Structure
The Full Blood Standard is inseparable from the restoration architecture that preserves it.
Genetic Requirements
- Multi‑line maternal preservation
- Controlled rotational sire architecture
- Avoidance of bottlenecks and popular‑sire collapse
- Integration of Norwegian and Jamthund Return genetics only through structured, multi‑generation planning
- Maintenance of functional phenotype across generations
Population Philosophy
The Full Blood Elkhound is not a “breed” in the modern kennel‑club sense. It is a restored northern landrace, maintained through:
- genetic diversity
- functional evaluation
- lineage continuity
- phenotype stability
This is a heritage population, not a cosmetic one.
6. Purpose and Capability
The Full Blood Elkhound is a working northern dog, capable of:
- long‑distance travel
- terrain navigation
- scent tracking
- situational decision‑making
- family guardianship
- livestock awareness
- cold‑climate endurance
The dog must retain the capability profile of the original Scandinavian working Elkhound.
7. A Living Standard
The Full Blood Standard is not static. It evolves only to reflect:
- historical evidence
- working‑line evaluation
- multi‑generation phenotype consistency
- genetic analysis
- restoration outcomes
It does not evolve to follow trends, show‑ring preferences, or cosmetic fashion.
This standard protects the true northern dog, not the modern reinterpretation.
Summary Statement
The Full Blood Elkhound Standard restores the original northern landrace dog — defined by lineage, function, temperament, and working capability — preserved through a rigorous restoration architecture and protected from modern cosmetic drift. It is the authoritative, academically grounded standard for the Full Blood Elkhound population