Skip to main content

Top Dogs

Posted on by Hank
baby
Baby

A couple of weeks ago Beagle Man received a very interesting request:  I was invited to be on the panel of judges for Westport Animal Shelter Advocates’ (WASA) Top Dog photo/essay contest.  My name had been submitted by a dog-walking friend who volunteers at WASA, a group that

bella
Bella

was formed several years back to advocate for and assist the dogs at Westport Animal Control. I jumped at the chance, of course.  If it’s about dogs, count me in.

The judging took place last Wednesday at Town Hall.  All three judges (Bud Siegel, Patty Strauss, myself) were asked to score each dog in three areas:  its photo; the essay submitted by its owner, and its “specialness” — that je ne sais quoi that makes a dog a Top Dog.

blue bear
Blue Bear

The judging, of course, was totally subjective, and for me, it wasn’t easy:  I love just about everything about every dog.  And we, the judges, all had our quirks.  One judge was an easy grader — gave every dog somewhere between a 27 and a 30.  (Thirty — 10-10-10 — was a perfect score.)

bruce
Bruce

Another judge was all over the ballpark, awarding scores as high as 30 and as low as 14.  I was tough — trying to guard against “grade inflation,” and also overcompensating for my first inclination to give every dog a perfect “10” in every category.  We

china
China

also tried our best to put aside whatever breed biases we had.  One judge confessed, off the record, a preference for big dogs.  Another — wonder who this could be? — had to control

lola
Lola

his urge to automatically give the lone beagle entry a “30” before even looking at the photo or reading the essay.

But in spite of the difficult nature of the voting and the idiosyncracies of the judges, I’m pleased to say there was an extremely high degree of consensus in the resulting pool of finalists.  And while the Top Dog won’t be named publicly until a

top dog candidacy
Ricky throws his hat into the ring early for Top Dog 2013

ribbon ceremony at Town Hall (date still to be determined), WASA President Julie Loparo gave me the green light to publish photos of the handsome finalists, shown throughout the post.

Note:  As much fun as I had serving on the panel this year, I plan to step aside next year — so I can enter my own dog, Ricky.  Just so there’s no misunderstanding, even though I was a judge this year, when it comes to awarding the blue ribbon next year, I don’t expect any special consideration whatsoever for Ricky.  That’s “Ricky” — R-I-C-K-Y. . .



Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Subscribe

* = required field

Search


Archives


Recent Comments