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I have a male dog that is UKC and a female dog that is AKC is there a way to to get her registered with the UKC or him with the AKC. and if so how would i go about doing that.

2006-10-24 09:11:37 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Dogs

6 answers

You can duel register the one that is AKC, with UKC..but not the other way around..
The procedure by which a purebred dog, not out of a UKC registered litter, may be registered with United Kennel Club, Inc. Dogs must be registered with a registry acknowledged by UKC and show proof of such by submitting a copy of the Registration Certificate from that registry.

The owner of a single-registered dog has the same rights and privileges as the owner of a dog whose litter was UKC registered. Single-registered dogs may participate in any UKC licensed event for which the breed is eligible. A dog with a disqualifying fault as determined by the dog's UKC breed standard is ineligible for single registration.

U.K.C. tailors the rules for single registration to the needs of each individual breed and taking into account the wishes of our individual national breed associations. Accordingly, the rules for single registration vary slightly depending on the breed of dog to be registered. If your dog is accepted for single registration, you will receive a registration certificate with a three-generation pedigree and Easy Entry™ card.

General rules for single registration.
1. Pedigree. Each application must include a three-generation pedigree. The pedigree may be handwritten and does not need to be certified by any organization.
2. Proof of purebred status. Each application must include a copy of a registration certificate from a U.K.C. approved registry.
3. Disqualifying faults. A dog with a disqualifying fault as defined in the U.K.C. standard for the dog's breed is ineligible for single registration. Such dogs may be eligible for the U.K.C. Limited Privilege program.
this site has the contact information> http://www.ukcdogs.com/Registration.htm

2006-10-24 09:15:49 · answer #1 · answered by Chetco 7 · 0 0

You may be able to get the female registered with UKC, but I don't think you can get the male registered AKC. Go to the UKC website and look on there for info on how to register your AKC dog.

2006-10-24 09:15:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can't get him registered with AKC but you can get her registered UKC. You simple need to get their registration application, fill it out, photocopy your AKC papers and send that along with the registration fee to the UKC.There are a lot of dogs that are dual registered UKC/AKC. There are also many that are shown in UKC/AKC events and many that have dual championships.

2006-10-24 10:23:15 · answer #3 · answered by Great Dane Lover 7 · 0 0

You can register her with the UKC. You can't register him with AKC unless you can get his AKC papers from the breeder.

2006-10-24 09:15:09 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Her mom and father might have had to be registered first. then the clutter might have had to be registered by potential of her breeder earlier you will be able to desire to in my opinion sign up her. of course in case you acquire her as a puppy with a spay settlement then the registration could be withheld till your vet sent some thing to the breeder confirming the spay. Of in case you merely have been given her from some BYB who themselves did no longer have registered canines then you quite are out of success getting her registered as a pedigreed Yorkshire Terrier with any registry that actual counts. yet whether she have been registered, merely being registered isn't sufficient of a reason to reproduce a canines besides. It says no longer something approximately high quality or well-being merely that the canines is a undeniable breed and who the mummy and father have been. . To be properly worth breeding one additionally should do well-being / genetic attempting out (and you cant have the hips examined till she is two yrs old). and she or he must be shown and titled to furnish some data she is a stable occasion of the breed. If she does no longer / can't meet those circumstances it quite is ideal to easily get her spayed. She would not "choose" to have doggies. and the international does no longer choose greater BYB doggies

2016-12-28 04:01:44 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Drag that hound down to the DMV, and dont forget the paperwork!

2006-10-24 09:14:33 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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