Norfolk Spaniel
The Norfolk Spaniel is a historical English sporting spaniel rather than a living standardized breed. Nineteenth-century writers used the name for active land spaniels associated with Norfolk and nearby sporting kennels, often liver-and-white or colored working dogs used to flush game. The label became blurred with other regional spaniel types, and much of the old Norfolk material was eventually absorbed into the development of English springer spaniels and related field lines. That makes the Norfolk Spaniel most useful today as a pedigree and breed-history term.
Care discussions are therefore historical, not a guide to buying a puppy under that name. People researching the Norfolk Spaniel are usually looking at old stud records, sporting literature, paintings, or the ancestry of modern spaniels. The practical context was upland work: quartering cover, staying within gun range, flushing birds, and remaining biddable under pressure. Modern breeders should avoid presenting recreated or loosely labeled dogs as direct continuations unless records support the claim. For Creatures readers, the breed is best described as an extinct regional spaniel type that helped shape later gundog families.
Colors: Albino, Apricot, Bicolor, Black, Black and Tan, Black and White, Black Mask, Blue, Blue and Tan, Blue Merle, Blue Roan, Blue Tick, Brindle, Brown, Brown and Tan, Brown and White, Chocolate, Cream, Dapple, Domino, Fawn, Fawn and White, Gold, Gray, Grey, Harlequin, Irish Marked, Leucistic, Liver, Liver Mask, Mantle, Mask, Melanistic, Merle, Mottled, Parti-Color, Piebald, Red, Red and White, Red Merle, Red Roan, Red Tick, Reverse Brindle, Roan, Sable, Saddle, Silver, Speckled, Spotted, Tan, Ticked, Tricolor, Tuxedo, White, Yellow