Schweizer Laufhund
The Schweizer Laufhund, often called the Swiss Hound, is a medium-sized scent hound from Switzerland used for hare, fox, and similar game. It is best understood as a breed with four traditional varieties: Bernese, Jura, Lucerne, and Schwyz, each with its own color pattern and regional history. Laufhunds are clean-lined dogs with long pendant ears, a close coat, and a light, athletic frame built for hours of steady trailing rather than short bursts of speed. Their carrying voice is part of their hunting style.
In homes, Schweizer Laufhunds are usually sociable with familiar people, but their strongest instincts are to follow scent and range ahead. They suit handlers who can provide field work, tracking, canicross, or other demanding exercise, and they need fencing and leash management around roads and wildlife. Care is not coat-intensive, though ears should be checked after wet cover and body condition kept lean. Hunting clubs tend to value working ability and the correct variety as much as appearance, so companion buyers should look for stable temperament as well as proven scent-hound background.
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