Talk:Saluki

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Its pretty good...a little more info would be nice,though.

  • Does anyone know how fast a Saluki runs? Either in miles per hour or kilometers per hour.Kenallen 01:26, 25 February 2007 (UTC)

My experience is a good saluki's absolute top speed is about 70km/hr. But bearing in mind this is rarely attained, and it is very difficult to measure accurately because they usually vary speed and direction when hunting, and are somewhat unmotivated to run a ordinary flat track.

  • I own a book that says the top speed is around 40 mph. —Preceding unsigned comment added by APBTgirl (talkcontribs) 00:36, 14 February 2008 (UTC)

Can someone do some research into the origin of this dog and it's name. The word "saluki" sounds like it must be derived from the Hellenic dynasty known as the seleucids.

  • Well, the online dictionary (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/dict.asp?Word=saluki) says "Arabic saluqi, of Saluq, an ancient city of southern Arabia." Whereas The Complete Saluki Book, (Book of the Breed) by Diana Allan, Ken Allan. Copyright © 1999. excerpted on Amazon (http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/186054195X/026-0757487-4718015?v=product-description&n=266239), supports your suggestion, among others, saying (I hope this is ok to quote): "The true origin of this beautiful breed of Arabian hunting hound is lost in the mists of time and the shifting sands of the desert; even the source of the name 'Saluki' is a mystery. Saluki is an anglicism of the Arabic word saluqi, and research through medieval literature, written in Arabic, reveals several places which may have given their name to the hound of the desert. Some lexicographers have suggested that the origin of the word was derived from a town called Saluk, in Southern Arabia, which no longer exists. Saluk or Saluq was famous for its armour and hounds, and reference to the hounds is made in an early Arab verse: "Oh my hound brought by Kings from Saluk". Another line from a verse composed by an Umayyad poet reads: "They have with them their hounds of Saluq, like horses wheeling in battle, dragging on their halters." There is another place named Saluq in Armenia, to the west of the Caspian Sea. Other Arabic sources mention two towns with the name Saluqiyah, from which the Saluq might have been derived. The last and perhaps the most plausible suggestion is that the name saluqi could be derived from Seleucia (Saluqiyah in Arabic), a city on the west bank of the Tigris south of Baghdad, founded by Seleucus I in 312BC. The city was the capital of the Seleucid dynasty which survived down to circa 65AD. This implies that the word Saluki does not originate from one specific place, but is associated with the vast Middle Eastern Empire of the Seleucid dynasty."

Zooterkin 14:44, 8 July 2006 (UTC)


Contents

[edit] Salukis at Southern Illinois University

Speaking of Salukis — a breed of dog — at SIU-Carbondale, mention of that town always brings to mind their second-most-famous hound, Old Boomer. Just outside of town, near the railroad tracks, stands a monument to him. It seems that a few decades into the 20th century, Old Boomer sensed a “hot box” on a coal car on a train swiftly passing through — on which his master was a trainman. Realizing, as dogs do, that an out-of-grease “hot box” could lead to derailment, he ran alongside, got up to speed, and, with one leg raised, of course, continuously peed on the site of the overheated bearing as he ran — not realizing that a bridge abutment was fast approaching — against which he bashed his brains out and died. I guess that’s why they call the canine Man’s Best Friend. That old a son of a bitch! Apparently, his master did live to fabricate the story. There’s even a trackside stone monument there to prove it.

- Posted here by Pat Briody

[edit] Size of head

It appears from the photos that this breed has a small head in comparison to the rest of its body (in comparison with other dog breeds). Is this correct? Badagnani 06:49, 16 May 2007 (UTC)

Yes, this is correct, and is true for most sight hounds. The english greyhound has an even smaller head in comparison to it's body (it has a substantially heavier body than a saluki)

[edit] Azawakh or Sloughi Mentions

There has been some recent activity on this page in regards to changing the information to Azawakh or Sloughi, From every sournce I have looked at online, and in many dog books, it seems to counter these statements. The edits tend to come from sources with no registration. Anyone care to comment on how we should proceed? It seems that one person is bent on making sure their version of the facts are the ones that stick?!

The focus of this ---> paragraph is on the Sloughi, not the Saluki. I am going to delete it.
The Sloughi or Azawakh and not the Saluki appears on the ancient Egyptian tombs of 2100 B.C. and was so esteemed that their bodies was often mummified like the bodies of the Pharaohs themselves. Many early stone inscriptions depict the young King Tutankhamen hunting with his pair of royal Slougis/Azawakh and the remains of numerous specimens have been found in the ancient tombs of the Upper Nile region. Wolfie the Marshmallow 23:02, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Hair or Fur?

Does the Saluki have hair that requires grooming or fur that sheds? Could someone include it in the article? Thanks! -Laikalynx 20:37, 10 August 2007 (UTC)


Well, salukis need to be brushed, and yes they do shed. . . alot. They dont really need to go to a groomer but yes they do shed —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.214.133.99 (talk) 20:06, 24 February 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Correction in other names of the breed

In the main page under the main photo there is a list of other names of this breed, when "Tazi" is mentioned as one of them. This is a great mistake as Tazi is a total different breed. The only connection between the Saluki and the Tazi is that they are both used in hunts. Many breeders see the Tazi as a primitve breed rather than a sighthound.

I do think this should be corrected as it is wrong information on a serious breed.