Contact UKC : Registration


The rules for Single Registration for the Treeing Cur are as follows:

1. Completed UKC Application for Cur/Feist Single Registration

2. Copy of your dog's registration certificate from a UKC acknowledged registry may be provided but is
not required.

Acceptable registries for the Treeing Cur are: Mountain View Cur Registry, National Kennel Club,
Professional Kennel Club and World Tree dog Association

3. Complete three generation pedigree may be provided but is not required. (photocopy or handwritten pedigree is acceptable)

4. Three color photographs. One photo of each side of the dog and one photo of the front must be provided.
Photos should be taken at eye level with the dog in a standing position.

5. Single Registration fee of $20.00

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Recent News At UKC

05/20/2012: 2012 Bluetick Days Saturday Nite Hunt Results UKC Licensed Purina Points Nite Hunt MOH: Robert ‘Bub’ Rose Total Entered: 144 King of Hunt: GR CH GR NITE CH ‘PR’ Mad-Dog MO Blue Smoke, owned by Roy, third from left, or Tim Clifton, third from right, of Pleasanton, Kansas, handled by Tim. Also shown are Dana Byrd,...   Read more here.

05/19/2012:

2012 Bluetick Days Saturday Water Race Results

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2012 Bluetick Days Saturday Bench Show Results

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2012 Bluetick Days Friday Nite Hunt Results

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2012 Bluetick Days Candids

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2012 Bluetick Days Friday Bench Show Results

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2012 Bluetick Days Thursday Nite Hunt Results

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Arkansas State Championship Results

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News Archive.

This Weekend At UKC

Middle Georgia Kennel Club will be hosting events this weekend, May 18 - 20 in Perry, Georgia. More Information.

Pennsylvania Nite Hunters Inc will be hosting an event this weekend, May 19 in Meadville, Pennsylvania. More Information.

Find an event in your area.

American Eskimo

Recognized by the United Kennel Club in 1913, the American Eskimo is a member of the ancient and wide ranging Spitz family of dogs. White Spitzes were popular in Pomerania and in the coastal regions of Germany. Sailors traded the white dogs throughout Europe. When Queen Charlotte of England acquired several white Spitzes, the dogs became fashionable among British aristocrats. White Spitzes appear in several Gainsborough paintings. Known as the German Spitz in its homeland, the breed was renamed the American Eskimo in 1917.



Read more about UKC's many dog breeds here.

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