Back in May we helped launch Britain’s Next Top Dog – a new competition looking for the country’s most photogenic canines with all proceeds going to Cancer Research UK.
The entries poured in and more than £30,000 was raised as a panel of dog-loving celebrities including Clare Balding, Graham Norton, Stephen Fry, Nigel Havers and Gabby Logan chose six category winners, before the public voted for Britain’s ultimate Next Top Dog.
It’s been a triumph for its instigator Fee Sharples, a retired nurse from Norfolk who was diagnosed with cancer in 2014.
‘Every day something wonderful has happened,’ she says. ‘It’s buoyed me up so much, as well as raising money to fight cancer and celebrating our love of dogs.’
17 gorgeous dogs looking for a forever home in Greater Manchester right now
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120m 절벽 아래로 떨어진 강아지가 만나게 된 기적
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25 of the Most Decorated Dog Breeds Newsweek 2 hrs ago Lydia Smith © Matt Cardy/Getty Images An American Cocker Spaniel is awarded Best In Show at Crufts Dog Show in 2017
Over the last 100 years, dog owners around the world have enjoyed showing off their pets in dog shows.
Crufts, the largest dog show in the U.K., was first set up in 1891 by the showman Charles Crufts and has become one of the most important canine events in the world.
From tiny Dachshunds to giant Irish Wolfhounds, all sorts of dogs take part in the competition every year. Throughout the many shows, however, it has become clear that some breeds win more than others.