![]() Black pigmented dog colors: Chalk / Cream / Apricot / Gold / Red / Black / Blue / Silverīrown pigmented dog colors: Caramel Ice / Caramel Cream / Caramel / Caramel Red / Chocolate / Lavender / Cafe / Parchment ![]() Coat color will range in shade and intensity. At times, a puppy’s coat will lighten with age or may surprise everyone by darkening. Keep in mind, a pup may not retain his original color. Since we do not breed parents that are the same size, the offspring can be a range of sizes.Īustralian Labradoodle colors vary widely and include solid and parti-colors (more than one color). You will notice that available puppies are listed with an "Expected Size" range. Lakeview is only able to estimate the adult size. They are fantastic with kids, other animals, and think everyone is their friend. This makes them excellent therapy and service dog candidates. They LOVE their humans and tend to be very in-tune with their needs. They adore toys! Plush, squeaky, tug, you name it they love them all. They need regular exercise, but nothing like the requirements of some of the field hunting breeds. They are incredibly intelligent and eager to please, which makes them extremely trainable. Australian Labradoodles love to play and have just the right amount of energy. If the kids are running around playing, that’s what they want to do! If you’re snuggled up with a good book, they will happily curl up beside you. They are jovial, comical, and goofy, but also content just to relax with their people. TemperamentĪn Australian Labradoodle is a perpetual optimist. Lakeview Labradoodles only breeds Multigeneration Australian Labradoodles. Multigeneration Australian Labradoodles typically have a non-shedding coat (as much as a dog can be non-shedding) if both parents are also non-shedding. Today's Australian Labradoodles are wonderful, intelligent, family-friendly dogs with lush coats that are more reliably low to non-shedding and allergy-friendly than other types of Labradoodles.Ī multigeneration Australian Labradoodle comes about from the breeding of one Australian Labradoodle to another. DNA in some lines will still show the original parent breeds. ![]() Eventually, the infusing only included the lab, poodle, and cocker spaniel (American and English). Then, in the late 1980s, Tegan Park and Rutland Manor, the two founders of the Australian Labradoodle as we know it today, began carefully infusing several other breeds into early generations of their Lab/Poodle crosses, all to improve temperament, coat, conformation, and size. The first Labradoodle was developed by the Royal Guide Dog Association of Australia in an effort to create an allergy-friendly guide dog.
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