Whippet
35 mph in three strides โ then 23 hours of sleeping on your sofa. The Whippet is the ultimate sprinter-couch potato paradox: an aerodynamic missile outdoors, a blanket-burrowing cuddle machine indoors. Complete guide: the paper-thin skin that tears like tissue, the zero-body-fat anesthesia danger, and why this "poor man's Greyhound" might be the perfect apartment dog.
๐ Breed Overview
๐ TOC
๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ History โ The Poor Man's Greyhound
The Whippet was developed in Victorian England by working-class miners in the north. They couldn't afford the aristocratic Greyhound, so they created their own scaled-down version โ crossing small Greyhounds with terriers for extra tenacity. Whippets became the center of "rag racing" โ sprinting down alleys chasing a rag waved by their owner. The sport was hugely popular in mining towns, and the fastest dogs earned their families real money. The breed was also used for poaching rabbits on aristocratic estates โ fast enough to catch a rabbit, small enough to be hidden under a coat. Today they're the #48 AKC breed.
๐จ 35 mph Sprinter, 23-Hour Sofa Sleeper
The Whippet is the fastest accelerating dog breed โ 0 to 35 mph in seconds. But this is a sprinter, not a marathon runner. They need intense, short-burst exercise (20-30 minutes of all-out running in a secure area) followed by hours of deep sleep. They are fantastic apartment dogs โ quiet, clean, low-odor, and content to burrow under blankets for most of the day. โ ๏ธ NEVER trust a Whippet off-leash near roads or small animals. Their prey drive is absolute โ a squirrel triggers pure instinct, and they will chase it into traffic with zero awareness. A secure, high fence is mandatory.
โ ๏ธ Thin Skin & Anesthesia Danger
Whippets have extremely thin, delicate skin with virtually no body fat. Their skin can tear from a minor collision with a stick, a fence, or even rough play with another dog. Skin tears require immediate veterinary attention โ stitches within hours to prevent infection and ensure proper healing.
๐ง No body fat = anesthesia sensitivity: Whippets have 4-7% body fat (a Labrador has 25%). Most anesthetics are fat-soluble โ without body fat to store the drug, Whippets are extremely sensitive to standard anesthetic protocols. They require sighthound-specific protocols (propofol, not thiopental). NEVER let a vet unfamiliar with sighthounds anesthetize your Whippet. Also: they get cold easily โ sweaters and coats are mandatory in cold weather.
โ๏ธ Health โ Generally Excellent
- Anesthesia sensitivity: See above โ sighthound-specific protocols mandatory
- Eye issues: Cataracts, PRA โ annual ophthalmologist exams recommended
- Mitral Valve Disease: Heart murmur โ annual cardiac auscultation
- Arrhythmia: Whippets can have naturally slow resting heart rates โ don't panic; this is normal
๐ฐ Cost Breakdown
๐ก Fun Facts
Fastest accelerating breed: Whippets go from 0 to 35 mph in under 3 seconds โ faster acceleration than a Ferrari. They reach top speed in just a few strides. No other breed accelerates this quickly.
Rag racing heritage: Working-class miners raced Whippets by waving a rag at the finish line. The dogs sprinted down narrow alleys โ the "poor man's horse race." Today, Whippet racing (with a mechanical lure) is still popular.
Cuddle specialists: Whippets are famous for "burrowing" โ they will wiggle under blankets, pillows, your jacket, and anything soft. They have essentially zero body fat and seek warmth constantly. Expect a Whippet-shaped lump in your duvet.
Double-suspension gallop: At full speed, Whippets execute a double-suspension rotary gallop โ all four feet leave the ground TWICE per stride. Only Greyhounds and Whippets do this, and it's what gives them their breathtaking, floating appearance.