Porcelaine 🤍

Porcelaine

Scenthound / FCI Group 6 · Purebred · France's oldest surviving scenthound — gleaming white coat like glazed porcelain, a melodious voice, and centuries of chasing boar and deer through French royal forests

55–62 lbsWeight
21–23 inHeight
12–14 yrsLifespan
HighEnergy

🐾 Overview

The Porcelaine (also known as the Chien de Franche-Comté) is considered the oldest French scenthound breed still in existence — a sleek, elegant, white-coated hound whose name derives from the glossy sheen of its coat, said to resemble glazed porcelain. The breed's origins are traced to the Franche-Comté region of eastern France, near the Swiss border, where references to a "Porcelaine" hound appear in hunting records as far back as 1845. Earlier descriptions of similar white French hounds with orange-spotted ears suggest the type may be considerably older, potentially descended from the ancient Montaimboeuf hound and Swiss Laufhund.

Like many aristocratic French hunting breeds, the Porcelaine nearly went extinct during the French Revolution — the dissolution of noble hunting establishments destroyed most of the packs. The breed was painstakingly reconstituted in the 19th century, partly through crosses with Swiss hounds. FCI recognizes the Porcelaine under Group 6. Today the breed is still primarily a pack hunter in France, used for boar, deer, and hare in the traditional French venery style. Outside France it is extremely rare — fewer than a few hundred individuals exist internationally — making it one of the most uncommon recognized hounds in the world.

📸 Photo Gallery

Real Porcelaines — browse photos showcasing their gleaming white coat and elegant hound build.

😊 Temperament & Personality

The Porcelaine is even-tempered, sociable, and gentle in the home — a pack hound that thrives on companionship with other dogs and adapts surprisingly well to family life for a breed bred primarily for pack hunting.

  • Sociable and even-tempered — bred to work in packs, gets along well with other dogs
  • Gentle with family — patient and affectionate
  • Generally good with children
  • Strong prey drive — not safe off-leash outside secure areas
  • Independent on a scent trail — recall requires dedicated training
  • Vocal — the Porcelaine's melodious voice is a celebrated breed trait

🏃 Exercise & Activity Needs

  • Daily exercise: 60–90 minutes — a pack hunting dog with serious endurance
  • Off-leash only in fully secure areas — strong prey drive
  • Thrive with other dogs for companionship and play
  • Nose work, tracking, and scent trails provide excellent mental stimulation
  • Adapt to suburban life with sufficient daily exercise

✂️ Grooming & Coat Care

  • Short, fine, gleaming white coat — minimal grooming required
  • Weekly wipe-down; bathe every 6–8 weeks or when dirty from field work
  • The white coat shows dirt easily — regular baths keep the coat at its best
  • Check and clean drop ears weekly — essential for all floppy-eared hounds
  • Trim nails every 3–4 weeks; check paws after runs

🎓 Training

  • Intelligent but independent — typical of pack scent hounds
  • Use positive reinforcement with high-value food rewards
  • Recall training is the highest priority before any off-leash freedom
  • Socialization from puppyhood — generally easy given natural sociability
  • Excel in pack work and scent-based activities

🏥 Health & Common Issues

The Porcelaine is a healthy, robust breed. The small international population requires careful attention to genetic diversity in breeding programs.

Ear infections (drop ears) Hip dysplasia (low incidence) Bloat / GDV (deep-chested)
Average Lifespan
12–14 years
Size Category
Medium · 55–62 lbs
Vet Visits
Annual wellness; ear checks
Pet Insurance
Recommended

🏠 Is a Porcelaine Right for You?

The Porcelaine suits active, patient owners who appreciate the elegance of a rare French scenthound. They need daily vigorous exercise, a secure yard, and ideally canine companions. Their vocal nature and strong prey drive require management in suburban settings. For hound enthusiasts seeking something truly rare and beautiful, the Porcelaine is an extraordinary choice.

👶With Kids★★★★☆
🐕With Dogs★★★★★
🐈With Cats★★☆☆☆
🏠Apartment★★☆☆☆
🔰First-Time Owner★★★☆☆
🌡️Cold Climates★★★☆☆

🐾 Related Breeds

🍽️ How Much to Feed a Porcelaine

Puppy (8–12 weeks)
3–4 meals/day
Puppy (3–6 months)
3 meals/day
Adult (1+ year)
2 meals/day
Senior (9+ years)
2 smaller meals/day

📏 Daily Portion Guide

55 lbs (less active)
2¼ cups/day
58 lbs (average active)
2½ cups/day
62 lbs (hunting/very active)
2¾ cups/day

✅ Best Foods for Porcelaines

  • High-protein formula for active working hounds
  • Feed from a raised bowl to reduce bloat risk — deep-chested breed
  • Omega-3 fatty acids support the fine white coat's gleam and health
  • Avoid free-feeding — hounds are food-motivated and prone to overeat
  • Fresh or raw feeding is popular with French hunting dog enthusiasts

🚫 Dangerous Foods

ChocolateGrapes & RaisinsOnions & GarlicXylitolMacadamia NutsAlcoholAvocado

💡 Tip: Boarding your Porcelaine?

Porcelaines are sociable and adapt well to boarding if kept with other dogs — solo kenneling can cause stress for a pack-bred breed. Choose a facility with dog-to-dog interaction opportunities. Their vocal nature (melodious baying) means a noise-tolerant facility is preferred. Secure outdoor areas are essential given their prey drive.

💰 How Much Does a Porcelaine Cost?

Reputable Breeder (France)
$1,000–$2,500
Imported to US
$2,500–$5,000+
Rescue/Adoption
$100–$400
Note
Extremely rare — waiting lists common

📅 Monthly Cost

Budget approximately $110–$200 per month for a Porcelaine.

Food
$50–$80/month
Vet (annual)
$400–$700/year
Pet insurance
$30–$55/month
Grooming (minimal)
$10–$20/month

🧬 Porcelaine Mix Breeds

Porcelaine mixes are exceptionally rare outside France. Any cross typically inherits strong scenting ability and the breed's elegant hound build.

🐾 Porcelaine × Beagle

Two elegant scent hounds — compact, sociable, and nose-driven. Likely to produce a white-and-tan or tricolor companion with excellent tracking ability.

Size
20–45 lbs
Energy
High
Shedding
Low–Moderate
Price
Extremely rare

🐾 Porcelaine × English Foxhound

Two classic pack hunting hounds — athletic, melodious, and tireless. An outstanding sporting hound for traditional hunt pursuits.

Size
55–75 lbs
Energy
Very High
Shedding
Low
Price
Extremely rare

🎉 Amazing Facts About Porcelaines

  • 🤍 The Porcelaine's name comes from the appearance of its coat rather than any connection to ceramics — the short, fine, brilliantly white fur with its subtle orange-spotted patches and gleaming skin-visible sheen reminded French hunters of Limoges porcelain, the fine white ceramic produced in the Franche-Comté region's neighbor, Limoges. The name is as much a poetic tribute to the breed's beauty as it is a physical description.
  • ⚔️ Like most aristocratic French hunting breeds, the Porcelaine was nearly destroyed during the French Revolution (1789–1799). The revolution's abolition of noble privilege included the dissolution of the great French hunting packs maintained by the aristocracy, and hundreds of hounds were killed, scattered, or abandoned as their noble owners fled or were guillotined. The Porcelaine's survival through this period is attributed to its reconstitution in the 19th century by Swiss and French breeders working from surviving stock.
  • 🎵 The Porcelaine is celebrated in French hunting culture for its voice — a melodious, musical bay considered one of the most beautiful sounds in the pack hunt. Traditional French venery (mounted pack hunting) places great importance on the "music" of the pack, and each breed's voice is considered part of its character. The Porcelaine's clear, ringing tone is said to carry farther than most hounds in the dense French forests where it hunted boar and deer.
  • 🌍 The Porcelaine holds the distinction of being among the rarest recognized hound breeds in the world outside its country of origin. Fewer than 500 Porcelaines are estimated to exist internationally, with the vast majority in France and a small number in the US, Canada, and Switzerland. This rarity means finding a reputable breeder requires patience, research, and often a willingness to travel or import from France.
  • 🦌 In traditional French hunting, the Porcelaine was used primarily in large packs to hunt deer and wild boar — a very different activity from American or British fox hunting. French pack hunts can involve dozens of hounds covering huge areas of forested terrain over many hours, with the Porcelaine's endurance, speed, and penetrating voice making it particularly suited to these extended chases across the varied terrain of eastern France.

📋 Porcelaine At a Glance

FCI Group
Group 6 — Scent Hounds
Origin
Franche-Comté, France (documented 1845)
Also Known As
Chien de Franche-Comté
Rarity
One of the rarest hound breeds globally