Schillerstövare 🦊

Schillerstövare

Scenthound / FCI Group 6 · Purebred · Sweden's fastest and most elegant hound — a striking tan-and-black scent hound bred by Per Schiller for speed, endurance, and a bold voice across the snow-covered forests of Scandinavia

40–53 lbsWeight
19–24 inHeight
12–15 yrsLifespan
HighEnergy

🐾 Overview

The Schillerstövare (Schiller Hound) is Sweden's most celebrated scent hound — a lean, athletic, and strikingly beautiful breed developed in the late 19th century by Swedish farmer and dog breeder Per Schiller to be the fastest and most effective hare hound in Scandinavia. The breed takes its name directly from its creator, who exhibited the first Schillerstövare dogs at the Stockholm Dog Show in 1886, where they caused a sensation. The breed combines elegant conformation — a lean, deep-chested body built for sustained high-speed running — with exceptional scenting ability and a bold, melodious voice that can be heard across vast snowfields.

The Schillerstövare is primarily a hunting breed, used in Sweden and neighboring Scandinavian countries for hare and fox hunting across open terrain and forest. Its speed across snow is legendary — Swedish hunters call it "the fastest of all Swedish hounds." The FCI recognized the breed in Group 6 (Scenthounds and Related Breeds). Outside Scandinavia, the Schillerstövare is virtually unknown, making it one of the more obscure FCI-recognized breeds internationally. In Sweden, however, it is a beloved national breed with a passionate following among hunters who prize its combination of beauty, speed, and scenting ability.

📸 Photo Gallery

Real Schillerstövares — their striking tan-and-black saddle markings and lean, athletic build.

😊 Temperament & Personality

The Schillerstövare is a cheerful, energetic, and affectionate hound — one of the friendlier and more family-compatible of the Scandinavian hunting breeds.

  • Energetic, enthusiastic, and cheerful — a genuinely happy-natured hound
  • Affectionate and good-natured with its family, including children
  • High prey drive — will follow a scent with total focus; not safe off-leash in open areas
  • Generally friendly toward other dogs — accustomed to working in pairs or packs
  • Independent on the scent trail — bred to work without constant direction
  • Can be vocal — the melodious hound voice is a breed trait that neighbors may notice
  • More sociable and family-friendly than many hunting breed counterparts

🏃 Exercise & Activity Needs

  • Daily exercise: 60–90 minutes — a high-endurance hunting hound built for sustained running
  • Thrives with hunting, running, hiking, and scent work
  • Needs a securely fenced yard — will follow a scent over the horizon without hesitation
  • Excellent partner for joggers and trail runners
  • Nosework and tracking games provide essential mental stimulation
  • Boredom produces howling and destructive behavior — exercise is non-negotiable

✂️ Grooming & Coat Care

  • Short, dense, close-lying coat — a low-maintenance working hound coat
  • Striking two-color pattern: tan body with a black saddle and markings
  • Weekly brushing with a hound glove to remove dead hair and maintain coat sheen
  • Minimal shedding compared to double-coated breeds — moderate year-round
  • Bathe every 6–8 weeks or as needed after field work
  • Check and clean drop ears weekly — hound ears are prone to moisture and infection

🎓 Training

  • Intelligent and trainable but has classic hound independence when on a scent
  • Positive reinforcement with food and praise works well
  • Basic obedience achievable; recall in scent-distracting environments is difficult
  • Hunting training is natural and rewarding — instincts are easily channeled
  • Early socialization produces a well-adjusted, confident adult
  • Better suited to hunters and active outdoor owners than to casual pet owners

🏥 Health & Common Issues

A healthy and long-lived breed — Swedish breeding programs have maintained good genetic health with relatively low incidence of hereditary conditions.

Hip dysplasia (screen breeding stock) Ear infections (drop ears — check regularly) Bloat / GDV (deep-chested hound build) Eye conditions (occasional)
Average Lifespan
12–15 years
Size Category
Medium · 40–53 lbs
Vet Visits
Annual wellness; hip evaluation for breeders; weekly ear checks
Pet Insurance
Recommended

🏠 Is a Schillerstövare Right for You?

The Schillerstövare is an excellent choice for hunters, active outdoor enthusiasts, and families in rural or semi-rural settings who want a cheerful, affectionate, and energetic hound. Its friendly temperament makes it more family-compatible than many hunting breeds, while its exceptional hunting ability satisfies serious hunters. The key requirements are: significant daily exercise, a securely fenced yard, and acceptance of its hound voice. For someone who wants a versatile hunting companion that is also a warm family dog, the Schillerstövare is a hidden gem — largely unknown outside Sweden but well worth seeking out.

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

🍽️ How Much to Feed a Schillerstövare

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

📏 Daily Portion Guide

40 lbs (less active)
2–2½ cups/day
47 lbs (active adult)
2½–3 cups/day
53 lbs (heavy hunting season)
3–3¾ cups/day

✅ Best Foods for Schillerstövares

  • High-quality medium-breed or active-dog formula with meat as the primary ingredient
  • High protein to support an active, running hound's muscle maintenance
  • Omega-3 fatty acids support joint health and coat condition
  • Avoid feeding before or immediately after vigorous exercise — bloat risk
  • Keep the breed lean — the Schillerstövare's hunting ability depends on an athletic build

🚫 Dangerous Foods

ChocolateGrapes & RaisinsOnions & GarlicXylitolMacadamia NutsAlcoholAvocado

💡 Tip: Boarding your Schillerstövare?

Schillerstövares are among the more boardable of the hunting breeds — their friendly, sociable nature means they adapt reasonably well to a kennel environment with proper exercise. Choose a facility that provides at least 2 hours of outdoor exercise daily and has experience with hound breeds. One consideration: the Schillerstövare's melodious hound voice can be vocal in a kennel environment, so ensure the facility is designed to handle vocal hound breeds without stress to the dog or other boarders.

💰 How Much Does a Schillerstövare Cost?

Reputable Breeder (Sweden/Scandinavia)
5,000–12,000 SEK (~$450–$1,100)
International Import
$1,500–$3,000
Rescue/Adoption
Virtually unavailable outside Scandinavia
Note ⚠️
Extremely rare outside Sweden — import is the only option for most international buyers

📅 Monthly Cost

Budget approximately $80–$150 per month for a Schillerstövare.

Food
$40–$65/month
Vet (annual)
$350–$600/year
Pet insurance
$25–$45/month
Grooming
$10–$20/month (low maintenance coat)

🧬 Schillerstövare Mix Breeds

Deliberate Schillerstövare crosses are virtually nonexistent outside Scandinavia. The breed is rare enough globally that all breeding efforts focus on maintaining the pure breed. Occasional working crosses with Hamiltonstövare or other Swedish hounds occur among hunters, but no established designer mixes exist.

🐾 Schillerstövare × Hamiltonstövare

An occasional cross between Sweden's two most celebrated hound breeds — combining Schillerstövare speed with Hamiltonstövare's powerful nose and larger frame. A capable, elegant Swedish hound of mixed heritage. Rare; not intentionally bred for the pet market.

Size
45–65 lbs
Energy
High
Shedding
Moderate
Price
Not intentionally bred

🎉 Amazing Facts About Schillerstövares

  • 🏆 The Schillerstövare holds a unique distinction in dog show history: it is one of the only breeds named directly after the individual who exhibited it at its debut show, and whose dogs won the top prize at that same inaugural appearance. When Per Schiller presented his hounds at the Stockholm Dog Show in 1886, judges were so impressed by the breed's elegance, conformation, and quality that the dogs won in their class. The breed was named "Schillerstövare" in Per Schiller's honor — the Swedish word "stövare" means "hound" — making it one of the most directly and personally named breeds in the FCI registry.
  • ❄️ The Schillerstövare was specifically bred to work in deep snow — a hunting condition that makes speed across terrain critically important. Swedish hare hunting is typically conducted in winter across snow-covered forests and fields, where the hound must be fast enough to keep a hare in motion and close enough to give tongue (bay loudly) so the hunter can track its position. The Schillerstövare's lean, long-legged build — closer to a sighthound than most scent hounds — and its light, dense coat were specifically selected for speed across snowy terrain. Hunters who have compared the breed to other Swedish hounds consistently describe it as noticeably faster on snow.
  • 🎵 The Schillerstövare is celebrated in Sweden for the quality of its "voice" — the melodious, far-carrying bay it gives when on a scent. Swedish hunting culture places significant importance on hound voice: the bay must be loud enough to be heard at a distance across open terrain, melodious rather than harsh, and distinctive enough that a hunter can identify his dog's call from among a group. The Schillerstövare is considered to have one of the finest hound voices of all Swedish breeds — a fact that is formally evaluated in Swedish hunting trials where voice quality is scored alongside scenting ability and speed.
  • 🌍 The Schillerstövare is practically unknown outside Scandinavia, making it one of the "hidden gems" of the FCI registry. While breeds like the Hamiltonstövare have slowly gained an international following, the Schillerstövare remains almost exclusively a Swedish breed — with the vast majority of the world population in Sweden and a small presence in Norway and Finland. This obscurity is partly cultural (Swedish hunters are not generally motivated to export their best working dogs) and partly practical (the breed's requirements — hunting access, large outdoor space, tolerance for vocal hounds — limit its appeal outside its native context). For rare breed enthusiasts, it represents one of the most distinctive and least-known FCI scent hounds in existence.
  • 📋 Per Schiller created the breed by crossing several different hound types in a deliberate effort to produce a specifically superior hare hound. The foundational crosses are believed to have included German Hounds (Bracken types), Swiss Hounds, and possibly English Foxhound blood — all chosen for speed, nose, and endurance rather than conformation. The resulting breed was fixed sufficiently by the 1880s to show and name, and the Swedish Kennel Club (SKK) registered the breed formally shortly after the 1886 Stockholm show. The breed standard has remained relatively stable since then, reflecting the breed's origins as a functional hunting tool rather than a show creation.

📋 Schillerstövare At a Glance

FCI Group
Group 6 — Scenthounds and Related Breeds
Origin
Sweden
Also Known As
Schiller Hound
Unique Feature
Named for its creator; fastest Swedish hound in snow; celebrated for hound voice quality