Bernese Mountain Dog · Australian Shepherd · Poodle

Australian Mountain Doodle:
Complete Breed Guide

The Australian Mountain Doodle is a triple-cross hybrid dog created by combining the Bernese Mountain Dog, Australian Shepherd, and Poodle — designed to bring together the calm temperament of the Bernese, the working intelligence of the Australian Shepherd, and the low-shedding coat genetics of the Poodle.

Also known as: Swiss Doodle  ·  Aussie Mountain Doodle  ·  Aussiebernedoodle  ·  Australian Bernedoodle

View Planned Litters Learn About the Breed Australian Mountain Doodles raised at Stokeshire Designer Doodles in Medford, Wisconsin
Breed at a Glance

Australian Mountain Doodle — Quick Facts

Breed TypeDesigner hybrid — triple cross. Not AKC or FCI recognized.
Parent BreedsBernese Mountain Dog × Australian Shepherd × Poodle
Also CalledSwiss Doodle, Aussie Mountain Doodle, Aussiebernedoodle, Australian Bernedoodle
Size RangeToy/Micro, Mini, Medium, Standard — 10 to 100 lbs adult
Coat TypesWavy, curly, furnished, or unfurnished — determined by RSPO2, KRT71, and FGF5 genetics
Shedding LevelLow to moderate — furnished dogs with curly coats shed least
TemperamentIntelligent, loyal, calm, affectionate, adaptable
Exercise Need60–90 minutes daily structured activity plus mental stimulation
TrainabilityVery high — positive reinforcement, fast acquisition, strong retention
Lifespan10–16 years (smaller dogs live longer)
Best ForActive families, allergy-sensitive homes, therapy dog programs, first-time owners with training commitment
Where We BreedStokeshire raises Australian Mountain Doodles in Medford, Wisconsin — nationwide transport available
PricingTypically $3,000–$5,500 depending on size, coat genetics, and program. See Stokeshire puppy pricing.

Breed Definition

What Is an Australian Mountain Doodle?

An Australian Mountain Doodle is a triple-cross hybrid produced by combining three distinct parent breeds: the Bernese Mountain Dog, the Australian Shepherd, and the Poodle. The cross is intentionally designed to unite three complementary qualities — the calm, devoted temperament of the Bernese Mountain Dog; the working intelligence and trainability of the Australian Shepherd; and the low-shedding coat genetics of the Poodle.

The naming of this cross is not standardized. Swiss Doodle, Aussie Mountain Doodle, Aussiebernedoodle, and Australian Bernedoodle are all used to describe the same or closely related three-way pairing. Note that "Australian Bernedoodle" is also used by some programs to describe a Bernese Mountain Dog crossed with an Australian Labradoodle — a multi-generation cross that may introduce additional breeds (Labrador, Cocker Spaniel) beyond the three described here. On this page, Stokeshire Designer Doodles uses "Australian Mountain Doodle" as the primary name and defines it specifically as Bernese Mountain Dog × Australian Shepherd × Poodle. For families weighing this cross against related doodle breeds, our Australian Mountain Doodle vs. Bernedoodle vs. Aussiedoodle comparison walks through the practical differences.

The broader doodle context is well-documented — intentional Poodle crosses for guide dog work are documented as far back as the late 1980s. The specific Australian Mountain Doodle cross is a more recent development, with breeder-reported origins varying by program. It emerged from the same broader boom in Poodle crosses, rather than from a single founding event, and no major kennel club registry recognizes it as a standardized breed with a parent club and breed standard.

The goal of this cross is balance: the Bernese provides the anchor, the Aussie provides the spark, and the Poodle provides the coat.

Breed Composition

Which Breeds Make Up an Australian Mountain Doodle?

Each parent breed contributes distinct traits. Understanding each lineage helps families understand the range of outcomes possible and the importance of health screening each parent before breeding.

The Calm Anchor

Bernese Mountain Dog

Originally bred as a Swiss farm dog, the Bernese is known for its devoted, gentle-giant temperament. It contributes calm, loyalty, and patience with children. Bernese Mountain Dogs have a higher incidence of histiocytic sarcoma and hip/elbow dysplasia relative to the general dog population. OFA evaluations and full genetic panels are standard in responsible Bernese programs.

The Intelligence Layer

Australian Shepherd

Developed in the American West as a working herding breed, the Australian Shepherd contributes sharp problem-solving, athleticism, and the merle genetics behind the breed's striking color patterns. Australian Shepherds carry a significant rate of the MDR1/ABCB1 drug sensitivity variant — AMD puppies may inherit this and should be tested before any drug exposure.

The Coat Foundation

Poodle

Available in Standard, Miniature, and Toy sizes, the Poodle contributes trainability, emotional attunement, and the coat genetics associated with low shedding: the RSPO2 furnishings gene and MC5R shedding variant. The Poodle size used is the primary driver of adult AMD size. Standard Poodles are screened for hip dysplasia, PRA, von Willebrand's disease, and gastric dilation-volvulus risk.

Generation Guide

F1, F1B, F2, Multigen Australian Mountain Doodles

Generation labels describe the breeding structure behind a puppy. In triple-cross dogs, these labels are not universally standardized. A common F1 AMD structure is an F1 Bernedoodle (50% Bernese / 50% Poodle) crossed with an F1 Aussiedoodle (50% Australian Shepherd / 50% Poodle) — producing approximately 50% Poodle, 25% Bernese, 25% Australian Shepherd. This is a breeding-structure expectation, not a guarantee for every program.

GenerationTypical Genetic Structure Coat ExpectationBest Suited For
F1~50% Poodle, ~25% Bernese, ~25% AussieWavy to straight; moderate shedding; coat varies by furnishings statusFamilies comfortable with coat variability and strong hybrid vigor
F1B~75% Poodle, ~12.5% Bernese, ~12.5% Aussie (F1 × Poodle)Curlier, lower-shedding; more consistently allergy-friendlyAllergy-sensitive homes; first-time doodle owners
F2~50% Poodle, ~25% Bernese, ~25% Aussie (F1 × F1)Wide variation possible — coat and size less predictableFamilies comfortable with variability in outcomes
F2B~62.5% Poodle (F2 × Poodle)Wavy to curly; low-shedding; more predictable furnishingsStructured households; therapy potential; coat consistency priority
MultigenMultiple generations — proportions vary by program designMost consistent; curly or wavy; lowest sheddingAllergy-sensitive families; maximum coat predictability
Note on generation labels: Because this is a triple-cross hybrid, generation terminology is not consistent across breeders. Always ask for the genetic makeup and health testing documentation on both parents — not just the generation label. Coat outcome predictability also depends on specific gene variants, not just generation.

Temperament & Lifestyle

Australian Mountain Doodle Temperament

The Australian Mountain Doodle temperament reflects the combined influence of all three parent breeds. Modern canine behavioral genetics research confirms that breed ancestry is a meaningful but modest predictor of individual behavior — one large genomics study found breed ancestry explains approximately 9% of behavioral variation across individual dogs, with environment, socialization, and training playing a much larger role. This means temperament language for any cross should use "tends to," "often," and "varies by individual" — and should emphasize early socialization over breed guarantees.

With that framing, Australian Mountain Doodles from well-bred, well-socialized programs tend to be: adaptable, people-oriented, emotionally attuned, calm in settled environments, and highly responsive to training. These qualities make them well-suited to family life and, when properly developed, therapy and support work.

IntelligenceHigh
TrainabilityVery High
Energy LevelModerate–High
Calm NatureHigh
Family FriendlyHigh
SheddingLow*
Socialization NeedModerate–High
AdaptabilityHigh
Apartment SuitedMini/Toy Yes†

* Furnished dogs with curly coats shed least. No dog is 100% hypoallergenic.  † With consistent daily exercise and mental stimulation.

Living Environment

Mini and Toy Australian Mountain Doodles adapt well to apartment living provided their exercise and mental stimulation needs are met consistently — they do not require a yard, they require time and activity from their owner. Medium and Standard AMDs can also live in apartments with a disciplined exercise routine, but their larger size and higher energy output make it more demanding. All size categories benefit from outdoor access and should not be expected to self-exercise in a yard without human engagement.

Who the Australian Mountain Doodle Is Not Ideal For

  • Households where the dog will be left alone 8+ hours daily — Australian Shepherd lineage increases separation anxiety risk without proper conditioning. Separation anxiety is a clinical behavioral condition that typically requires a structured desensitization protocol, not just gradually longer absences
  • Families unable to commit to 60–90 minutes of daily structured exercise
  • Those expecting low-maintenance grooming — furnished coats require brushing multiple times per week and professional grooming every 6–8 weeks to prevent matting
  • First-time owners who are not prepared to invest in early training, socialization, and ongoing obedience work
Adult Australian Mountain Doodle Alby — Stokeshire Designer Doodles
Penelope — Australian Mountain Doodle dam at Stokeshire Designer Doodles
Size Guide

How Big Do Australian Mountain Doodles Get?

Adult size is primarily determined by the Poodle parent used. Standard AMDs typically reach 23–29 inches and 50–100 lbs. Mini AMDs typically reach 17–20 inches and 25–35 lbs. No specific adult size is guaranteed in any hybrid breeding program.

SizeAdult WeightAdult HeightFull Growth ByLifespan Est.
Toy / Micro10–24 lbs12–18 in10–12 months14–16 years
Mini25–35 lbs17–20 in~12 months13–15 years
Medium35–50 lbs18–22 in12–18 months12–14 years
Standard50–100 lbs23–29 in18–24 months10–13 years
Toy/Micro
10–24 lbs
Mini
25–35 lbs
Medium
35–50 lbs
Standard
50–100 lbs

→ Full size guide: growth timelines, growth plate protection, and lifespan by size

Coat & Colors

Australian Mountain Doodle Coat Types

Whether a doodle sheds, how curly it looks, and whether it is appropriate for allergy-sensitive homes are all determined by specific, testable gene variants — not by generation labels. Four loci control the coat characteristics families care most about.

RSPO2 Furnishings Gene

Controls facial hair — beard, eyebrows, moustache. Furnished dogs (FF or Ff) have the classic doodle appearance. Unfurnished dogs (ff) have natural facial hair and shed considerably more. Unfurnished AMDs are not appropriate for allergy-sensitive households and are never marketed as hypoallergenic at Stokeshire.

KRT71 Curl Gene

Determines coat curl tightness. Two copies = curly; one copy = wavy; zero = straight or soft wave. Curlier coats shed the least but mat most quickly without brushing. The wavy coat is the most common and widely preferred expression in AMD programs.

MC5R Shedding Gene

Influences the hair growth cycle turnover rate. Poodles typically carry the low-shedding variant — a primary genetic reason doodle-type dogs distribute less hair into the environment. Shedding is multigenic; no single gene guarantees a non-shedding outcome.

FGF5 Coat Length Gene

Controls overall coat length. Most furnished AMDs carry the long-coat FGF5 variant through Poodle lineage. Dogs expressing the short-coat variant will have noticeably shorter coats regardless of curl or furnishings status.

→ Deep dive: all four genes explained, shedding scale, genotype outcome table, merle safety

Coat Patterns & Colors

The Australian Shepherd parent introduces the merle gene (PMEL/SILV locus) to the cross. The Bernese Mountain Dog contributes the tri-color foundation. Common patterns in AMD litters — including the striking parti and merle parti combinations — are summarized below:

Tri-Color

Black or brown base with white markings and copper/tan points. The classic Bernese-influenced pattern.

Blue Merle

Black-based merle — grey, black, and white marbling. Often paired with blue or heterochromatic eyes.

Red Merle

Brown-based merle. Red, chocolate, and cream marbling.

Phantom

Base color with secondary markings above eyes, cheeks, legs, and chest.

Parti

Large patches of two or more colors, typically with significant white. See full parti guide →

Tuxedo / Bi-Color

Solid base with white chest and paws, or two predominant colors.

Merle safety: Two merle-carrying dogs must never be bred together. Double-merle offspring (MM) face significant risk of blindness and deafness. Stokeshire confirms merle status on all breeding dogs via Embark before any pairing. For more on the genetics behind merle parti, blue merle, and red merle inheritance, see our parti and merle pattern guide.
Grooming & Maintenance

Australian Mountain Doodle Grooming Requirements

Low-shedding doodle coats are not low-maintenance coats — this is the trade-off most breeder pages fail to explain. Curly and wavy furnished coats retain shed hair within the coat structure rather than releasing it into the environment. That retained hair accumulates, tangles, and mats without consistent brushing. The lower the shedding, the higher the brushing requirement.

Curly · Furnished Every 2–3 Days

Brushing

Professional grooming every 6–8 weeks. Highest grooming demand of all coat types. Mat risk is significant without consistent attention.

Wavy · Furnished 3–4× Per Week

Brushing

Professional grooming every 6–8 weeks. Most common AMD coat. More manageable than curly but still mats in friction zones without regular attention.

Fleece / Soft Wave 2–3× Per Week

Brushing

Professional grooming every 8–10 weeks. Most forgiving furnished coat to maintain, though mat-prone zones still need regular attention.

Unfurnished 1–2× Per Week

Brushing

Lower mat risk due to natural shedding cycle. Professional grooming every 10–12 weeks. Higher environmental shedding than furnished coats.

The Seven Mat-Prone Zones

Mats develop fastest in areas where coat experiences repeated friction. These zones require extra attention every brushing session regardless of overall coat condition: behind the ears, collar zone, armpits, groin/inner thighs, under harness straps, facial furnishings, and paw feathering. Always brush before bathing — water tightens existing tangles and sets them permanently.