ron2
Posted : 11/28/2008 8:30:43 PM
Liesje
Implying that we were picking bitches for an 8 week old puppy is ludicris, the dog is not even house trained yet.
I thought Nikon was 14 weeks and that you were already starting with the strike stick which is how you got toothed, even though you initially described it as a bite. It sounded like a toothing to me. I agree to a timeline. Potty training. Obedience. Then tracking and protection. But that's just my idea.
Liesje
Hence why I got a male
Call me crazy but I imagine a contract could be written where you get pick of the litter in lieu of a stud fee. And, again, when I look at your question about the enforcability of speuter in a contract and you said,words to the effect of, "I don't care about the ethics question," and your writing of notes in your catalog, it sounds like a more serious interest in how Nikon finishes and how that might translate into a future line of SCH dogs.
Liesje
The bitch she bred to Gorbi is young and is her first homebred German bitch she is now breeding. If you can point out which "faults" you is as "unsalvageable" I can address those concerns.
I must have been confused. I thought she was the one who bred Kenya, whom you have pointed out has the wrong temperment for SCH and is why, in part, you got Nikon, so that you could get into SCH. And that your breeder bred her bitch to a male after 3 days of observation. Only in this post do you mention that one doesn;t go to one of these shows without knowing background of the other dogs. That's a lot of work "just for fun." Which is it? A happy lark or serious business, evaluating with an eye to breeding? Which is more consideration than a friend of mine had with her female Lab. She wanted to have her bitch bred with Shadow because he is a pretty boy. I talked her out of it and within a year or so, it was moot, as both dogs were fixed.
Which leads to a side question. In order for dogs to compete in SCH, must they be unaltered?
Liesje
As for the comment about evaluating a dog in three days you seem to have missed the part where the show is mainly a point of interest. No good breeder would attend a show without any prior knowledge or experience with the dogs entered and make breeding decisions simply based on the results of the show.
Reasonable. But you just said that your breeder bred her home-bred bitch to Gorbi, a male at the show, after 3 days. Unless she knew about Gorbi way before and that was not mentioned previously. The other thing I was noticing was that your breeder bred a show/work hybrid to another show, which created Nikon's litter and explains the slope in his rear even when he was 8 weeks old, which was not in the original breeding program of Kirschental, which is to breed a show sire with a working dam. It would be interesting to know how many of Kenya's littermates were soft. Or, how many of Nikon's littermates were soft. Or had the right focus and confidence to do SCH. You've mentioned that she wished she had kept Nikon and hopes that you stay nearby so that she can have him sire if she finds a suitable dam. That certainly makes it sound as if your breeder is the one who bred Nikon's litter. Unless she didn't cause that breeding or Kenya's, in which case she hasn't had any problem with a line, I guess. I get confused. She's breeding, she's not breeding. I thought maybe you had plans, too. If she were that gung ho about him, you might have thought, hmm, maybe he is breedworthy. What would it take to breed him, etc. I'm not saying that you shouldn't or can't breed. As I said before, you might do well at it. Especially if you are breeding with an eye toward SCH, which definitely includes both temperment and workability, and less of an eye toward a specific conformation. As valid as breeding for herding skills.
Let me side-track just a moment to show what I mean about the value of temperment and workability in breeding. Depending on which history source, the chukchi bred the chukchi dog (Siberian Husky) for 1,000 to 3,000 years. They didn't care about finished height, weight, coloration. Heck, they didn't even care if the eyes were the same color. Or all one color. They culled failures and only bred the dogs that were good with humans and could do the job. So, you had dogs ranging from 22 inches tall at the shoulder to 24 +, ranging from 45 lbs to almost 60. Wildly varying piebald colors in the coat, not unlike a wolf. Mono-color eyes, bi-colored (each eye a different color), and parti-colored (the irises were more than one color. It was one of the healthiest breeds, suffering usually from coronal dystrophy (trouble focusing at close and extreme distances) and some mild Hip Dysplasia (and I theorize that was more from the work than anything else. A 12 year old Sibe tugging into the wind at -70 F might get a little achy.) Otherwise, relatively free of defects and totally suited for the environment and the job at hand. I knew a lady with a 16 year old who could still run but not as long as she used to run. I do honestly fear for what will happen to the breed with AKC standards in place. A dog has to fall within certain physical dimensions to be judged. To the handlers and showers credit, the last few I have seen in the big shows were from working teams, proving some workability but they were no doubt chosen because they also matched the specific dimensions dictated by the AKC.
But, even for fun, I think it's great to have activities to do and goals to achieve, even if you never had Nikon sire a litter. Thing is, what if your breeder asked to have Nikon sire a litter. Would you? And would you like to have pick of the litter, especially if Nikon gets a SCH 3? I can see it being easy to get into breeding when you have found something special.
In any case, thanks for helping to educate me about the world of SCH.
I've wanted to build a cart and get Shadow pulling. He's a natural and I have trained him with mushing commands. I don't think we could get far in off-leash obedience. He's a little too Sibe in my opinion. But I could be wrong, there. But if we never do anything but walk and practice obedience and serve as a teaching aid for one instructor I know, that's fine, too. This trainer I know was working with a client's dog and was practicing the watch me command. And Shadow was the perfect foil. He liked the other dog and the traded sniffs. I had him in a down and he only didn't like it as much when the other dog was licking and sniffing him too much, which allowed the "Watch me" command to be used. Shadow was showing great tolerance to the exuberant younger dog. We have our moments, now and then.