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by jdh on 27 December 2006 - 03:12
by Preston on 27 December 2006 - 06:12
by Preston on 27 December 2006 - 06:12

by Bob-O on 27 December 2006 - 14:12

by DesertRangers on 27 December 2006 - 14:12

by animules on 27 December 2006 - 17:12

by wildstrobe on 27 December 2006 - 19:12
by marci on 19 February 2008 - 09:02
Can anyone share his ideas on what bloodlines were used to correct "Rolf blood" in our GSDs..??? ALF NORDFELSEN was one... Who else...??? And... is the "IRON back" the term to describe the slightly arched back...??? If that is so... then Quanto Wienerau had a Roach back ... I haven't seen any picture of a roach older than this one... Roulette Wienerau and she has missing ancestors through Delfy von Schaffhausen... I was able to see a picture of Quanto's father Condor Zollgens... that has a slight impression of a roach...
http://www.pedigreedatabase.com/gsd/pedigree/1238.html
by Speaknow on 20 February 2008 - 00:02
by Preston on 20 February 2008 - 05:02
Speaknow, if you have a GSD with a front that has a steep upper arm and thus can't reach very far coupled with a sickle hocked rear (long lower thight bone) and steep croup, there is a given imbalance between the front and rear. The front has short reach and the rear has long reach as well as a powerful lifting/propelling force (for short periods of time--ie diminished endurance). There are several ways for the dog to compensate. One is to lift and hold the front legs up (like a saddle bred horse) or a second is to bend the frront legs upward at the elbow (false reach--appealing to the uninformed). The key is to keep the front legs up and off the ground until the rear end's rear extension is completed. The best structural representation of this incorrect rear action vs correct action is Wynthia Strickland's classic book on the GSD. Her book is bar far the best I have ever read and well worth acquiring and owning.
The long back (versus the short back) constitutes a longer lever. It's like a seesaw. If one side is very long, even a light person can raise a heavy person on the other side if it is shorter. Therefore if the dog's back is long the weight of the front assembly serves to stabilize the excessive drive and lift of the sickle hocked rear, which itself has a strabnge wind up, spring discharge action (this action appears very impressive to many, especially American Shepherd show enthusiasts and AKC GSD specialty judges--however, it is very incorrect and there is diminished working ability, endurance and soundness.
The overall cost of this long back is not just reduced endurance, but a structurally weaker back, less efficient transmission of power through the back, and diminished attractiveness of the GSD (exaggerated, distorted, stretched profile). A GSD with a short iron back flexes less, looks much more attractive, transmits power and drive much more effectively and efficiently, has less back problems orhopedically, less myopathies and better general health holding all other things constant.
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