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by Bavarian Wagon on 27 December 2016 - 17:12

by Sunsilver on 27 December 2016 - 17:12
Yes, Westminister. Hundmutter is in England, I think, so she was probably thinking of the Royal Family...
BV, yes, that would be ideal, but with the ASL's - baby steps, baby steps...
Some of them can work and do have nice, correct movement. Here's 2 pics from my files that show that's true: You can ge the dog's names by right-clicking on the photo.
by joanro on 27 December 2016 - 19:12
Both these dogs represent my ideal gsd...female in my previous post and her brother, today.
Female
by Bavarian Wagon on 27 December 2016 - 20:12

by Hundmutter on 27 December 2016 - 20:12
I know what you intended, Sunny, but looking at your post from a perspective of a board participant living in Europe ...

by Sunsilver on 27 December 2016 - 20:12
Joan, nice dogs! Yup, that's what they SHOULD look like!
Love the playful expression on the female's face in the 3rd photo.
BV. agree with you. When one of my dogs was in a class of about 30 dogs getting the CGC, I could NOT believe how low the standard was set. Very few dogs were capable of walking nicely on a loose leash, and even fewer were paying close attention to their handlers.
The professional trainer who had helped me prepare for the test, and had come along to watch said: "I'm probably going to be seeing a lot of these dogs in my classes soon!"

by susie on 27 December 2016 - 20:12
I want the breed
- to be within the FCI standard conformationwise ( I don´t care if it´s a VA or a G rating ),
- to be healthscreened ( HD/ED ),
- to be free of allergies
- to be titled either in IPO or something adequate, be it Mondio, Ring, or something else
- to be breed surveyed ( cause I am interested in a breed besides being interested in working dogs )
I want people to understand that
- a working dog breed must have the proven ( not assumed ) ability to work
- any dog used for breeding has to fit to the breed standard
- any dog used for breeding has to be healthy
I want the officials of SV
- to stick to the rules ( be it sport or conformation ) and
- to judge according to the rules
I want breeders ( pet owners? ) to understand
- that not every dog is breedworthy
- that it´s not about health or conformation or working ability,
but about all of it...

by Hundmutter on 27 December 2016 - 20:12
Sunsilver, quick question: is it possible for a winning dog from a Canadian SV show like the Schutzhund regional that you reference go on to achieve Canadian Champion status in purebred beauty competitions run under Canadian Kennel Club auspices ? Would that win count as a qualifier, or part of a points addition if you are still running Points evaluation ?IE is that even technically possible, setting aside the question of conformational 'type' ?
by vk4gsd on 27 December 2016 - 20:12

by Hundmutter on 27 December 2016 - 20:12
Susie I couldn't agree with you more (although it seems difficult to convince some people that what the Germans accept as 'proof' of 'working' ability counts for anything, set against the Personal Protection Dog / non-Sport view ...);
but have you owned at least one dog you felt met EVERY point on your list and was your 'ideal' dog made flesh, which is what I think Mith was asking ?
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