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by joanro on 03 August 2017 - 20:08
by Mackenzie on 03 August 2017 - 20:08
I have read on this PDB in this thread and other threads posters have said they have made close inbreeding and were satisfied with the results but none have admitted to having some of the failures and faults of the inbreed. The continuation of close inbreeding is just stamping the problems further into the breed.
All of this is done without a care in the world about the damage being done.
Mackenzie
by joanro on 03 August 2017 - 20:08
If I had failures, I would not say all results were positive. No hip prob, temperaments and nerves strong, drives balanced and all with clear heads , sound structure... Happy happy !
Stamping in best traits and genetic strengths...have offspring from line bred dogs to prove it.

by Jenni78 on 03 August 2017 - 20:08
by joanro on 03 August 2017 - 20:08
Jenni,

by Jenni78 on 03 August 2017 - 21:08
by Mackenzie on 03 August 2017 - 21:08
It became clear to me that the close inbreeding that occurred in Germany in the 1990's was not good and the only consistent thing from that time has been the color. I stopped all breeding from 1994 and I have not bred anything from that time.
People will always breed for the wrong trait ignoring the inbreed or outcross matings.
Mackenzie
by beetree on 03 August 2017 - 22:08
When the good genes come together, they are good. When the bad genes come together, they are really, really bad. And don't fool yourselves, the freaks that happen are the UGLY truth, and culling them, means: dead.
If you know you will have to kill those ones to get those "clones" being sought, that is the issue one should be confronting before attempting such close line breedings. This site has a horrific example of this exact scenario in its pages. It is an eye opener for the uninitiated.
by GSCat on 03 August 2017 - 23:08
YaYax4--
I look for OFA (or non-U.S. equivalent organization) certified hips and no DM, meaning not even a carrier. (Some) of the information is available here on PDB in the pedigree. The information you want may not be on PDB because the testing hasn't been done, the results aren't back yet, or the owner has not yet uploaded the results to PDB. However, you can search on the OFA website for a specific dog. You can also see what tests are recommended for each breed, read about the various disorders, see what each test entails (x-rays, blood test, exam, etc.), and see what the different ratings and certifications mean.
http://www.ofa.org/index.html
I would also look at the breed survey if I were going to send my bitch overseas for breeding. Good for here in the U.S., too, but I don't see it as often as overseas, and in the U.S. I can actually go see the potential stud for myself.
https://www.germanshepherddog.com/about/german-shepherd-dogs/breed-surveys/
http://gsdca.org/images/SV%20Documents/Breed%20Survey%20Rules%20and%20Procedures%20041215.pdf
http://gsdca.org/images/SV%20Documents/GSDCA%20Breed%20Survey%20Guidelines%20011016.pdf
This is so important to me that until I have the health tests done after my dog turns two, I won't even consider breeding her. If the results show she is an appropriate candidate for breeding, then the decision will be made whether or not to breed, and if so, to whom. If it is at all possible, I will also do breed survey before making the decision of whether or not to breed her.

by Jenni78 on 03 August 2017 - 23:08
Mackenzie, you're not seeing what I am saying- my point is that it is IMPOSSIBLE to "make" genes show up when linebreeding or inbreeding if the genes don't exist in the pair in the first place. I am not talking about spontaneous mutations. On the contrary, it *is* possible to weed problems out in some cases, by exposing who is carrying them and go from there to breed away from certain problems.
I agree that regardless of inbreeding or linebreeding, people will still select for the wrong traits. However, that is too subjective to cover here.
I'm not quite sure why Beetree says I mean "kill" when I said "cull." If I meant kill I would say kill. But I don't. I mean, say, never breed any dog from a certain pairing if something nasty cropped up, place them all in non-breeding homes, vasectomized or with hysterectomies. That is every bit as effective as preventing reproduction as killing the poor things.
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