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by darylehret on 29 July 2011 - 17:07
Not the same thing at all, now are they, yet, what we are talking about are supposed to be all the same breed.
But really, they're not, because when combined they won't breed true to type. Sure, in their first generation, they might appear more uniform in appearance, temperament and drives. But by the F2 generation, you'll end up with results all over the place. The question that should be asked, is why are they not seperate breeds?! And which side should retain the original breed name. You want the universal type from the sixties? There should be no problem achieving that from strictly workingline stock, and less trouble trying to maintain your lines, than trying to insert something that isn't already there.
by VomMarischal on 29 July 2011 - 18:07

by darylehret on 29 July 2011 - 19:07
by VomMarischal on 29 July 2011 - 19:07
by Ibrahim on 29 July 2011 - 20:07
You said:
"they might appear more uniform in appearance, temperament and drives. But by the F2 generation, you'll end up with results all over the place."
Three questions please:
1. When you cross work with show and you get first generation litter and you choose say a male with good conformation and improved temperament and drives and then when he is adult you breed him to a show girl with good conformation and good show temperament and then you continue to choose best male and so on and after few generations you repeat the outcross as in first breeding above, does your above quote apply to this case?
2. When you cross work with show and take a good specimen and you again breed it to a (show work cross), do you think one may wind up with un expected temperament? and I am concerned here about dangerous temperament or trait, like unfriendliness, tendency to bite etc.
3. In continuation to above 2nd question how do you explain how the first GSDs were created? didn't Max breed various dogs of various traits and build to develop our present GSD?
P.s: Unfriendliness = Unfriendliness towards human
Ibrahim
by VomMarischal on 29 July 2011 - 20:07
by Ibrahim on 29 July 2011 - 20:07
because when combined they won't breed true to type. Sure, in their first generation, they might appear more uniform in appearance, temperament and drives. But by the F2 generation, you'll end up with results all over the place.
Ibrahim

by Red Sable on 29 July 2011 - 20:07
Temperament I do not want to see is friendly like a Golden, skittish, (spooks easily, cowardly) and so soft so that you can't look at them sternly without them slinking.
A little sharpness doesn't bother me, actually I like it as long as it doesn't come with cowardliness. I like natural aggression.
What kind of temperaments does everyones dog here have? What kind of temperament do you think they should have? And who actually thinks their dogs have the correct GSD temperament?
by Ibrahim on 29 July 2011 - 21:07
When trained it should have strong heart and nerve to investigate, search, bite on command and protect its family and property when need arises. That is in theory but not all GSDs rise up to these qualities, not the work ones too.
Ibrahim
by VomMarischal on 29 July 2011 - 21:07
Ibrahim, my females have great temperament as far as I am concerned, and I would never breed them to a showlines dog. Who with the ideal temperament would be tempted to BREED DOWN?
I guess that's what showlines people would say about conformation. Why would they breed to my girl, when her puppies will not contribute to a progeny list that's winning in shows?
It took 50 years for the two lines to separate (three lines if you count ASS) and might take a really long time to recombine.
I don't think either the people who value temperament or the people who value looks would be willing to give up their ideal.
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