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by Hundmutter on 07 July 2016 - 11:07

by susie on 08 July 2016 - 17:07
Vello wasn´t famous for his working abilities first and foremost, but for his outlook, although he was oversized...I think together with some others he is responsible for the oversize in our breed. People used him although he was too big - they liked him ...
He is responsible for a lot of good dogs, and he is responsible for a lot of oversized dogs - but honestly, in case he wouldn´t have been bred, breeders would have used other studs, and for sure these studs would have been responsible for other influential / great siblings. We will never know...
My point simply is that there are that much German Shepherd Dogs out there, that we don´t need to use "faulty" dogs, be them "faulty" in case of temperament or conformation.
by Bavarian Wagon on 08 July 2016 - 17:07

by susie on 08 July 2016 - 18:07
The use of Vello clearly showed a "tendency" - even in the fifties people liked and still like "big, strong" dogs, seems to be in our nature, but during the same time a lot of people forget about agility/working ability and health.
"Our" breed ( in case of conformation ) was created to be a working dog breed ( based on real shepherd dogs ), very agile, very persistent, the perfect trotter.
A dog "willing to work" but "not able to work" conformation wise in real life is not better than a dog "able to work" but "not willing to work" temperament wise.
As someone who handled and saw a lot of different dogs during the AD trial I can tell you that neither overseized nor too heavy dogs do fit the breed standard ( as don´t overangulated nor underangulated dogs ).
There often is a difference between our personal preferences and the breed standard ( and this statement includes owners, breeders, and judges ).

by susie on 08 July 2016 - 18:07
15.000 German Shepherd Dogs currently bred in my country / year. How many in your country / year? West Europe? East Europe?
Don´t tell me that only the heavily oversized dogs do have that special trait a breeder is looking for...
We are lying to ourselves - we like the stud, we own the female, the puppies are easy to sell, and so on...

by Hundmutter on 08 July 2016 - 18:07
Perhaps we should retitle this topic "Character of the German Shepherd Dog BREEDER". I wish there was some way of ensuring that only people of good judgement and with the interests of the breed at heart would be able to mate them and produce / sell puppies ! Of course it is right that a dog who is just a little oversize but who is very correct in all other aspects of both temperament and physical attributes ought to be bred from, but at least with the proviso that the opp. sex partner is NOT also oversized; but unless we have some universal and draconian way of dictating that, we are reliant on the goodwill and common sense of breeders everywhere, so we are always going to carry with us that proportion of people who think it is okay to breed dogs with massive heads and/or body structure, who will unhesitatingly put a large dog to a large bitch and think there is nothing wrong in doing so. Just because they can. As the owner until a year ago of a dog who stood 66.5 cm, I feel this really personally !

by susie on 08 July 2016 - 19:07
For sure the character of the breeder does create the character of his/her dogs...
Every breeder needs to learn how to distinguish between a "good dog" and a "breedworthy dog".
A lot of people feel personally attacked when told their beloved dog shouldn´t be bred - I never understood why. I loved all of my dogs, but not all of them would have been breedworthy.
Maybe I think so, because in Germany we are used to breed restrictions.
For us it´s daily routine to raise a dog, train a dog, and then be told "not suitable for breeding".
No discussion, no option - we just move on.

by Xeph on 08 July 2016 - 19:07
I can go an inch either way on the standard, personally. There are bigger problems. And we will always be breeding faulty dogs to other faulty dogs...that's what breeding is. If there was a perfect dog we could, y'know...stop.

by susie on 08 July 2016 - 19:07
There are no "perfect" dogs, but the goal should be to breed dogs with as much advantages as possible, and to the same time as few disadvantages as possible.
Right now we are talking about seize, but the discussion could be about health, teeth, testicles, color, temperament, working ability, too - no difference.
There is always an excuse for someone who wants to breed.
by Bavarian Wagon on 08 July 2016 - 19:07
I definitely agree with you about the size thing. I personally prefer dogs that are closer to the middle and further from the top of the standard. For a bitch, the smaller the better. As a helper, and a handler, I see the benefits of "smaller" dogs. I prefer them. I also see the direct correlation with size and drive loss. A large dog, with tons of drive is a rarity and almost a unicorn. The majority of large dogs I see, definitely have way less drive than a similar lined dog which is smaller/within standard. I've seen very very few dogs over the breed standard that have had what I would consider national/world level drive. It's proven to me that the SV knew what they were talking about when they decided on size standards in regards to a working dog.
As an example...I currently handle a dog who is within standard. He has a litter mate who is definitely pushing the top of the standard. Both dogs are actively trained in IPO, but mine has 10 times the drive the litter mate does. Some of it is training, some of it is just the difference in the dogs themselves, but the drive levels are so far apart its hard to believe they come from the same litter sometimes.
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