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by gimme10mins on 04 April 2011 - 18:04
Thanks

by Emoore on 04 April 2011 - 23:04

by YogieBear on 04 April 2011 - 23:04
I believe she got it from Wildsteigerland....
here is her pedigree
http://www.pedigreedatabase.com/german_shepherd_dog/dog.html?id=554393
but she is working - not show.................... so are you talking about show? or working?
I am not sure what you are talking about when the black and tan not being attractive either? There is no brain washing ....maybe you are talking on the "show" line circuit---not on the working line.........I am not familiar with that..............you gotta be talking about show cause - my male is black and tan and nobody says he is undesireable................... http://www.pedigreedatabase.com/german_shepherd_dog/dog.html?id=591778

by Emoore on 05 April 2011 - 00:04

by gimme10mins on 05 April 2011 - 04:04

by Silbersee on 05 April 2011 - 14:04
how much are you going to pay me for every time I find Canto vd Wienerau in your dog's pedigree? How about $100? I will pm you my mailing address. It will be costly for you!!
Seriously, your dog is three quarters showlines and one quarter workingline, even linebred on showline dogs.
Wildsteiger Land and Trienzbachtal are old well known showline kennels.

by Silbersee on 05 April 2011 - 14:04
it is the old discussion of the Martin era. Walter and Hermann Martin promoted the black and red type and called dogs with too much black as having an "unfriendly look". Other old partners include Dr. Ernst Beck and a couple others. Most of them are either deceased or not breeding anymore.
The "showline look" was created first with heavy linebreeding on Quanto and Canto. Mutz was used sparingly. Marko was shunned completely. But you will find Marko and Mutz in old workingline pedigrees. Mutz mainly through his offspring Cliff vd Moehnequelle (Kimm Werseufer, Amigo Gronendamm, Lump Osterberger Land, Johnny Rheinhalle).
Afterwards, Palme was heavily linebred on. She and sister Perle were linebred 3-4 on Canto. And Palme is in every showline pedigree, either through Uran Wildsteiger Land or the Q-litter Arminius. In the early 90s, all linebreedings were done on Uran and/or the Q-litter, often 8, 10 or 12 times. So, how can anybody find a showline pedigree without Canto or Quanto is beyond my comprehension and I challenge anybody to proof it!
When you look at all these linebreedings, you will see that it was impossible not to perpetuate that type. It is really scary how the nowawdays inbreeding depression was created.

by Sunsilver on 05 April 2011 - 14:04
It is really scary how the nowawdays inbreeding depression was created. |
Hopefully now that the Martin era has passed, new blood can be brought in to refresh it, though I'm not going to hold my breath waiting. Anything that deviates from the type established by the Martins is still not going to capture the top spots in the German shows.

by TingiesandTails on 05 April 2011 - 16:04
To achieve a certain colour you have to line - or inbreed within a certain breeding stock - unless you want sable.
I don't think that the deep red is a desirable colour and I'm sure you will see the trend towards this will soon decline again.

by Abby Normal on 05 April 2011 - 18:04
Many purists do not care for 'brightly' coloured dogs, and over the years have migrated away from SL to WL for the above 3 reasons.
The shame of it is, to do well in the 'show' ring, you can guarantee a non blk/red will not be placed particularly highly, regardless of it's structure/ability. Consequently few compete and when they do they are vastly outnumbered by blk/red. Consequently the popularity of the alternative colours doesn't get a chance to resurface, pretty much locking SL into black and red for the foreseeable future IMO. And yes, no matter how hotly some may dispute it, it has led to a genetic bottleneck, but they simply look the other way because the wish to continue to produce 'more of the same'. My dogs have Canto/Quanto in their lines.
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