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by Ace952 on 18 January 2011 - 16:01
Also,
What would consider as the prime age range to breed a male & female? At what age do you consider a dog too old to breed?
Would you breed without a breed survey being done? If so why don't you feel it isn't necessary?

by Jenni78 on 18 January 2011 - 16:01
I have to say that just in my own personal experience, my bitch has made a deeper stamp on her pups than any sire I have bred her to. It may be that I am very careful in planning litters for specific purposes, but in all of them, I see miniatures of her. It's as if she clones herself. I try to avoid "wildcards" and make sure the dogs will complement each other nicely, but this is more than that. She reproduces herself over and over again, consistently w/in litters. In the pups I've held back I see the same things as the owners tell me about the ones I have sold. There are very clear similarities in pups from different sires- totally different bloodlines, too. For this reason, just based on my own very limited experience, I think we greatly underestimate the impact the bitch has, and this has been very detrimental to the breed in general. For every less-than-stellar bitch who is bred (and that's probably 80-90% IMHO), that's a litter of pups who have IMO, a less than 50% chance of excellence.
There will always be exceptions; there will be pups (and human children) who resemble one parent so closely it's like the other was just a silent chromosome donor, but the majority are a result of a combination, a combination that all too often is mismatched in quality due to a misunderstanding of genetic distribution.
I think equal, at least, consideration needs to be given to the bitch or you're swimming upstream as far as goals in breeding. Temperament is partly genetic and partly environmental. The bitch is 50% of one and a lot more than 50% of the other; let's not forget their sire is not raising them.
I would take a good, strong producing bitch over a "top" stud dog any day, at any price (if I could....LOL).

by ziegenfarm on 18 January 2011 - 17:01
pjp

by Ace952 on 18 January 2011 - 17:01
Just like you said, it makes it seem like they are only good for just being the oven and it is the father that gives the pups everything that they are. It does make you wonder how this hurt breeding practices if you don't know the females as in depth as you know the males.

by GSDPACK on 18 January 2011 - 18:01
depends. Some people get a dog, get the minimum requirements and breed them. Some people get a dog breed them to pay for the dog, then do training. Remember it takes 4-5 months for a pregnant female to be out of work. So take that 8 mos in 3 years and you should be getting at least a title or two. But then you have to look at people and what they do with their dogs and if they even do anything with the dogs.
Males can breed in the morning and go to Nationals the next day (seen that done) LOL
. There is plenty of people who breed worked females, not just titled females. Look around, they dont advertize much but they are around.
When a person finds a nice female, they get maybe 3 breedings from her at the most, they want to work them not just breed them! Well that is at least what I do. Cant speak for everybody.
Pack

by SchaeferhundSchH on 18 January 2011 - 18:01
I've seen females have a profound influence on their puppies. They play just as much of a part as the sire. Then again you will always bump into the sire, and or dam who just seems to produce them self and the other parent merely is the parent on paper but seems to have played no part on the puppies.
Heh. I'm not sure what gave anyone the impression that males were more important than females though.

by Ace952 on 18 January 2011 - 18:01
Pack.....the minimum would be a kkl1 correct?
Sch....I think you see it all the time. Heck look on this board and other places and there are numerous threads about the top producing studs, best working studs, etc. You don't see the same when it comes the the females.
How old is too old for a female to carry a litter? What age would you not go past?

by Jenni78 on 18 January 2011 - 18:01
I have had people tell me I should title my females to SchH3, and I ask why? Anyone who wants to can test them and see what they want/need to see. I feel once I find a female that I think is good enough to breed (and that's pretty rare) that it's really superfluous and more related to ego than anything else to put more titles on them just to say they have them. More titles do not make the pups "more better." LOL
Because males are trialed and shown more, their names are more notorious, often, and recognizable names lead to $$$ in breedings. People advertise the male's name and don't say much about the dam.
I have tried to drill this into my prospective buyers who tend to downplay my bitch. I have had people wanting a certain sire and wanting a clone of him and they don't seem to want to entertain that the dam is likely to be a huge influence. It frustrates me to no end. And unfairly, the sires get all the credit for fantastic pups who are very similar...and have different sires but the same dam. You do the math. LOL

by GSDPACK on 18 January 2011 - 19:01
Jenni,
it is not that rare to find a breedworthy female. I think you feel that way is becasue people dont work the females they have! You also said why should I go to ScH3, I say because people will see your dog and recognize the value.
You say come and test her.. I like to see how she works for the owner!
If you go to a season of trials you will find nice females. Some of them are not trained well but if somebody knows how to read a dog they will recognize the value. What I find counter productive is having a nice dog sitting and popping litters. We just have difference of opinios!
I like to work the dog, you like to breed them. After a females shows me she is all that I look for in her, then I breed her! I like them to do more than just have puppies so I keep working them, I owe that to them as a handler. That is just my point of view.
Cheers and happy day
by desert dog on 18 January 2011 - 20:01
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