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Home » November 23rd, 2013 Entries posted on “November, 2013”

Brandon Florida Kennel Club – Saturday, November 23, 2013

BIS-Ribbon

Show Name: Brandon Florida Kennel Club Location: Plant City, FL Show Date: November 23, 2013 Total Entry: 711 Best In Show Judge: Mr. James Frederiksen Dog Reg: GCh. Sylvan Silver Springbok Breed: Borzoi Handler: Patti Neale Owner: Chris & Patti Neale Reserve Dog Reg: GCh. Temora Ri Diercc Reserve Breed: Australian Terrier Reserve Handler: Kellie [...]

November 23rd, 2013 | Posted in All Breed Show Results | Read More »

Golden Valley Kennel Club – Friday, November 22, 2013

GCH Dreamcatcher Major Victory Of Loki

Show Name: Golden Valley Kennel Club Location: Turlock, CA Show Date: November 22, 2013 Total Entry: 1039 Best In Show Judge: Mrs. Anne Katona Dog Reg: GCH Dreamcatcher Major Victory Of Loki Breed: Tibetan Mastiff Handler: Tony Carter Owner: Debra Parsons & William Slayton Reserve Dog Reg: GCh Absolutely Talk Of The Town Reserve Breed: [...]

November 22nd, 2013 | Posted in All Breed Show Results | Read More »

South Windsor Kennel Club – Friday, November 22, 2013

GCh. Marsport Hot To Ride Lucky Seven MH

Show Name: South Windsor Kennel Club Location: W Springfield, MA Show Date: November 22, 20133 Total Entry: 1757 Best In Show Judge: Mrs. Elizabeth Gunter Dog Reg: GCh. Marsport Hot To Ride Lucky Seven MH Breed: Brittany Handler: Phil Booth Owner: Larry & Peggy Snider Reserve Dog Reg: GCh. Kenro’s Witching Hour Reserve Breed: Giant [...]

November 22nd, 2013 | Posted in All Breed Show Results | Read More »

Montgomery Kennel Club – Friday, November 22, 2013

GCh. Afterall Painting The Sky

  Show Name: Montgomery Kennel Club Location: Montgomery, AL Show Date: November 22, 2013 Total Entry: 850 Best In Show Judge: Ms. Victoria Jordan Dog Reg: GCh. Afterall Painting The Sky Breed: Wire Fox Terrier Handler: Gabriel Rangel Owner: Victor Malzoni Jr., T Steele, S & M Olund & Diane Ryan Reserve Dog Reg: GCh. [...]

November 22nd, 2013 | Posted in All Breed Show Results | Read More »

Northeastern Maryland Kennel Club – Friday, November 22, 2013

GCh. Claircreek Impression de Matisse

Show Name: Northeastern Maryland Kennel Club Location: West Friendship, MD Show Date: November 22, 2013 Total Entry: 932 Best In Show Judge: Mrs. Wendy Wilhauck Dog Reg: GCh Claircreek Impression de Matisse Breed: Portuguese Water Dog Handler: Michael Scott Owner: Milan Lint, Peggy Helming & Donna Gottdenker Reserve Dog Reg: GCh Wolf Creek Galaxy of [...]

November 22nd, 2013 | Posted in All Breed Show Results | Read More »

Holyoke Kennel Club – Thursday, November 21, 2013

GCh. Hi-Tech The King of Sherry Shoot JP

Show Name: Holyoke Kennel Club Location: W Springfield, MA Show Date: November 21, 2013 Total Entry: 1381 Best In Show Judge: Mr. William Gunter Dog Reg: GCh. Hi-Tech The King of Sherry Shoot JP Breed: Boxer Handler: Diego Garcia Owner: Mrs. Jack Billhardt & Sergio Tenenbaum Reserve Dog Reg: GCh. Pinehill’s Payday of Hays Hill [...]

November 21st, 2013 | Posted in All Breed Show Results | Read More »

NY Times Reports on Complaints of Increased Emotional Support Dogs Traveling on Planes

vacation  _AQHA_Equine Chronicle

An article in the New York Times suggests that there has been an increase in airline passengers flying with emotional support animals, which are most often dogs. Emotional support dogs are allowed in restaurants, airports, and any other public places – even those with strict no pet policies. To be an emotional support dog, a [...]

November 20th, 2013 | Posted in The Buzz | Read More »

Producing Pedigrees, Not Winners

pedigrees

Producing Pedigrees, Not Winners

By Amy Fernandez

The nineteenth century author and judge, James Watson, was one of the dog world’s sharpest critics. He had plenty to say about every aspect of the game, but pedigree junkie ranked among his favorite targets. He thought it ironic that American breeders “worship the fetish of pedigree in animals – while holding that a man must be gauged by his individual merits.”

He constantly cautioned breeders and buyers not to rely on pedigrees as guarantees of quality, “Pedigree has its value but you must know something regarding the dogs in the pedigree either personally or from reliable information especially the history of the most prominent of the past generation or two to draw proper conclusions.”

Pedigrees don’t tell the whole story, but they usually offer us some reliable insights.
Few breeders can imagine making an important decision without them. It’s an indispensable tool, but Watson watched far too many people making uninformed decisions solely on this basis. “For most buyers the pedigree might as well be filled with random names, if enough of them happen to be preceded by Ch. They purchase two puppies like this – not related – and start breeding dogs to win prizes…such a breeder produces pedigrees, not winners.”

Watson was frustrated by this narrow-minded approach to dog evaluation, but that wasn’t his only reservation about certified pedigrees. Writing in 1907, he knew first hand what kinds of records often supported this official looking, certified documents.

Breeds existed long before the Kennel Club was founded in 1873. However, documented, purebred ancestry had never been the sole defining factor for that designation. The recognizable, consistent types that qualified as breeds were primarily a regional phenomena. Large, private breeding programs cultivated distinctive strains over the course of many human and canine generations. Just as often, breeds emerged locally, thanks to a combination of relative geographic isolation and consistent selection for a specific job. In either case, the value of any purebred type was situational.

Dog breeding was sort of like making chili. The basic recipe has many versions, and improvisation was expected. Breeders didn’t hesitate to incorporate new ingredients to improve their stock. It was a creative endeavor and the success of the final product was a matter of taste.

That started to change in 1874 when the Kennel Club began creating the first database of purebred lineage. They began by documenting the ancestry of dogs that had already been exhibited. This required backtracking fourteen years since dog shows started in 1859. Writing to more than 3,500 breeders and owners ultimately yielded a hodgepodge of names, dates, and pedigree details based on personal records, faded memories, and secondhand accounts. Assembling this collection into 4027 dog records for 40 different breeds qualifies as remarkable exercise in perseverance and determination, However, Watson emphasized that skepticism was warranted.

“Pedigrees have been traced farther back in Bedlingtons than in any other breed of terrier.” For example, he notes that many pedigrees traced back to the foundation sire Old Flint, whelped in 1782, “There are no end to broken lines in such a pedigree, besides which, we know absolutely nothing as to what Old Flint looked like….simply to suppose that he was a Bedlington such as we have today is because Bedlingtons can be traced back to him is absurd.” Watson made a good point, but Bedlingtons weren’t unique in that respect.

Along with recordkeeping inconsistencies, breeds were a work in progress. Very often, classification was based on physical appearance rather than ancestry. For instance, the Kennel Club lumped Dandies and Skyes together as Scottish Terriers until 1879. Needless to say, an entirely different breed usurped that name. Scotties, Westies and Cairns began as different strains of the same Highland stock. Littermates were often designated as one or the other. Eventually, white Scotties became Westies, short-haired Skyes became Cairns, etc. But pedigrees of short-legged Terrier breeds often contained the same ancestors.

Timing and circumstance also played a role. Dogs that were considered undesirable specimens of one breed because of their coat, color or size frequently found a niche as another emerging breed. When the Kennel Club finally recognized Irish Wolfhounds, quite a few Deerhounds changed their allegiance. “At the time when there were classes for Old English and also for Welsh terriers, one dog was shown in both classes at Darlington and won first in each!” Watson saw the humor in these amazing transformations, as well as their potential impact on breeding programs.

His advice may be more than century old, but it’s not outdated. Then as now, “individual excellence must take precedence over pedigree.”

November 20th, 2013 | Posted in Current Articles,Featured | Read More »

Remembering James Edwin (Ed) Henderson

Sunset

James Edwin (Ed) Henderson passed away on November 18, 2013 following a long battle with a terminal illness. Ed was the husband of popular handler, Brenda Combs. Brenda will remember her husband as  ”honorable and funny until the last days of his life.”. Brenda notes that she will remember “his love of life and animals; [...]

November 19th, 2013 | Posted in Breaking News,Featured | Read More »

Tabloid Journalism and It’s Effect On Our Sport

SIberian

Innovations like the telephone, internet, and social media have refined this time honored art, but it doesn’t take much to set the wheels in motion. And dog-related lawsuits are always prime material for the grapevine.

November 19th, 2013 | Posted in World News | Read More »

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