Table Talk Live: Deb Cooper and Vicki Seiler-Cushman
Deb Cooper and Vicki Seiler-Cushman talk about her first Best In Show assignment in Canfield. Join us this weekend for fun-filled, informative coverage of the 2020 Steel Valley Cluster!
Deb Cooper and Vicki Seiler-Cushman talk about her first Best In Show assignment in Canfield. Join us this weekend for fun-filled, informative coverage of the 2020 Steel Valley Cluster!
Table Talk Live’s Deb Cooper visits with 4-6 month puppy competition exhibitors Michelle Michael and Wendy Kampinski.
Table Talk Live caught up with Junior, Sicily Coniglio at the poodle ring in Canfield.
Poodles in the rain in Canfield. Join us this weekend for fun-filled, informative coverage of the 2020 Steel Valley Cluster!
It’s a rainy Saturday at The Steel Valley Cluster in Canfield! Join us this weekend for fun-filled, informative coverage of the 2020 Steel Valley Cluster!
Quite often when one participates in, or overhears, a conversation concerning the pedigreed dog the word ‘correct’ is seemingly used with great abandon. It has now apparently become one of those elements in our language which we employ with considerable frequency but yet do we oftentimes really consider what we mean when we use it and, as a result, is it always applied in proper context? Are we always aware of how it should be defined? Do we ever qualify it with a follow-up; correct in what sense, for what purpose? Has it now, perhaps, become so loosely and cursorily thrown in so as to lose its potency and intended meaning? Are we compromising a certain connotation here when we use it too casually?
Within the judging community, knowing when to stop is for the most part related to either health or age. One’s inherent ability to pass judgment, given the subjective nature of the process, is seldom an issue unless, that is, a judge’s procedure is called into question and subsequently found to be flawed. At the same time,