Interesting Dog Breeds
Posted in Dog Information on 11/16/2007 09:33 am by admin
The mark to be sought in dog breeding is improvement - improvement of your own actions, improving the quality of puppies that you raise, and finally, improving the race itself.
Many owners argue against the purebred dog. They maintain that mongrels must be smarter than thoroughbred specimens of blood, because dogs are the best performing almost always mixed races. This is true, of course, but the vaudeville artist who trains an average of these animals is like the rest of us find it rather expensive to finance the creation of a troupe of thoroughbreds.
I think it's much more likely to be the reason for the Mutts outperforms the greatest degree of intelligence on their part. In fact, I have trained both thoroughbreds and mixed breeds, and I have no hesitation to say that the purebred dog showed more sagacity and was more conducive to discipline.
A good point to remember is never to raise dogs have an inherited defect, if it is minor and is more than offset by exceptionally strong point. Some claim that the dog with a fault should never, under any circumstances be high, but I am of the opinion that conditions sometimes alter cases.
Suppose a father throws puppies just close enough to the standard in all respects except one, and it shows fault with several litters. Obviously a puppy such a father will never go to the top in the ring, but it may be a valuable link to get something better when the sample race right of the opposite sex in order to overcome the failure. If the defect is a major problem, however, I would advise against breeding the dog.
An important aspect to consider is the puppy coat. This is also the hereditary bone structure, decision or occlusion of teeth.
Some blood lines creating layers better than others. Since it is hereditary, a coat natural poor can not be improved, and any attention in the world will not change it into a shiny, luxuriant growth. The best we can do to a poor dog is lying to keep it was as good as possible and to reproduce the layers better in the next generation.
When breeding, the most important thing to remember is to stick to the right type, unless you know you can improve it. A mixed breed of some alley may be sound in body. It may even move well, but it lacks the kind - the blending characteristics of his race, which marks the thoroughbreds. We all hope to one day reproduce the perfect model, but there are other things to consider as skeletons and coats that cover them. It would be much more satisfying race, a fine specimen with a temperament nervous or ugly.
Dogs must be useful and ornamental to survive. From the smallest to the largest toy working dog, they should not know the meaning of fear, but must always be ready to defend their rights. Nervous dogs whose redeeming feature threaded only their accession to the type of property are often refused recognition in the ring because of these defects.
If neither the dog or bitch is a equitable model, inbreeding should not be attempted. The purpose of inbreeding is not to reproduce all the characteristics of families, but only the flow of good points that the dog or bitch possesses. The brother, sister, mother-son or father-daughter of the Cross must be carefully thought, and in each case, both dogs must be of exceptionally high quality.
Never shy race, weak, or nervous dogs, and do not breed any dog until it reaches its full development. Unless it is exceptionally slow in coming in the first round, it is better to give him extra time for development rather than race.
Many more can be said about the breeding dogs, but some are useful; points to make you think. You're on your way!
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