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My recent re-reading of Snakefoot: The Making of a
Champion, by Robert G. Wehle, served as a refresher course in aspects
of our continuing attempts, as breeders, to get it right. Not only was
that much-loved gentleman a great breeder of Elhew Pointers, he also bred
foxes, chickens, sheep, cattle, and Thoroughbred racehorses during a
lifetime devoted to animals. His breeding success is legendary.
Wehle felt that the value of competition was
that it provided the breeder a way to measure his stock against that of
others. But prior to his death in 2005, after more than 60 years of
breeding Pointers, Wehle saw changes that concerned him. Because certain
judgment calls were not consistent with his concept of the correct
pointing gundog, he began to questions the system itself.
This was not about dog shows; this was bout
field trials. Although Wehle finished the championship title at bench
shows on a few of his early dogs, his focus was always on field trials,
which his dogs dominated for decades. Yet the criteria of the field trial
in recent years strayed from what Wehle had always pursued - the breeding
of a comfortable shooting dog.
How similar to what we hear today from many old-timers in
the world of breeding and showing dogs! The winning criteria change as the
years go by, and in many breeds the dog becomes something other than what
it was bred to be. However painful this is to the purist, there is some
comfort in the fact that expert breeders in other fields also share our
concerns, which seem to be by-products of the modern lifestyle. Dairy
cattlemen worry that their concentration on milk production has caused the
deterioration of functional traits. (I agree with their belief that the
deterioration of functional traits can happen even when there is
balanced breeding emphasizing selection for correct functionality.)
Racehorse breeders feel "they don't make 'em like they used to," and worry
that modern stock is not as strong nor as durable as stock of the past.
Exactly why this happens is not clear. Some
researchers believe there is an inevitable decline in the fitness of
populations that are subject to artificial selection. With natural
selection, incompetent predators do not hunt successfully enough to
sustain their lives long enough to make their contribution to the gene
pool. Neither do incompetent prey animals survive long enough to
reproduce. It take athletic, intelligent, able animals to survive in the
wild.
The environment also contributes to the
compromises facing modern mammals, whether wild or domesticated. The
capability of an expert fertility veterinarian was not something one heard
much about until recent years; now, even humans suffer declining
fertility. Coping with these complex problems is the heavy responsibility
of all who breed purebred dogs.
How much environment and nutrition contribute
to waning well-being is difficult to estimate. Each breeder has to seek
out the best information and techniques in the care and nurturing of
breeding stock. Every dog good company claims to have the ultimate answer.
So do the raw-diet pundits. And exactly what may be the long-term impact
of the variety of chemicals our modern dogs are subjected to for parasite
and disease control is anybody's guess. How then does the breeder proceed?
This is a tough questions, but it is certainly answerable if one has a
good plan.
The first step in a good plan is to define the
breeding goals. Determine your ideal model, picturing it only with
functional anatomy as well as correct and beautiful type. But don't stop
there, because health, fitness, and soundness of temperament as well as
body are equally important. And breed character is paramount.
Next, one must evaluate the available breeding
stock in the family, as well as the direction in which potential crosses
with that existing stock may lead. Furthermore, future potential matings
for the resulting stock must also be part of the equation.
Unfortunately, the lament we hear from
master breeders of many breeds is that there are no dogs to breed to
because the available dogs fall far short of satisfying the ideal they
seek. Breeders have always had to deal with this problem due to the many
trade-offs inherent in the breeding process. Yet my discussions with many
breeders have led me to believe that in a number of breeds this problem is
more acute today than in the past. It is most perplexing to have an
excellent, useful bitch and be unable to find the "right" dog for her!
Develop your own personal grading system to
help you determine the worth of your stock. View dog shows as the arena
where you can indeed measure the quality of your stock against that of
others to determine how your breeding program is proceeding. Always keep
in mind the numerous complex variables that determine judgment calls at
dog shows. The best breeding stock may not always be the winner.
If you aren't yet the best judge of your own
breeding stock, make it your business to become the best judge. Don't just
go to a show for the win' go for the added knowledge that can benefit your
breeding program. Let wise elders inspire you always to do the right thing
in your decision-making, and make sure you understand that wisdom and
kennel-blindness are not compatible.
Always keep in mind this quote from Wehle's
book: "We are still breeding the original type of comfortable shooting dog
we started out to breed and will continue to breed this type of dog if I
have to stand completely alone." This comment came after six decades in
his beloved breed. It serves as eternal inspiration for those whose breed
means everything to them.
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