

Cardinal wrote:Don't breed your mutt. Theres no reason to and unless you've done heavy genetic testing you're polluting the gene pool with more unstable dogs.![]()
Want to be a good breeder? Awesome. Make sure your dogs are tilted in ATLEAST conformation and ONE type of sport. Make sure you do ALL the genetic testing for your breed of choice, make SURE your dogs are OFA'd and CERF'd. Temperament tests should be done, either CGC, ATTs, OR a therapy dog title. Can't do any of that stuff? DON'T BREED. It'll make you a BACKYARD BREEDER. Your dogs WILL end up in shelters and contribute to the thousands of dogs being put down daily.
A good breeder wants to breed to IMPROVE their reed of choice. How do they know their dogs are even worth breeding? The compete in sports like agility, rally, flyball ATLEAST a novice title. A lot of good breeders also compete in conformation to show their dogs are to standard physically. They do a CRAP LOAD of health testing, going to the vet and getting a "Ehh, your dogs are healthy" is NOT good enough EVER. Genetic testing needs to be done when the breed of choice has known genetic conditions. My dobbie breeder tests for wobblers and vWD. A good breeder will have their OFA and CERF which are basically orthopedic health and vision. My dobbie breeder also does echo's on her dogs hearts. A good breeder can ensure their dogs have a sound temperament because they use some form of temperament testing to ensure a sound dog.
Like I said, can't do any of those things? Your dog isn't WORTH breeding. End of story.
Also, breeders RARELY EVER break even, let alone make ANY profit.Before getting pregnant the dogs compete in sports, which can get expensive. Their dogs have expensive health testing. Their dogs get ultrsounds and heavy prenatal care while pregnant. The pups gets first shots, cropped/docked if its standard, wormed, and over all health checks. Not to mention most good breeders feed a high quality diet which isn't cheap at all. It all adds up really quick. I think I read once that the average litter costs the breeder 10,000+ until they are sold.
I have a GSD, and her main play mate is a Springer.
They look sooo cute together, and the Springer is a great agility dog. Marley can jump over benches and fences in the park.
GSD's are third most intelligent, as mine is 3 ½ months and knows her name, sit, stay, paw and is learning lie down and roll over.
I would want to create an intelligent, agility, medium to large sized breed, which coat colors and sizes that vary (GSD coat can be long, medium or short, and both breeds coats appear in several colors). Not shure of name, English Shepherd, German Springer (You may suggest).
Maybe I could make it a recognisable breed, although I doubt it.
We will not breed Marley and Xena as they will be sterilized, and nooo way our parents or council would let us.
Being able to jump over benches and fences doesn't make them an agility dog. It makes them a parkour dog.
I would probably keep one, and family might like a new member. Some people might like the cross.
It's my personal opinion on what I want to breed and why.




XenaPup wrote:I can only start in 10-20+ years. Like some people like a labradoodle and chiweenie, people can like my mutt. I don't like these breeds, but my friends love and even own them. Making them look cute is a good thing. People will like them. Alot of people have mixes, its weird if you say you never had one. My parents had 1, my grandma has 1, and years ago my dad had probably 3 or 4. I am going to breed the breeds. Its the only mix I want to make, the rest, like Salukis for sure, are purebred.
Correction, I need more breeds. I don't like poodles, chihuahuas, labradors, yorkies and most small breeds (Exept Scottish Terriers, Cocker Spaniels, Westies and Dachshunds), and a couple of other breeds (Some include Chow Chows and Dalmatians). Most mixes are made of these.

Saracirce wrote:o.0 I have nothing against mutts. I (sorta) own a mutt. I volunteer at a shelter at least twice a week and walk their mostly mutt dogs. A plan to rescue all or almost all of my future dogs and they're very likely to be mutts. What I am against is people purposefully breeding mutts just to make more pets.
All those breeds you listed, that's just a small portion of all the breeds of dogs in the world. There are well over 400. If you can't find a single purebred among all those you like, then you just must not be a dog person.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests