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Faolmor

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Posts posted by Faolmor

  1. As the title says...

    I'm having a lot of trouble sourcing decent dog food. I have tried Animal Tuckerbox and Pets Domain, but it's really hit and miss as to what's in stock at the time. I've had a litter of puppies here who were on the Royal Canin Starter and Mother, but I can't find anywhere that stocks it, and to order it in, I need to pay for 3 bags up-front (not possible for me!), and it will take 2 weeks to get here.

    Do most people just end up internet ordering in bulk? Or is there some hidden dog food mecca down here somewhere where only the people who know about it can find it?? :p

  2. Here is a classic example of one person idea of function

    Looks like a French dog to me...and their breed club is run by people who do actually work their dogs, and who cull those who don't work. While this is NOT my idea of what an Irish Setter should look like (not even a working one!!!), I would have to argue that this dog probably functions extremely well in the field.

    ETA: Though, personally, if this type of dog dictated the future direction and conformation of the breed, I'd die crying... There are far better-made working Irish out there!!

  3. For me, it is the difference between breeding for money, and breeding with the future of the breed in mind. It's the difference between someone saying, "Hey, your dog and mine are the same breed (or not!) - let's bang em together and go halves on the puppies," and someone carefully researching bloodlines, health test results, conformation of generations of puppies from both parents and much more, then choosing the parents of the litter based on a knowledgeable assessment and detailed goal of what you want to achieve with the litter...then of course doing the best by those puppies, for life.

    Breeding for the breed means looking overseas to find the best match for your bitch, if you can't find one locally. It might mean forking out thousands of dollars to bring a dog into the country, or semen, or whatever. It means spending hours looking over the history of all the dogs in that bloodline - were they healthy? Could they work? What physical traits were passed on? What traits might you get that you don't want? I could go on and on. All that is breeding for the breed.

    Anything less is breeding for money, IMHO.

    there is no more wrong in breeding for money than there is for breeding for a champ or a pet or a working dog as long as the other things which mean the benefit of the breed as well as the dogs are not compromised. There are some people who are doing worse things to breeds in the name of breeding for goals other than money.

    This is true. I guess I was trying to distinguish between ONLY breeding to make money (without caring which dogs you breed from), and breeding from well researched, healthy stock. The puppies are still sold, either way.

  4. For me, it is the difference between breeding for money, and breeding with the future of the breed in mind. It's the difference between someone saying, "Hey, your dog and mine are the same breed (or not!) - let's bang em together and go halves on the puppies," and someone carefully researching bloodlines, health test results, conformation of generations of puppies from both parents and much more, then choosing the parents of the litter based on a knowledgeable assessment and detailed goal of what you want to achieve with the litter...then of course doing the best by those puppies, for life.

    Breeding for the breed means looking overseas to find the best match for your bitch, if you can't find one locally. It might mean forking out thousands of dollars to bring a dog into the country, or semen, or whatever. It means spending hours looking over the history of all the dogs in that bloodline - were they healthy? Could they work? What physical traits were passed on? What traits might you get that you don't want? I could go on and on. All that is breeding for the breed.

    Anything less is breeding for money, IMHO.

  5. Another one here who shows Irish Setters...and if I had a dollar for every comment about how stupid they are, I'd be a millionaire at the end of a Royal day. There's nothing that gets my back up so quickly as someone who will stand there, arguing with you about how stupid your dog is!! I remember one guy flouncing off with a final, "Well I said they're stupid...so there!" That level of maturity in any discussion is usually more indicative of the loser of the argument, IMHO...:laugh:

    As for pats, if hands are clean, everyone is welcome, whether I've been in the ring yet or not - provided I have invited them in to pat the dogs, and provided they behave respectfully and don't crowd etc. I can't say I've ever had an issue with unclean hands on coats, or people who haven't been polite, curious and respectful. I just ask, "Are you hands clean? Okay, then, in you come!" There's no point me trying to promote my breed as kid-friendly and people-friendly if I spend all day telling people to stand back and don't touch. I will actively encourage people to come meet my dogs, particularly if I can see them standing nearby wanting to pat them. One of my dogs spent half the day last year leaning her whole body around the edge of the bench, trying to attract as many pats as she could with a big smile on her face and a full-body tail wag. How can that NOT be promoting the friendliness of the breed? She was in her element, and the public adored her.

    Yes, the Royal is a long day, and I do understand some exhibitors might choose to be precious with their dogs. But really...as others have said. If you can't handle it, don't enter. It's not like you don't know what to expect.

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