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WoofnHoof

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Posts posted by WoofnHoof

  1. On 28/12/2023 at 9:24 PM, ihtisham said:

    "Husky dog" refers to the Siberian Husky, a popular and distinctive breed of working dog known for its thick double coat, erect triangular ears, and distinctive markings. Siberian Huskies are known for their friendly demeanor, intelligence, and strong work ethic. They were originally bred as sled dogs in cold climates and are recognized for their endurance and strength.


    Are you looking at getting a husky? They are awesome dogs but can be challenging for a first time owner. Check out the dog breeds 101 forum to find more info :)

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  2. 3 hours ago, sandgrubber said:

    Biologically possible, but institutionally, not so much.

     

    For example, in years past I bred Labradors.  The breed's popularity is unquestionable.  It's also clear that many people who love Lab temperament would prefer a smaller dog with less shedding.  Breeding in this direction would be easy, and would probably also yield dogs better suited to hot climates.  BUT you'd be excommunicated for announcing the intention of doing so.


    Sad but true :( 

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  3. On 24/12/2023 at 6:18 AM, sandgrubber said:

    I just wish the effort that went into pushing extreme comformation had gone to breeding overall health (including the things causing most vet visits like allergies, obstructed breathing, ear infections) and traits suitable for the majority of modern families (friendly, playful, trainable, not overly barky or energetic, relatively small, good with children).  Oodles move in this direction, but not very well.  Systematic, pedigree based cross breeding could have done a much better job, but has been utterly rejected.


    I agree but I don’t even think it needs to involve cross breeding, many of the desired traits already exist within currently available breeds, they just haven’t been strongly selected for. The fact that conformation has changed so drastically within existing breeds in such a short period of time suggests that better outcomes could easily be achieved in a similarly short space of time without having to outcross at all.
     

    Of course you can’t put a non/low-shedding coat into a breed that doesn’t have it without crossing but you can certainly select calmer, more trainable temperaments within the existing non-shedding breeds. You can select for sIze quite easily, that has already been done in existing poodle breeds. Ditto for health issues especially with genetic testing easy and affordable. Behaviour is not so simple but not impossible, low drive dogs pop up in working lines all the time, there just needs to be the will to select strongly and consistently for those traits with a view to move the breed towards suitability as a pet rather than work or show. 

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  4. 1 hour ago, sandgrubber said:

    Brachy skulls serve no purpose.  The shortened legs and elongated spine of modern daschunds serve no purpose. Excess coat serves no purpose.  Deep skin folds serve no purpose.  It's trend/fashion.

    Small fluffy oodles seems to work for many modern families.  They may require a lot of grooming, but so do Pekes, poodles, Saints, Newfies, Afghans, and show line Spaniels. The pedigree world supported and furthered the cross breeding that created the modern pekinese, cavvy, silky, and other small pet/lapdog breeds.  More recently it has dropped the ball when it comes to breeding dogs suited to apartment life, 300 sq m sections, grey nomadism, etc. 

    I approve of keeping pedigrees, but when the function is pet/companion, I wish the pedigree conveyed more information about the things that matter in a pet: health and temperament. 

     

    There's high demand for friendly, cheerful, loyal, non yappy, dogs without huge need for exercise.  Sadly, the pedigree world isn't meeting this demand and the supply is coming from elsewhere. 


    Yes I think the show influence is a whole other can of worms, but it only accounts for the last 30-40 years of breeding. In post war times there is no way people would breed dogs that need C-sections every time or must be kept in air conditioning. I think removing the “working” aspect of breeds enables fashion to shape breeds, most of the stud books have been closed for over 100 years so it’s not cross breeding that is responsible for the enhancement of extreme traits, even in breeds that diverged into pets a long time ago. 
    Once you take away the functional aspect and purely have looks as the focus the rest goes out the window. There are “halter bred” quarter horses that are unrideable because they’ve been bred to stand and shuffle around a show ring, it’s extremely sad. Having said that looks are also a big part of the oodle branding, the fluffy teddy bear look is part of their appeal and that is also part of the reason that they too can have health issues. When their function is heavily based around looks then there is potential for other traits to be left behind, just as with other breeds and lines. 

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  5. I think the issue isn’t money, new breeds have been developed in the past to do a job and help the owner make a living whether that’s herding, hunting, guarding etc. Breeding for purpose doesn’t mean it wasn’t profitable at one point in the breed’s development.  

     

    I think the issue is that there is a lack of clear direction and ethical behaviour when it comes to oodles. Putting two different breeds together does not a new breed make, there needs to be a clear development of desired traits to ensure consistency. The “job description” for these dogs is as a generic pet dog, there is no clear standard or goal. When research was done into “the perfect pet dog for Australia” people identified things like non-shedding, friendly, low drive etc. These are all traits that exist to a degree in existing pure-breeds but aren’t marketed as such to the public. Marketing is everything in this day and age, old fashioned perceptions about poodles mean they are not first choice despite having *most* of the traits people want. Here comes the controversial bit: Existing pure breeds could easily be modified to meet a pet market.  Before anyone says that would ruin the breed there are already many breeds which have distinct show and working lines. Show lines and working lines can look and behave very differently and it’s not the end of the world, and it’s not blasphemy to think that this could also be done for “pet” lines. If breeds never changed we wouldn’t have any differences between working and show because breeds were originally developed to work and do a specific job not trot round a show ring. 
     

    I think there is also a perception in the pure breed world that pet dogs are inferior, not “up to scratch” and therefore they are cheaper than show dogs. Like it or not people associate price with quality, that’s why they happily fork over thousands for oodles. Price historically has at least implied quality, add some clever marketing that plays on existing perceptions and you can see how the market and therefore the public has responded. People still believe a cross gives you “the best of both worlds” despite logic suggesting that it might also give the worst of both. 
     

    Look at the success of organisations such as Peta, we know their goal is to sever all human ties with animals yet the general public has no idea and just thinks they are a welfare group. It’s all because of very clever marketing. It’s completely unethical but it works because they target and enhance existing perceptions for their own gain, much like many oodle breeders. The problem with pure breeds is that it’s much more difficult to fight deeply ingrained prejudices. 
     

    edited for typos 

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  6. Well I finally joined the WSS club! Took a while lol :)

    My girl Ellie is from a ANKC breeder in Qld and she is just over 5 months old. 

    Observations so far:

    Velcro dog to the max! Do not get a Swiss if you value your alone time in the dunny, if she can’t come in with you she will lay down outside the door waiting for you to come out. 

    Loud! She has discovered her big girl voice and it’s set off the decibel warning on my smartwatch so look out for accelerated hearing loss lol! So strange after having the husky who was talkative but hardly ever actually barked. 

    Active! My husky was quite sick as a pup (liver shunt) so I didn’t get to really experience the full-on adolescent stages and most of my little dogs have been adult rescues so this girl is full of beans in comparison. No sleeping in. Ever. Luckily I have paddocks full of rabbits here to burn off some puppy energy. Great to take for walks although can’t seem to go in a straight line (that’s a win for the husky at least he would go straight lol!). 
    Grubby! OMG after having clean freak husky who didn’t even like to go outside if the grass was a bit wet and cleaned himself obsessively like a cat, this girl absolutely loves to be filthy! Mud, dead things, pretty much anything she can get into that will make her dirty is her goal, bonus points if she can find it straight after a wash :D 

    Overall thoughts: Stunning dog, loads of fun, loads of work (at the youngster stage anyway) but I wouldn’t have it any other way :) 

     

    IMG_9904.jpeg

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  7. It’s such a great concept and certainly has loads of scope for expansion and refinement. There have been a number of studies now looking at the various cues that dogs use to communicate with us, such as pointing behaviour and so on. There have been a couple of studies where they trained horses to use boards with symbols on them to indicate whether they wanted to wear a rug or not, so now that people are learning how to train animals more effectively using these tools the potential is massive in gaining insight into how they think. Of course humans tend to extrapolate to match our own inner monologue which may not be accurate but certainly simple concepts should be well within reach, it’s just refining the methodology IMO.


    I would think there are cheaper options as the boards were originally modelled off the commonly used assistive technology used to help disabled people communicate, so there may be options that are less expensive and still usable out there? 
     

  8. On 16/02/2022 at 3:39 PM, Selkie said:

    A lot of people here are familiar with cross breeds, though, in addition to purebreds. Knowledge of the two aren't mutually exclusive.

     

    I agree many of us have crosses and dogs of unknown breeding and love them just as much. I don't think it necessarily implies a bias when we state that a cross will likely not be ideal in this situation, just the simple fact of predictability of traits. Given that many breeders of crosses like to promote those crosses as "best of both worlds" it would be remiss to fail to point out the genetic gambling aspect. If the OP were an experienced owner with heaps of latitude in their situation and willingness to accommodate a variety of behavioural and physiological traits then I think people would direct them to purebreds *and* rescues (which are often crosses). It's not promoting crosses because directing people to a cross in rescue is not encouraging or promoting the breeding of them. Interested to hear thoughts on this though as it's an interesting point! 

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  9. 5 hours ago, Podgus said:

    @WoofnHoof  during my 2 forays into the show ring during the mid 80’s and again in the 2000’s, I encountered multiple breeders who’d get really pretty shitty if a dog they’d bred won against them!! Seriously! They’d alienate and cold shoulder people they’d sold their own stock to who’d subsequently started winning against them. Why the hell wouldn’t you be proud as punch that a dog you’d sold came out and won, often with an inexperienced handler….. defied belief!  

     

    That's really sad isn't it? I know some horse breeders prefer to restrict what is being bred from their lines if they have spent a lot of money importing sires etc but it's only in very niche markets IME. In this day and age it's easy enough to import whatever breeding you want so it's only restricting a small subset of small scale breeders.  Most are ecstatic to see progeny doing well, representing the breed and the lines. We aren't playing for sheep stations out there. 

     

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  10. I find it ridiculous personally. If someone wants to have a crack at showing why shouldn't they? If the dog isn't fabulous it won't blow anyone away but they might have a nice day out.

     

    If the animals are such poor quality that breeders are embarrassed by them then I would question the quality of their breeding in general. Omitting the few with glaring faults there really shouldn't be anything stopping most people going to the odd dog show, they aren't taking it to crufts for crying out loud. What people consider show quality can vary greatly anyway, realistically if the dog meets the standard it should be of sufficient quality to represent its breed and whether it wins is up to the judge. I remember years ago a similar discussion here with a breeder stating "I don't want to see my shit in the ring". :o

     

    I've only known a few breeders in the horse world who won't register certain progeny and they are the *least* ethical for several reasons. Everyone else is quite happy to see their animals out and about. They are ambassadors for their breed and for the stud even if they aren't perfect according to a show judge. Anyone who shows knows you take take the same animal to one judge and have it win everything and another judge won't even give it a look so it's not the end of the world if it doesn't win.

     

    Despite this showing can be great for teaching animals manners and patience, educating owners and spectators about breeds and conformation, socialising dog and human (as long as your fellow showies aren't wankers!) and just generally getting out and about. 

     

    The gatekeepers need to chill out IMO. Where is the harm in taking pride in the animals you have produced whether they are some arbitrary definition of "show quality" or not? As the OP says, anyone who is going to breed outside of the regs will ignore LR and so it's really just ANKC vs ANKC breeders shooting themselves in the foot.  

     

     

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  11. First thing to think about is the working origin of the breed. Those breeds have been developed over centuries for herding, chasing sheep and cattle all day every day. Work that is both mentally and physically stimulating. That is why they are popular for dog sports which are very high energy and require loads of training. 

     

    Think about a worst case scenario that could happen. Kids get bored or move out. Work gets busy. It rains for weeks and no one wants to take the dog out for a long walk. Do you still want the dog if the things you hope for don't eventuate? If so what do you see the dog doing while you are working and the kids are absent? If it's purely companionship there are several more suitable breeds who will be happy with short walks and plenty of attention at home. 

     

    Re shedding most dogs will shed you just have to deal with that but you can minimise it with short coated breeds like danes and greyhounds. Alternatively you can go with a low shedding breed but it will need regular clipping. 

     

    Barking can be influenced by breed, again think about the history and whether a dog barks as part of its job, most herders do. The rest is largely behavioural and individual, dogs bark for various reasons, sometimes to alert (if you are in a busy area with lots of people going past this might be important) sometimes because they are bored, sometimes they just like the sound of their own voice. A good breeder will help guide you as far as their breed goes as they know them best. 

     

    Crosses are the least predictable option, as said above it is generally not recommended for people who have a specific set of requirements, you want predictable traits. If you are keen on rescue a greyhound could be an option to explore via a reputable group who performs temperament testing and suitable vetting. 

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  12. I'm sure some whippet owners will be along soon to give you their experiences. In the meantime you will find some good info in the breed101 section and there is also a breed subforum for general chat for owners and breeders. Your best bet is to look up some breeders on the main page and have a chat to them about whether the breed will be suitable for your situation :)

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  13. A husky will not guard you nor will they curl up on the couch with you (unless you keep your internal house temperature below 0 degrees C). They are independent and extremely challenging for first time dog owners. Not to mention they shed a LOT of hair, they cannot be offlead and while they are smart and trainable that doesn't mean they are biddable, they do what suits them not you.

     

    When looking at breeds think about their working origins. Huskies were bred to pull sleds in the harshest of conditions. They want to run and if they are off lead they will run and run and never come back, trust me on this. They are bred to seek very little direction from their human, their job was to listen to go, stop and turn. Everything else was up to them, so they do not seek guidance nor permission from their owners.

     

    Compare this trait to other breeds such as herding dogs, they will often check with their human and look to them for direction. Look at the breeds that are often doing well in obedience, an obedient husky is rare.

     

    Guarding is hit and miss in non-guardian breeds, you need to speak to individual breeders they can tell you if their dogs are likely to have some guarding capability. Again no husky will guard you, some individuals can be a little protective but they are notoriously friendly to strangers. 

     

    A husky also needs to be engaged, if they are not mentally and physically stimulated they will find ways to occupy themselves that you may not like. This can include chewing up everything, stealing stuff (I lost a wallet for months because the dog stole it), digging, escaping etc. You don't want to let a smart dog get bored or restless.

     

    Please keep researching before you decide, it seems highly unlikely to me that a husky will fit your needs. Don't be swayed by their looks there are many huskies in pounds and rescues because they are not suited for many lifestyles. 

     

    Talk to breeders of ridgebacks and shepherds, they will be able to help you decide whether these breeds may be more suitable for you. Breeder contact details are on the DOL breeds pages, also checkout the Breeds 101 forum to get some more information on the breeds you are interested in. 

     

    Best of luck in your search! 

     

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  14. My boy has had this for some years. Initially when I asked the vet in Qld they didn't know. When I moved to NSW I got it looked at again and we got a diagnosis. He went on steroids initially then moved to an immune suppressant drug (imuran) and he has been on it for about 2-3 years now and it has helped a lot. His nose is a bit damaged from being untreated. Put him on the immune suppressant as he was starting to get severe gum inflammation as well, and he has improved out of sight. Nose and gums improved and nails are not as brittle. Doesn't seem to have had much in the way of side effects. Not sure about long term effects but my boy is quite old so it's negligible.

  15. On 05/05/2021 at 8:40 AM, sheena said:

    I have just tuned back into this discussion & I can't believe that the OP is still persisting with his/her questions. I have always thought that this forum was for discussion on the breeding of pure bred dogs & the training & general discussion on ALL dogs in general.  Mickey88 is wasting everyones time with this business when he/she obviously wants to breed oodles (cross bred mongrels) & cash in on the lucritive market. He/she is already trying to find the cheapest option, so I imagine he/she will not be spending much on health testing etc, as it is all about profit & possibly the beginnings of yet another puppy farm :banghead:

     

    Yes it's funny isn't it? The OP can evidently sense that papers are worth *something* (which is why they are thinking more $ per pup) but still can't work out WHY.  

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  16. I can't believe it's been more than a year since I started this thread and the old boy is still ticking along! So happy with him, just a short clip since my internet is taking ages to upload anything.

     

     

     

    He is about the same gait-wise but he is still pretty happy and keen to go for walks so that is the main thing. I tried to convince him to let me pull him along in a cart but that was not happening. Likewise my attempt to convince him to wear boots was a battle that I am sad to say I did not win, you would think I was trying to cut his feet off the way he carried on and they came straight off so that was a write off. 

     

    He had an acupuncture session a while ago which seemed to help so hoping to line that up again. He is still on the neurontin and synovan but we have changed the anti-inflammatory to previcox which seems to agree with him. 

     

    So all in all I am pretty happy with how he is going, I never would have thought he would still be relatively mobile at this age so will take each day as it comes and if he makes it to 15 (early Sept) I will be stoked. As long as he is still waiting at the door ready for a walk every morning and evening and happy to go I will take that as a sign that he is still happy in himself. :)

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  17. The main issue with breeding animals that have been registered with *other* registers is that there is no way to verify the pedigree is a true record of lineage. The reason a pedigree has inherent value is because it verifies that a dog is what the breeder/seller says it is. If another registry will register a dog that isn't verified then the pedigree is virtually meaningless. If another register is not rigorous with their parentage verification and record keeping then buyers don't really know what they are buying. As a result the inherent value of papers is not only compromised for that registry, but people begin to think ALL papers are meaningless except for showing. 

     

    The reason a verified lineage is important is because breeding will often throw you curve balls at the best of times. The genetics of the animal in front of you is largely hidden, you see physiology and behaviour in the one dog but genetics is a complex science, and you can't always know what will pop up in the subsequent generations.

     

    The experienced breeders, the "gatekeepers" some might say, have often spent many years poring over pedigrees, researching lines, observing dogs and their progeny, and their progeny, and so on. You can only make sense of that information with verified pedigrees. Now, not all ANKC breeders are ethical, but they are much more likely to understand the importance of those lines and mutligenerational implications of breeding than members of registries which do not have such strict regulation. Their opinion, like the pedigree itself, carries weight due to the depth of knowledge and experience implicit. That is why most will not sell a dog on mains to someone they don't know well, the rise of puppy farming and indiscriminate breeding has made them wary. If you put your heart and soul into producing a healthy animal, sound in mind and body then see someone breed it with a dog that is the opposite, just for the $, then it is no wonder this situation has occurred. 

     

    So while to most people, these protectionist restrictions seem excessive, it is important to understand the reasons why. In some cases it is to protect the lines, the animals they have spent much of their lives developing. It is also to protect the integrity of breeds. As much as everyone loves their cross-bred pets, the first thing many people do is ask what breeds might be in it. And the reason these alternative registries exist is because people still believe a pedigree has inherent value in telling you what that animal is. Thus, the integrity of breeds and pedigrees *should* be protected.

     

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