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>Yes Linda and it was well documented elsewhere that I did.
> ...but then everyone else in their breed does too! Just seems they have their own set of rules!
>
> Season are just the risk you take when entering a show with a bitch, as they can come in early or late.
> thats why i prefer to show a male
>> In reply to Tify, how long after a season then do you think we should keep our bitches at home?
> I have had the sex pests at some of my girls right in the middle between seasons, and those spayed too. and got accusing looks and being told oh your bitch must be in/due n season.
>
> To be fair to the boys though at any given show there are bound to be some bitches in season or just coming in or going out, after all there are around the thousand dogs at a champ show with more than half likely to be female. So some boys will misdirect their interest
>if you have another bitch at home in season and your bitch has been with her she may well smell good too
>You could know your bitch is due in season soon but they're not actually in season yet, so you take them to a show only to find they come into season the next day
1/2
months later (9 month cycle) I've also taken a bitch just in season to a champ show (outdoor show) and with all the precautions I took, no dog reacted to her. Not even her oversexed half brother who usually made himself a real nuisance whenever he was near her. It was the one time he completely ignored her, as did all the other dogs ;) As for not nice for the judge going over a bitch in season, a wet wipe or two doctored with dettol/tcp will ensure no unpleasant occurance.>I do feel that owners of bitches get a raw deal, they are blamed for dogs' bad behaviour, whether they are in season or not, they have to miss shows because they are in season, they miss shows because they are having a phantom, they miss because they are out of coat because of their cycle and they miss because they've had pups - often up to a year because of recovering and lack of suitable shows.
> When I was showing bitches I acepted that, if they weren't spayed, there'd be times when they came into season at inconvenient times, and I'd miss shows. C'est la vie.
> I agree, that's one of things, as a bitch owner, that has to be accepted (if they are shown)
In my own bred it is frowned upon, but the very people who tut tut are often the ones whose bitches have come in on the way to the show
>When I was showing bitches I acepted that, if they weren't spayed, there'd be times when they came into season at inconvenient times, and I'd >miss shows. C'est la vie.
>I agree, that's one of things, as a bitch owner, that has to be accepted (if they are shown)
>I must say I find it strange that bitch owners are supposed to accept that they shouldn't show them when in season (not talking about full season or late stages) but dog owners feel they shouldn't have to accept that there will be bitches who will be distracting to their dogs.
>IMO it's even worse than throwing bait around the ring and distracting the competition that way; at least that only distracts the other animals >in the ring at the time, not in adjoining rings, or even the next day. I guess knowingly distracting other people's dogs and potentially spoiling >their chances of success is just bad sportsmanship.
> How is this to be achieved if the bitch misses most of the shows owing to being in season?
> A bitch normally in season for 4 weeks, some bitches put on weight/lose weight/lose condition because of hormones. In coated breeds the months after a season is when they drop their coat meaning they aren't showable until the coat grows in again, usually as the next season is approaching.
>In my breed we have the some of the same names judging year in, year out and others seem to wait for 4-5+ years until their next >appointment. By then my bitch could be in Veteran!
>> In my breed we have the some of the same names judging year in, year out and others seem to wait for 4-5+ years until their next >appointment. By then my bitch could be in Veteran!
>
> No, I don't think I'll bring a bitch to a show, no matter who the judge is.
> I think I must be in a different world as I couldn't care less if it was a particular judge that I want to go under. If my bitch is in season then she just doesn't go. Even if she ended up being a veteran when a particular judge was doing us again I don't think it is fair in the bitch, the dogs, the other exhibitors or the judge to take a bitch in season to a show. Maybe I'm not competative enough but to me the day is there to be enjoyed. I couldn't enjoy it if I was having to watch every dog that came close, making sure that my bitch didn't get caught. Especially as she could be grumpy and might fly at a dog that came too close, thus giving her a name for being vicious. When all she is doing is protecting herself. No, I don't think I'll bring a bitch to a show, no matter who the judge is.
> a mate of mine didnt know her bitch was in season until my boy told her!!!!!
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