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> It's not 'KC official' but it's completely valid.
>In fact if you limited breeding to dogs whose owners were interested in competing the breeds would very quickly be so inbred they'd become unviable and be lost.
>In a test or trial you are not assessing your own dog. Someone else is.
>As I said above, why do those of us who compete bother then??
>On shoots there are all the other people as well, of course.
>Because you enjoy competition, presumably. Not everyone does - and that's no sin, and certainly doesn't mean their dogs are beyond the pale.
> It is quite possible to own a working dog and not to breed from it - millions of people manage to. If you can't assess your dog's working ability in competition, do not breed
>It is quite possible to own a working dog and not to breed from it - millions of people manage to. If you can't assess your dog's working ability in competition, do not breed.
>Working dogs have been successfully bred for far longer than there have been formal competitions.
>Most people on shoots these days are out for a day in the countryside in lovely scenery, and why not bring the dog too? The dog may not even be a gundog! During the week they may well be working busy jobs in the city, not out in the country training their gundogs. If their dog is a useless dog, there are so many birds put down that the dog is going to put something up, so any dog is better than no dog - and the dogs which are really awol can be kept on the lead.
>Your perception of the world of working dogs is outdated and based on something from many moons ago.
>many people besides those contributing to this thread may read it, since CD posts often come up in search results.
>There are one or two snobs who look down on the terriers doing a terrific job bustling about in the undergrowth, but on the whole people are pleasant and out to get the job done; they're being paid to do it after all! They don't care whether the dogs are pedigree or crossbred, gundog or not.
>And you really think they are going to read your posts and say.. " Oh yes before I breed from my cocker I have to train her to the gun, get up at 5am and drive hundreds of mile to compete with her and only when she is a FTCh I will breed from her.
>I think you are misunderstanding what I'm saying, if you think my point is that every dog on a pedigree needs to be a champion. I never said that, so please don't twist what I've said. I've said only that dogs should be assessed in competition or against standards before being bred. Being assessed in competition may not necessarily mean even earning a title.
> Very few dogs become FTChs, but even being placed decently in a couple of trials proves that a dog has something desirable.
>You now appear to be saying that people on shoots are paid. This is simply not true. Occasionally there is a core team of beaters who get a nominal fee of about £25 - which just about covers petrol and expenses. No one gets paid more than that except for the keeper. The vast majority of people are unpaid, and are beating or picking up for the fun of it.
>Are you now saying that it's acceptable to breed crossbreeds and terriers for gundog purposes, on the basis that they perform adequately as gundogs in your assessment method of 'turning up and being present on a shoot'? I give up.
>The important thing is that your dog has been impartially assessed alongside its peers and found to have desirable attributes.
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