> The lines we used has never had any problems, so we thought this would be the best/safe way to go. The breeder has been doing breeding for along time and was confident that its not a problem as he knows his dogs.
My youngest bitch champion (now 7) is from such a mating (COI: 13.7) the half siblings had the same mother who at the time was a healthy 9 year old, from my 4th generation, with three adult healthy litters behind her (the mating was between a daughter from first litter and son from her last, and both had totally unrelated sires), the COI was quite similar.
Of course it does limit you in the next generation and you will need to find an unrelated mate for the offspring you intent to keep. You will also need to avoid breeding from a puppy displaying the faults of the parents, as they are more likely to be passed on when they are bred from, equally the good points have a chance of coming through strongly (which is why this sort of breeding was practiced, but it's a two edged sword)..
> So to the questions.
1, Was this OK, or have I made a big mistake.
2, Should I just sell as normal.
3, or should I be sending out the pedigree form so people can see first, before I take the deposit.
4, should I tell them, but this would mean its a problem, else why would I be telling them.
5, if no one (apart form the 1 person I told) wants them, should I put them up for Adoption or sell them for £0 on a popular website (but homes maybe not as good as the we are hopping for) !!!
1. Yes, if the parents have been health tested and the lines produced healthy offspring. This along with grandparent to grand offspring is the closet the KC now allow, though there are dogs bred with higher COI's, with multiple line breeding.
2. Yes.
3. You should always have the pedigree available to the buyers, and they can make up their own minds. If any are planning on breeding you will need to tell them they need to mate to unrelated lines in next generation.
4. You would tell them the reasons for your choice of sire, and what you hoped to achieve in the litter by your choice, in the normal run of things.
5. Absolutely no reason why they should not be home able, if they are healthy typical pups. I assume you will endorse the puppies (progeny not eligible for registration), as most god breeders do, and not lift such endorsements unless all relevant health testing is carried out and advice sought on mating partners.