
Hi MamaBas
It doesn't work quite like that. It used to be that show results (two "Very Good" or "Excellent" evaluations, from two different judges) were enough to qualify a dog for breeding. But breed clubs in Switzerland now hold their OWN qualification event. This is tougher than show results alone. An international judge is acquired for the club event (called the "Ankoerung" in German, "Séléction" in French), not a group of fellow breeders. The judge puts the dog and it's owner through the usual assessments, but in addition, there is a character test and evaluation. For this, sometimes fellow breeders (also present and waiting their turn with their own dogs) are asked to form a circle, for instance, and close in on the dog to check it's ability to deal with such a situation. Our breed club always has the same judge nowadays, and she requires the whole event to be held in a train station. Now, since my dogs have not grown up in a train station, nor will they raise their puppies in one, I find this, well, pretty ridiculous. Maybe aggravating would be the better word, because you only have to think of paying a fortune for a puppy you have bought from a top breeder in a foreign country, paid the plane fare and hotel to get there and back, waited a year until the qualification for breeding while training carefully, and then have the whole thing messed up because a train came roaring into the station.
Anyhow, it's not a committee which decides on whether to qualify a dog for breeding or not, it is the judge, the same judge you might very well meet next time in the show ring. But the event is club-sponsored. That is required of all clubs. There must be two "Ankoerungen" per year.