
Most breeds, especially those that are numerically small are crying out for real enthusiasts to take over as custodians of the breed, when the old guard are no longer able to.
I quote one of the top breeders in my own breed Margaret Harper, who has been active in the breed for 50 years.
This is part of an article she has written about her life with the br4eed.
"We`ve been lucky to have had many lovely Elkhounds during this half century and many have gone to novice homes and given their owners their first champion. There`s nothing Ted and I like more than seeing one of our breeding doing well for other people. I could never understand the people who have said to us over the years “I bet you wished you hadn`t let that one go”. If the dog is well cared for we share their pleasure we don`t envy it.
Bringing in fresh bloodlines whenever possible is essential in a numerically small breed such as ours is in UK. Several breeders have brought in stock and helped to keep the breed afloat. Hopefully it will now become much easier to get new blood into this country with the relaxation of quarantine laws.
The gene pool becomes very concentrated if you keep breeding back into your own line you can end up in a corner with nowhere to go. The same faults will keep re-appearing and unless you go out you can`t correct them.
In a similar way the same can be said about repeat matings. All well and good if you want to keep one of that particular pairing but if you keep doing this the breed suffers in the long run because the gene pool is reduced even more. Should a really serious problem arise a lot of stock of identical breeding could possibly be sidelined.
Winning in the show ring should be secondary to trying to improve the size of a healthy gene pool in this country especially now with far fewer litters being bred. The Kennel Club registrations were under a hundred individual puppies last year. When I came into the breed in the fifties annual registrations were over 200 and rose to stay between 300 to 400 for a long time. This is the lowest since 1925! Breeders beware!
Unless we can attract serious breeders from other breeds into the Elkhound world I can see a dangerous downward spiral because at the moment far too many good puppies are never going to be bred from. Of course we want to get them into very good homes but as some vets seem to want to rush everyone into early neutering they are virtually destroying the potential future breeding stock. If pet owners had time to think about a possible later litter and with help and encouragement from breeder and club we might see the registrations begin to rise.
Perhaps we have been too discouraging in the past with the fear of our breed becoming too popular and the spectre of puppy farms, but in this country at least it has gone too far the other way.
Too many of our devotees are not in a position to breed at all for various reasons and some of us who do will soon be too old!.......
We personally have to try to keep our numbers down as we get older and a little less active. We don`t have more than one litter a year sometimes not even that, in fact we only have one bitch of breeding age and a youngster of 12 months, R. Todd Sloane aka Toddy. She stayed because she was an only one and when the time came we couldn`t bring ourselves to part with her and that`s been a learning curve too! The rest are our pensioners from eight years to nearly fifteen. We can`t part with them they are a part of us, but of course this makes it nigh impossible to keep another youngster until someone has passed on and we don`t like to think about that.
We have rarely parted with an adult and if we did it was only to someone special whom we knew really well. We find it a real wrench letting anyone past puppy age go.
We haven`t exported for some years as we find it now too worrying not knowing how or where they are. I`m not sure whether that is hypocritical as we expect to bring in stock from overseas!
...........So hopefully a few fun years yet with this most precious breed, I can`t imagine living without them. Many loved ones I haven`t mentioned but in fifty years there have been quite a few and they are not forgotten.
Margaret Harper."
What breeders who have made a lifes work of their chosen breed don't want is dabblers and exploiters that can very quickly ruin a breeds health temperament and type by producing puppies without the breeds or the individual dogs welfare.
I found that I was welcomed with open arms whenit was clear that I had a serious interest. My oldest bitch was born in 1992 and my first litter was born only 3 years later, so I was of course reliant on other more experienced people in the breed for the knowledge needed to do things properly. I now like to think I can basically stand on my own feet as a breeder, but still constantly consult with my elders about dogs in the pedigrees of whom they have personal knowledge.