
When I bought my foundation bitch and decided I would start showing her (at nearly two years as my son was still a toddler wehn she came) I joined the National breed club. I had kept in regular touch with her breeder and had also asked the stud owner for a phjotos and got corresponding. I bought initially the Annual publications poroduced by the club for the previous 10 years (now I have yearbooks goiiung bavk to the 50's with odd gaps). These were very useful in order to put flesh on the bones that were her pedigree. I could see what her ancestors looked like, even trace some of her characteristics that had skipped generations.
When I first starteed going to Championship shows I thought all the dogs looked the saem and were gorgeous, but over time I got an eye for what I liked, and for what was correct (not always the same thing :D).
when I came to breed my first litter it was with my bitches parents owners both holding my hand over the phone, and local breeders of another breeed on hadn with the practical experience.
In hindsight I kept the wrong pup from my first litter, but did better 3 years later when choosing her daughter, but as is often the case I had gone two steps forward and one back, as this second home bred generation was lovley, but I ahd lost a bit of substance. This bitch was my first to do reliably well, and has her Stud Book number, RCC and nearly won out of Limit (has had an awful lot more 2nd and 3rds than first :D)
Her daughter was the pick of her litter, but trying to be sensible I didn't keep her, as I was trying to get a good age gap. Fate decreed otherwise and seh came back to me when she was too much for her Novice owners who had a young family. she really hit the heifhts for me and is now a Champion 3 times over, but has been the most challenging to won, as didn't get the training she needed whilst a baby.
This is the down side of breeding. You can end up on average with every 10th puppy coming unstuck in it's new home (have to admit it has happened lees in last few years, as maybve I am learning to suss out potential new owners better, or just dumb luck).
The up side for me has been that at least one pup per litter has owners that have become freinds. They come and visit, some have also taken to showing and done well, and my canine family gets larger. I now have several owners that have had more than one pup from me over the last 10 years.
You have loads of time, easily 3 years to learn the basics, and if you want you wil find yourself learning more over the next decades.