
:D
I know what you are saying in many ways as you are a person involved in the show and breeding world, but perhaps are at a stage where the value of the judges opinion is less than your own knowledge and you find fewer and fewer judges whose opinions you value.
My own mentors in my breed were and are in this category, and both did not show that often, more because of disinclination but also due to age making travelling more difficult.
These people do not need to show every bitch to evaluate her quality, or wait until a dog has won well before they use him as they can rely largely on their own knowledge, but this was not always so.
Without regular contact with the show and field a breeder cannot evaluate what they and more importantly others are breeding.
You need to have an eye to the breed as a whole to even decide what faults have to be given immediate attention or not tolerated, and what can safely be left a while.
For arguments sake you have a beautiful bitch, except she has poor ears, but ears are good throughout the breed, you would still use her but try to select for improvement in ears which should';t be hared as they a re in the majority.
Lets say ears are universally bad, your breeding decisions will be different you will not only be looking for a good match, but you will be specifically looking for good ears and checking that the dogs ancestors also had great ears. In the resulting litter your bias between pups will be to keep the one with the improved ears,a nd you hope you haven't lost anything vital in the process.
To breed for improvement you have to know not only where your going but where the rest of the breed is going. If you strongly believe the breed is going off course then as an experienced person in the bred you are placed to sound a cautionary note, which hopefully the breed and judges will heed, and the course can be rectified before going off too far.
I think it is no wonder that in some breeds the dogs have changed dramatically when perhaps they a re a popular breed and have a large turn over in breeders and exhibitors, there are few people who notice the changes before they are too late.
This is where breed clubs really must not neglect breed elders when they become less active in the breeds, perhaps not being able to get out to shows or to have the dogs they once had. these retired breed experts knowledge needs to be treasured.
I have only been in my current breed some 15 years and it makes me sad to see that so few people new to a breed look back into the breeds history.
They don't even know the lines their dogs are based on, and when the elders in a breed come to a club show they don't even know who they are or take the trouble to engage them in conversation, (as perhaps they are not the current winning breeders) and take the opportunity to soak up the knowledge.
My breeder has been dead now some 5 years, and her contemporaries are getting thin on the ground, but I can and could sit with them and when taking my foundation bitches pedigree back, was able to find out what these dogs were like what they tended to produce in virtues and faults, what they were like to live with.
I am now into the 6th generation of my own breeding and except for imports where knowledge of ancestors will be second hand find knowing so many of the dogs in a pedigree in person, little quirks in personality and looks that all come through sometimes after a couple of generations is fascinating, and helpful.