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> Any suggestions to improve it?
>it was my first visit to crufts this year and i went simply to observe but my god was it packed! now my simply going to watch, and yes do some shopping- there were some good things available, might annoy some of you
>it isn't about the winning but the romance of getting there
> Yes Katt many of us who do have dogs and show at Crufts have very healthy ones, ones that do Cani-Cross, agility, obedience, flyball, the list is endless.
>
> Many of us who do show do numerous other things with our dogs and if they weren't healthy they wouldn't be able to do such things.
>
> Yet again the minority are spoiling things now for the majority of the healthy dogs.
> But we have to look at the big picture these organisations are not just pulling out of events eg Crufts for no reason, (some people are taking it as they are penalising crufts)
4. If people are considering buying a pedigree dog they need to understand the importance of determining and questioning its genetic heritage.
> Hi Katt
>
>> But we have to look at the big picture these organisations are not just pulling out of events eg Crufts for no reason, (some people are taking it as they are penalising crufts)
> I don't want to be argumentative or rude but it appears to me that you need to look at the bigger picture - along with literally thousands of other dog owners who have no in depth contact with the matters covered in that documentary. The documentary did not show "the bigger picture" at all :-( It showed a comparatively miniscule section of a system which produces hundreds of thousands of healthy, long lived, well socialised happy family pets :-) However that wouldn't have made good viewing or had such a sensational impact so they went with the tiny picture instead and have now garnered enormous support from the public in general on the basis of this expose :-(
>
> In every major organisation there are bad apples - whether at the top, middle or bottom. The Government, NHS, medical profession at large, education system and teaching in general, legal system (from lawyers to High Courts, vets, army, navy, police forces, banking, City, many more - think huge retailers. How many similar programmes have been done which have castigated them so thoroughly and of any that may have done so how many have genuinely suffered from it the way that WE, the majority of responsible and ethical breeders exhibitors and judges, are currently doing??? None I'll wager!
>
> Quite simply the bigger picture didn't make news - hence wasn't even touched upon <IMG alt=mad src="/images/mad.gif">
>
> regards, Teri
> Crufts is an opportunity to celebrate all things dog with a whole bunch of people who care about dogs all gathered together in one place
>I agree 100 million%, Crufts was the only dog show I ever knew about growing up.
> Rightly or wrongly, we need to acknowledge that currently the KC have no legal control over poorly bred animals - no breeder is obligated to register their stock with the KC and quite literally hundreds of thousands of pedigree dogs are bred each year which are not.
> What I and many others would like to see is that the KC in the near future only permits breeders who meet NEW and VERY strict criteria to register their pups with them. The basics would need to be mandatory health testing married to selecting only those for breeding which had excellent results and then rearing and socialising resultant litters to the highest possible standards which includes following up with life time support.
>
> Then, and IMO only then, would the KC registration document carry true value and it would be up to all the major welfare organisations as well as the KC itself to hammer home to the general public that purchasing any puppy without KC documentation was foolhardy.
> We should all be able to pick up KC guidelines, leaflets and handouts from the vets, pet shops and training classes etc It's not up to Pedigree or Eukanuba to be giving advice about raising healthy puppies and training your dogs it should be more balanced than that and why not the KC?
> I didn't watch DB - never do TBH. I always think that folks who end up on this type of show have a want about them anyway (Moi? Snob? <IMG alt="eek" src="/images/eek.gif"/> ) - to me if you need serious help the last place you go to get it is on the telly
> What I and many others would like to see is that the KC in the near future only permits breeders who meet NEW and VERY strict criteria to register their pups with them. The basics would need to be mandatory health testing married to selecting only those for breeding which had excellent results and then rearing and socialising resultant litters to the highest possible standards which includes following up with life time support.
>
> Then, and IMO only then, would the KC registration document carry true value and it would be up to all the major welfare organisations as well as the KC itself to hammer home to the general public that purchasing any puppy without KC documentation was foolhardy.
>
> If the KC were to adopt the strategy mentioned by Teri then they could legitimately assume the education role too. They already offer information on choosing puppies, finding a breeder etc and this good advice and clear information is relevant for ALL dogs, not just pedigrees. If the KC were to present themselves as the calm, scientific, expert face then this could be mentioned in many of these dog programmes. As so many of the recent threads have said it is vital for the KC to have better PR and one of the ways they could do this is to publicise the need for well informed decision making and education that goes hand in hand with responsible dog ownership. We should all be able to pick up KC guidelines, leaflets and handouts from the vets, pet shops and training classes etc. It's not up to Pedigree or Eukanuba to be giving advice about raising healthy puppies and training your dogs it should be more balanced than that and why not the KC? Perhaps then we could have a page at the end of some TV programmes: If any of the issues in tonights programme affect you or your dogs then you can get information help and guidance from The Kennel Club at...
>
> Or am I just being naive and simplistic?!!
> Yes I know - we watch so that we can roll our eyeballs and feel a bit smug about our well behaved dogs, or celebrate our problems in the realisation that we're never that bad!!
>
> Although one had to feel sorry for the poor woman who broke down in tears thinking she was a social pariah as her dog ate it's own poo. She genuinely thought she had the only dog that has ever done this...
> hope it was all you expected
> had to listen to and avoid crowds of people all complaining about the dogs being in the way!!
> What I and many others would like to see is that the KC in the near future only permits breeders who meet NEW and VERY strict criteria to register their pups with them. The basics would need to be mandatory health testing married to selecting only those for breeding which had excellent results and then rearing and socialising resultant litters to the highest possible standards which includes following up with life time support.
> Half the fun of Crufts for me is looking at everyone's dogs, talking to owners and clapping their dogs. But I always ask first
> We should all be able to pick up KC guidelines, leaflets and handouts from the vets, pet shops and training classes etc.
> most people wouldn't go to the vets BEFORE buying a puppy.
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