The next growl from the Growler
Another column from our show world insider...
As a long time breeder of pedigree dogs I watch in horror what is happening in the dog world.
Yes, I health test (I do more tests than the KC want for my breed). I raise puppies in my home trying my best to make sure I am selling healthy happy well socialised pups to the best homes I can find.
I don't make a lot of money and I don't have a huge kennel.
There are a lot of breeders like me, all quietly doing the same thing - often still in contact with puppies who are now elderly and their owners and sometimes with owners who have come back to find a second family pet after the first passed away.
While I admit over the years we all make changes and try to improve, I do feel let down and unsupported by the KC who don't seem to have any time or interest in what any breeder is doing once the registration money has been paid.
After 'that programme' as many call it, why didn't our KC spend some money showing the other side and how good breeders operate? Surely a great education advantage was lost by the total lack of action or defense.
Then we had the mad knee-jerk face-saving race that went on. Rafts of change and new rules suddenly pouring out of Clarges Street with little consultation or warning. Very few of us could keep up. Most willingly went along with change and breed clubs up and down the country ran around like mad things trying to cope, holding the KC-demanded meetings and reviewing the new standards in the time frame allowed.
Many breeds had rules regarding breeding and health testing that were far more stringent and fitting to each individual breed, but they were swept away - replaced by a set of one size fits all approach from our KC. Is it the breeders fault that our esteemed leaders were caught napping and made to look foolish by a well planned and edited assault on pedigree dogs?
I would say KC educate yourselves, come down of your lofty perch in your gentleman's club and actually look at the dog breeding that goes on today.
The small hobby breeders you look down on are what has replaced big impersonal kennels and make up the majority of your customers
LONG MAY IT CONTINUE
THE GROWLER
As a long time breeder of pedigree dogs I watch in horror what is happening in the dog world.
Yes, I health test (I do more tests than the KC want for my breed). I raise puppies in my home trying my best to make sure I am selling healthy happy well socialised pups to the best homes I can find.
I don't make a lot of money and I don't have a huge kennel.
There are a lot of breeders like me, all quietly doing the same thing - often still in contact with puppies who are now elderly and their owners and sometimes with owners who have come back to find a second family pet after the first passed away.
While I admit over the years we all make changes and try to improve, I do feel let down and unsupported by the KC who don't seem to have any time or interest in what any breeder is doing once the registration money has been paid.
After 'that programme' as many call it, why didn't our KC spend some money showing the other side and how good breeders operate? Surely a great education advantage was lost by the total lack of action or defense.
Then we had the mad knee-jerk face-saving race that went on. Rafts of change and new rules suddenly pouring out of Clarges Street with little consultation or warning. Very few of us could keep up. Most willingly went along with change and breed clubs up and down the country ran around like mad things trying to cope, holding the KC-demanded meetings and reviewing the new standards in the time frame allowed.
Many breeds had rules regarding breeding and health testing that were far more stringent and fitting to each individual breed, but they were swept away - replaced by a set of one size fits all approach from our KC. Is it the breeders fault that our esteemed leaders were caught napping and made to look foolish by a well planned and edited assault on pedigree dogs?
I would say KC educate yourselves, come down of your lofty perch in your gentleman's club and actually look at the dog breeding that goes on today.
The small hobby breeders you look down on are what has replaced big impersonal kennels and make up the majority of your customers
LONG MAY IT CONTINUE
THE GROWLER
Comments
Of course that doesn't guarantee health, but it would give some protection against the problems that arise when puppies are raised in a kennel situation where they have minimal contact with human beings doing normal domestic activities.
I'm 'In the pink' but can't seem to log in today!
Come on, time to stop whinging, get the puppy contract in place and go it alone. be brave start something new and ditch that awful kennel club. they don't do anything worthy anyway.
This argument is typical of the Kennel Club. A patronising put down which is full of half truths.
Actually, most breeders only know as much as the owners of other dogs chose to make public, and many people are successful at hiding the health problems in their dogs.
A person acquainted with a breed for decades may have heard rumours about the problems in other lines, but for the relative newcomer there will be no way of finding out about the faults in the extended family of their dogs.
Anonymous goes on to say... "Yet if you look at breed clubs list and the KC publications (and their web site search engine) you can see just WHAT testing has been done for the ancestors of a pup"
A little misleading here..... There are very few official health schemes, they apply to relatively few breeds, and therefore there is very little information about breed health on the KC website.
Breed club lists, showing the health status of individual dogs are very few, and are all voluntary, so they will contain only a handful of names.
Then we have..." Such statement made by the previous post show just how little people know or research about how a healthy pup is bred, which is as much as a problem as poorly bred dogs are."
I would agree that lack of information about health issues in breeds is a problem for puppy buyers. Perhaps the Kennel Club should be doing more to genuinely help educate the public, instead of wasting time and money trying to puff up their molehill of health testing into a mountain?
Margaret Carter