A very well written post from Carl, and the card shuffling ability is a good 1.
He so right about the horse/champion thing too, never heard that before.
But u do see it in a lot of well bred FT dogs often no where near the expectations.
Hybrid vigor only really applies to 1st gen crosses, there is research out there showing that often 2nd gen crosses have poorer health and shorter life spans.
I'm sure in a recent thread in the vet's section a vet was commenting on Montreal dogs having a genetic disease from a parent bred.
In the old days when Maff still had power they would come onto farms and sieze anything they thought was a cross bred bull..
U won't find any farmers using a cross bred male on there stock.
Breeding stock and dogs isn't that different.
Usually in these sort of threads u get the all breeds came from wolfs and were allmongerals at 1 point. Which is true
But the old breeders used to be ruthless, any pups/dogs which looked to have the bad traits even the wrong colour/size/shape would be PTS there and then.
1 off my biggest worries about actually wanting a cross would be the standard of the dogs being mated.
I'd imagine anyone training a bitch to a decent standard would want a pure bred pup to try to improve on her,, not take as complete lucky dip marring.
While accidents will happen and produce some very decent dogs not sure I'd search for 1
Have just posted my intro but have wonderful Pennine dog originally from around Raby who would (I think) make good sire!Mine is a Pennine pointer - lab x GWP - great dog. Easy going around the family. Only use the dog on deer. Points, air scents, ground trails etc. Cross breeds can give you hybrid vigour, and less likely to have an issue with genetic problems that can afflict pure breeds. I would cross her with another Pennine. Oh and they are cheaper too then the pedigree mutts.
I agree 100%. The problem with cross-breeding is that people imagine it is like mixing paint where you get an 'averaging' of the two breeds; whereas, in reality, it is more like shuffling two packs of cards together, chucking half of them away and then seeing what you have got left. The predictability of outcome for any given puppy is very poor and the variability within any litter is enormous. Some puppies will be copies of the dam; some just like the sire; and the rest a random combination of characteristics from each of the parents.
And this is where human optimism comes in (with pedigree dogs as well, but even more markedly so with mongrels). We assume that if we take two great dogs or breeds and cross them, the puppies will carry all of the great characteristics from each of the two dogs in order to produce a super-dog. This is unlikely. They are just as likely to take all of the terrible characteristics from each breed and combine them into a super-crap-dog; or - most likely of all - take some random combination of good and bad and shuffle them together to make an (unpredictably) average dog.
Breeding pedigree dogs (for performance; forget looks) is hard enough. To try and do it with crosses just makes it even harder.
Finally, there is a saying in the horse-racing world that 'champions rarely breed champions'. I think it is the same with dogs: most of the time we are just guessing as to what we are going to get.
Kind regards,
Carl
As I said earlier this is a popular cross with hill keepers, seen some really good ones of course I don't suppose you will see the bad ones.
So many of them now that they have started breeding them to each other seem to breed true to type black rough coated labs with beards and most of the ones I have seen point, of course as I say maybe only seeing the ones that have turned out as they want them.
Never had one myself but have been impressed by the ones have seen
Have kept GSPs for years ever since I got bored of labs and spaniels, I like a challenge lol.
Best dog I ever had was a GSPx GWP.
I see the ones keepers keep and most are as wild as thunder and are definitely not trained!!!!If you only see the ones keepers have kept, do we think they keep the bad ones that are no good or have faults?
Well having lived in ireland for 35ish years now and being constantly involved with shooting all i can say to that is bollicsIf you only see the ones keepers have kept, do we think they keep the bad ones that are no good or have faults?
Keepers aren’t there to collect dogs. If the dog is no good for the job at hand it’s gone (or shot!).
I’ve seen some of the hunting springers over in Ireland and was impressed with how well they hunt cover. I queried how they just seem to be out and out cover bashers even at a young age.
I heard back from several reliable sources that dogs are so cheap over there, if they are not smashing cover to pieces by around 10 months they simply shoot the dog!!!
They said “it costs as much to keep a bad one as a good one!!”
They end up breeding excellent hunters with excellent hunters generation after generation, because anything that isn’t an excellent hunters gets done in.
How many people over here do that? How many people even have the common sense to admit that their 90% pet 10% gundog isn’t up to being bred from?
See ads everyday on the FB gundog groups - “how do I put my gundog out to stud? He’s really well bred (they usually aren’t that well bred) and he has an amazing temperament... he would make such an amazing daddy!”...
Then you get the people who are more concerned with health tests than working ability. The dog should be health tested and health ... BUT it needs to be an amazing worker first and foremost.
Well having lived in ireland for 35ish years now and being constantly involved with shooting all i can say to that is bollics
Most of the irish springers are very much rough shooting dogs that spend a lot of time hunting very rough demanding cover for woodcock and pheasants
There are plenty of the whimpy small pocket rocket ft types too
in the hands of a certain section of the shooting community
Suggesting that its because the bad ones just get shot is crazy imho believe me there are as many bad ones here as elsewhere
I'd put 2 mortgages on the percentage of bad tempered, growley fighting GWP and GWP x Lab is FAR higher than in Springers or Labradors!!!But to be fair there labs or spaniels weren't much better so not entirely the breeds fault
Well having lived in ireland for 35ish years now and being constantly involved with shooting all i can say to that is bollics
Most of the irish springers are very much rough shooting dogs that spend a lot of time hunting very rough demanding cover for woodcock and pheasants
There are plenty of the whimpy small pocket rocket ft types too
in the hands of a certain section of the shooting community
Suggesting that its because the bad ones just get shot is crazy imho believe me there are as many bad ones here as elsewhere
A few good posts above.
Not wanting to class all keepers and long dog/terrier men together but generally they will be far less tolerant of poor dogs that haven't made the grade.
And if the dog did survive but wasn't really that good they definately wouldn't be breeding of it
Traditionally these mongrals would pretty much be free to mates or very cheap so if the pup doesnt make the grade and needs 'balanced' it will be.
Often in these mongral breeders u get the classic line that's how the breeds were formed, which is 100% right but these breeders had a vision and tight new breed specs any pup/dog the wrong size or colour or any other temperament, training issues showed up at any time the dog would get a swiming lesson with a brick collar.
Ps I have 2 mongrals in my kennels so not anti mongral, springerdor and a gwpx lab ( from a similar area to Dicky's above) took it home from the grouse 1 day it was about to get a bullet, really don't rate it 1 bit, my pure labs can range further than it and hit cover harder than my springerdor for as gas a thin coat not a proper lab coat.
It was sitting shivering on my lap picking up on a duck flight the other night.
I don't think my gwpX would ever have been much of adog, although possibly with better training in its early years would definately be better than it is now.
Not saying I'd never have another mongral but I certainly wouldn't pay for 1 or go looking for 1 thinking I've reinventing the wheel.
And it would depend on the mongral X, breeding pointers X spaniels ( wot do u want a spaniel hunting 3 times out of shot range, instead of just the usual 1 range, that doesn't hold a point) or hounds to anything other than hounds is just daft
They can do a job and put game in the bag but u will most likely end up with a higher % of failures or poor dogs out of a litter.
But with all dog breeding u really never know how they will turn out u can only make the best guess after doing ur homework and assessing the dogs ur breeding are well suited, but not necessarily all red FTCH.
This can also be seen in Teckels/Dachshunds. It could almost be described as a hobby to get the dog through as many trials as possible. Yes, these trials can be diverse - boar pen, tracking, artificial earth, retrieving and with a lot of effort and patience many examples can pass all exams but that doesn't tell you anything about its 'natural' abilty - what does the dog have a natural desire to do...without all of the hard training. I am always far more interested in my own dogs 'natural ability' than what I can, with hard work, train them to do and I am always very open about what they are 'naturally' good at and what that naturally have little interest in. Only one of our teckels has naturally gone to ground, self-entering from 8 months. These points are far more important in breeding plans than what you can achieve with an awful lot of hard work.Just as u get kennel blindness I also think u get FT blindness assuming just because it has won/done well in a FT it's the best dog for everything.
Beating line, picking up, wild fowlung, rough shooting all want slightly different traits.
As I've said before both show and FT are now so specialised thee breeding for different traits
The sheep industry replies on cross need animals for commercial production, as do most of the beef industry.
My lab springer x, had no working parents, but overhearing a fellow gun saying, "if Ziggy can't find it, it can't be found" says it all, her faults almost certainly due to my training.