Tail docking a spaniel?

Remember that you're breeding sheep every year. Not the same with dogs that likely only have 2 litters in their lifetime. That alone will be a limiting factor. Bitches are unlikely to be bred before they're two and probably 3. Currently, if they have tiny tails but are, for example noisy or lethargic, they won't be bred from. This will slow down genetic breeding massively.
You obviously missed my comment about "more tools in the box now".

More vets fees 🤷‍♂️
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You obviously missed my comment about "more tools in the box now".


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I didn't. You have an added advantage that you have more animals to compare. I can't remember how many sheep you breed per year but it's certainly far more than the average shooting man who keeps a couple of dogs.
 
I didn't. You have an added advantage that you have more animals to compare. I can't remember how many sheep you breed per year but it's certainly far more than the average shooting man who keeps a couple of dogs.
Yes, that's why you get a whole breeders' association involved, with a number of breeders collaborating.
 
Just an old fashioned practice not really needed, imo.
If people want shorter tailed dogs then breeders should be breeding them with shorter tails, not cutting them off. It wouldn't be difficult to do.

My daughter's working spaniel (deer tracking) isn't docked, and has no issues. Neither of my terriers are docked, and no issues there either.
I have seen a good handful of working spaniels with undocked tails. All bar non had constant problems with split tails. There is no way I would own a undocked spaniel for beating, there is no comparison the amount of stick a dog gets beating compared to working deer.
 
It’d take too long, you’re realistically not going to know what type of dog you have until it’s at least 4. You’re going to bred for working ability, not the bitch/dog with the short tail. As the saying goes “pretty is what pretty does”.
I’d bet that there’ll never be spaniels about with 30/40% short tails from selective breeding
 
I’d bet that there’ll never be spaniels about with 30/40% short tails from selective breeding
There never will be, if there's not the appetite for it.
But I still maintain that it could be done, in far less time than you think, using the genetic selection methods available to us now that weren't available in the past.
But it would take a collaborative effort to do it, so unless involvement in such a sceme became a mandatory requirement of pedigree registration for the whole population of a particular breed it's unlikely to happen. But a forward-thinking association could do it. And in my opinion, should do it. You'd not end up with tails as short as traditionally docked tails, but they'd be short enough.
 
Only because I googled it, but seemingly there's about 7or 8 dog breeds that are born with no tails. Would be interesting to see some of these brought into working Spaniel cross breeding. Brittany Spaniels, Corgis,French Bulldogs, Australian Shepards, Rottweilers and Boston Terriers. Personally docked Spaniels are the only working Spaniel I'd have.
 
Only because I googled it, but seemingly there's about 7or 8 dog breeds that are born with no tails. Would be interesting to see some of these brought into working Spaniel cross breeding. Brittany Spaniels, Corgis,French Bulldogs, Australian Shepards, Rottweilers and Boston Terriers. Personally docked Spaniels are the only working Spaniel I'd have.
Introgression of the short tailed gene from Brittany Spaniels into Springer Spaniels would speed things up a bit, for anyone who thought my earlier mentioned method (ie, no crossbreeding) would be too slow. But not all Brittany Spaniels have naturally short tails, so the bloodlines would have to be carefully chosen.
 
Only because I googled it, but seemingly there's about 7or 8 dog breeds that are born with no tails. Would be interesting to see some of these brought into working Spaniel cross breeding. Brittany Spaniels, Corgis,French Bulldogs, Australian Shepards, Rottweilers and Boston Terriers. Personally docked Spaniels are the only working Spaniel I'd have.

Born with no tail ?
What do you mean potshotpat ?
 
You obviously missed my comment about "more tools in the box now".


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You’re underestimating the difficulty.
What you suggest may be simple, but it’s not easy.
You can select for tail length but you’ll still have to primarily select for working ability or you’ll end up with a strain of dogs that no one wants, except maybe the show ring brigade, because they are less capable than their long tailed counterparts.
You’ll have to prove that there’s no loss of working ability by competing successfully in KC licensed field trials, which means that you have to choose from pedigree dogs of your chosen breed, with no outcrosses or you can’t show or compete.

I’m too old to get involved, but I wish you every success in your endeavours to show us how easy it is.
I may even buy one, provided you meet the goals, a naturally short tail, no loss of working ability, together with KC registration and recognition.
You need the whole package.
2 out of 3 may not be bad, but it’s not going to be good enough here.
 
Sure.
The dog breeding world has the same problems as the sheep breeding world: resistance to change; a stubborn adherence to outdated practices.

Those breeders who are prepared to stick their neck out and think outside the box may be mocked now, but they'll be the ones who are laughing when legislation forces change.

I can remember a very good presentation at a genetics conference that I attended, in which the speaker said that if we want to stay ahead in the game we need to be breeding what customers will be looking for in 5 years time, not simply producing more of whatever it was they bought last year. And he was dead right.

Hence, for example, why I have DNA sampled all of my sheep to identify the ones with a natural genetic resistance to certain internal parasites so that I can selectively breed for that characteristic. OK, so we have drugs to treat the parasites, so why bother? Buyers aren't yet asking for parasite resistance when purchasing breeding stock. But the drugs we have are reducing in efficacy and coming under tighter control, so in 5 or so years time buyers will needing to acquire naturally resistant bloodlines. I will be in a position to supply them. The head-in-the-sand breeders won't.

Is the sheep breeding world breeding sheep to have the ability of a trained springer spaniel?

Or are the sheep breeders looking for animals that simply have to survive until they make a good weight for slaughter.

Selecting characteristics such as gaining good weight / fat and being resistant to pest is great but we currently have probably the best dog trainers / field triallers in the world.

They come all around the world for the championships and the winning dogs are often bought by Americans or Scandi’s for big money.

Even these top trialling men who are as as say likely the best of the best, with the best facilities, training and shooting ground one can get, still fail to breed every animals to a top FTCH standard.

They are unable to guarantee that when breeding 2 animals together the pups will get the exact characteristics they want.

It’s hard enough breeding animals got their intended use, do you genuinely think they can also add in a bunch of other things?

Or they could just dock them like they’ve done for hundreds of years without issue.
 
Makes me laugh that vets won't dock a pup at the legal gap of 3 to 5 days old,
But are more than happy to take a rake of money off you to sedate the dog "risky in itself" and take its nuts off.
Is that not mutilation too. ?
It is a mutilation, but permitted in the Mutilation Regulations.

Most of us don't like docking because a) it hurts b) it is of questionable benefit

All animal sectors are reviewing these historic (traditional dare I say) mutilations as we learn more about the harm and have evidence to question the tradition.
 
It is a mutilation, but permitted in the Mutilation Regulations.

Most of us don't like docking because a) it hurts b) it is of questionable benefit

All animal sectors are reviewing these historic (traditional dare I say) mutilations as we learn more about the harm and have evidence to question the tradition.

Questionable benefit ???
Have 5 minutes and read above mate
 
It is a mutilation, but permitted in the Mutilation Regulations.

Most of us don't like docking because a) it hurts b) it is of questionable benefit

All animal sectors are reviewing these historic (traditional dare I say) mutilations as we learn more about the harm and have evidence to question the tradition.

If the benefit was so questionable, why did law makers go back to the Scottish ban 10 years later and add in an exemption for working dogs?

The truth is there was considerable evidence presented by vets and others with the animal welfare in mind.
 
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