You understand wrong.
For example, taking some random dog (that is a chest dog) and just breeding it to a relative, who "just happens to be" a head dog is NOT the way to consistently get head dogs.
And breeding her to some relative who is NOT a head dog really isn't the way to get head dogs ...
Now, if you breed her to some strange dog who "is" a head dog (but you know nothing about his background), then all you're doing here is playing guessing-games.
The BEST breeding is TWO dogs that BOTH possess the desired trait of being a head dog, that ARE related by BOTH being down from THE SAME FOUNDATION DOG that likewise had/produces this trait
That, and only that, is how you can enjoy
consistent success at getting what you want
The chances are directly proportional to BOTH dogs being
consistent representatives of that style/trait ... as opposed to being "flukes" ...
Consistency is everything ... "flukes" are next to nothing ... breeding-wise.
No again. Why are you trying to do EVERYTHING BUT make
the best decision?
You and 99% of everyone else who will never make it off the ground as a breeder?
Do you realize there is a reason WHY most people never make it off the ground as breeders???
THEIR CHOICES-
SELECTION!
The best decision isn't breeding two unrelated dogs that "happen" to have some trait.
The best decision isn't breeding two related dogs that DON'T have that trait.
The best decision is breeding two RELATED dogs ... that HAVE that trait ... which is an EXPECTED trait from the line ... all linebred on some fabulous dog who HAD/THREW that trait.
No wonder so many people call breeding a "crapshoot" ... or why they think everyone has "zero" chance of knowing what they'll get ... they SET THEMSELVES UP to get a 0% chance
Me? I *knew* was getting fast, slick, athletic, highly-intelligent head dogs in every damned litter I produced,
because I set the breeding up to produce them.
It's not rocket science folks;
it's basic, ordinary horse sense ... that doesn't seem to be so basic or ordinary with a lot of people.
Well, then, expect to fail. If you set yourself up to fail, then you surely will. Why on earth would you breed to something that you know nothing about, genetically?
That is wasting 2 years of your life feeding a bunch of question-marks.
Have you ever considered the reality that there are more than just "those two dogs" to breed to
I mean, seriously, how can you expect to breed "the best dogs in the world" by playing guessing games and by
not insisting on the
standards of selection necessary to make sure you produce them?
Me, I didn't make any breedings unless I KNEW I would be producing the best GD dogs on the planet, that would BEAT anything their weight they faced, wherever they got off the plane, or would DIE TRYING ...
No, I didn't get that "every time" ... but I was damned close ... because they did win 87% of the time ... and "won
or lost game" 92% of the time ... regardless of where they were in the world ... or whose hands they were in ... and I don't think anyone on earth will top those percentages.
So if you don't have that level of confidence in what you're breeding, and aren't that sure of what you'll be producing, then you shouldn't be making the breeding.
That is my honest opinion, and experience, in breeding dogs
for specific traits.
Jack