Me and a friend were recently having this discussion. Do you breed to the winner or the sire of the winner?
Me and a friend were recently having this discussion. Do you breed to the winner or the sire of the winner?
Ihmo, it depends on the pedigree of both and what you are needing to add, to your bitch...
It is a given that all that needs to be taken into account but for discussion sake lets assume all the above are equal
It sounds like you already know, the answer, to your own question... lol
If you want to discuss, breeding.. You need to be more specific about some things. What you looking for in the offspring. Do you have room, to take a chance on the winner to see if he is a producer. How old is the proven producer. It's a few more things, that have to be known.. In order to get some help... I think that's why nobody is responding
I would breed to whichever dog has the traits that I am looking for/need in my bitch.
The son may have mouth, but dad doesn't. Dad may have air, but the son doesn't. Etc.
Sometimes, the stud "is just throwin' em," regardless, and you need to breed to those dogs while they're still around ... and sort out which children to breed later after he's gone 8-)
Jack
If you are constantly striving for improvement of a line and u go back to the dog that produced the ace, you are, in effect, standing still. You may get some good dogs, but you aren't advancing your breeding program.
So are you saying bred to the ace?Originally Posted by dance all night rece
How are you so sure the ace will produce?
Say you have a female off the ace and she is missing a piece of the puzzle...
Do you go back to the ace? Or to the dog that produced the ace?
Originally Posted by FACE203
I agree. I don't see how you advance your line by not breeding to your key stud dog.
If you have an ace off your stud, put him in the bullpen and then try to get another ace, this one a bitch, off of your stud dog. Get as many really good dogs off of your stud as possible, THEN (when the stud is gone) advance your line by interbreeding the very best offspring of him together.
That's how most breeders do it that I know ...
Jack
.
I actually did have my answer but when I had this discussion before you are right we were talking about actual dogs. I tried to leave the subject vague to encourage conversation. I wasn't really looking for "the answer".Originally Posted by FACE203
Gotcha... So what's some peds on the dogs, you speak of?