Jump to content

Recommended Posts


  • Replies 50
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Popular Posts

is that from experience?

Depends on you being a Peddler,if you ARE you'll wait an see won't you ? if you ain't use your loaf ,Jag !

these are 3 of the 4 pups from that breeding

Posted Images

well after getting some advise from the good pepole on here i may just see it through. as for the sire it was 100% my dog although i think i already said that hmm.gif

well after getting some advise from the good pepole on here i may just see it through. as for the sire it was 100% my dog although i think i already said that hmm.gif

I LINE BREED WHENEVER POSSIBLE, IVE JUST DONE MOTHER SON MATING PUPS 100PCT OK,
  • Like 1
Link to post

Nothing wrong with keeping a line close bred accidentally on purpose, or not. Seen some good workers bred that way deliberately. Don't knock it !!!

Edited to say more father/daughter, mother/son matings. Can't see any problem as long as they're going to be used for work among close friends. Check it out ! Could be surprised at the result.

Edited by SON OFF SHAM
Link to post

If your dogs are an outcross and then bred brother to sister there is no other breeding that will give you more diversity in a litter. Recessives and dominants can all come out. Cheesy example but the real popular breed cross is the lab with the poodle - so called labradoodle. When you do a first cross you will get dogs that look very similar. The dominant traits align to create a litter of similar confirmation. When you then breed the brothers to sisters of that cross you will see a wide variety of types with qualities from both the lab and the poodle in varying degrees. Coats could be smooth or curly. You can get lean or barrel chested. But once you choose a type from that 2nd cross you start narrowing type and genetics with a 3rd brother sister cross. From the third cross on you are getting a smaller and smaller pool. Therefore, if your dogs are out crossed then you will have a wider variety of genetic types to choose from. If your dogs are already a set type and line then you will get more like it. The risks of deformity and genetic malady is just as likely with an unknown outcross as an unplanned inbreeding. Breeding a father to a daughter or a mother to a son is actually much quicker at narrowing the gene pool than an initial inbreeding of brother to sister. Interesting which one is the more controversially. I would keep the litter. If the dogs were both good dogs I wouldn't shy from doing it intentionally.

  • Like 1
Link to post

So are you ,going to see the mating through,got people to take on Pups,or is it the Jab ? My point was,about unplanned mating,Timing etc.Not about Inbreeding ,I don't see a problem if you Know the "Mating",just sometimes unplanned matings ,can be put across as Planned and Pedigree get's made up,Due to the Fact,THE SIRE IS NOT KNOWN FOR SURE . ;)

 

With respect,may i make an observation? 1. Quote-"My point was,about unplanned mating,Timing etc.Not about Inbreeding " The thread is about INBREEDING.

2. quote-"sometimes unplanned matings ,can be put across as Planned and Pedigree get's made up,Due to the Fact,THE SIRE IS NOT KNOWN FOR SURE . ;)". He knows the parentage-the dogs tied,and the bitch had not been near any other dog.

3. quote-"I don't see a problem if you Know the "Mating". See point 2.

 

Why post? :doh:

 

Good post Mosby.

Edited by stormyboy
Link to post

If your dogs are an outcross and then bred brother to sister there is no other breeding that will give you more diversity in a litter. Recessives and dominants can all come out. Cheesy example but the real popular breed cross is the lab with the poodle - so called labradoodle. When you do a first cross you will get dogs that look very similar. The dominant traits align to create a litter of similar confirmation. When you then breed the brothers to sisters of that cross you will see a wide variety of types with qualities from both the lab and the poodle in varying degrees. Coats could be smooth or curly. You can get lean or barrel chested. But once you choose a type from that 2nd cross you start narrowing type and genetics with a 3rd brother sister cross. From the third cross on you are getting a smaller and smaller pool. Therefore, if your dogs are out crossed then you will have a wider variety of genetic types to choose from. If your dogs are already a set type and line then you will get more like it. The risks of deformity and genetic malady is just as likely with an unknown outcross as an unplanned inbreeding. Breeding a father to a daughter or a mother to a son is actually much quicker at narrowing the gene pool than an initial inbreeding of brother to sister. Interesting which one is the more controversially. I would keep the litter. If the dogs were both good dogs I wouldn't shy from doing it intentionally.

 

cheers for that. both are very good dogs and so are there parents. i have decided to see it through(let nature take its course) she may not even be pregnant but they did get locked together.

Link to post
  • 1 month later...
The risks of deformity and genetic malady is just as likely with an unknown outcross as an unplanned inbreeding.

 

That's simply not true, almost all genetic diseases are recessive and so the mathematical chances of two unrelated dogs having the same recessive genes (and therefore allowing their expression) is infinitely higher than with a related dogs.

 

Breeding a father to a daughter or a mother to a son is actually much quicker at narrowing the gene pool than an initial inbreeding of brother to sister.

 

Again, not true. The coefficient of inbreeding in mother-son/father-daughter is 12.5 %, the average* coefficient of inbreeding for brother-sister is 25%.

 

*I will concede that brother-sister breedings can result in higher or lower than 25% COE.

 

The other stuff you said makes alot of sense though, good stuff.

Edited by hogdog
Link to post

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...