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Picking wet puppies is about as good as reading tea leaves. :cheers:
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Sounds good thou :- "Cartman said:Picking wet puppies is about as good as reading tea leaves. :cheers:
i would be looking for shoulder angulation and hip angulation.its easier to see in a newborn wet pup than in an 6-8 week old bundle of fur that is distorted by fat and ungainly walking.also its easier to see the ribs and how well sprung they are or flat or slab sided.my breed is completely different to whippys though so i dont know if a whippet breeder is looking for the same as me.alsocan i say, i had a dobie pup who was one of the shortest backed dogs youve seen at 8 weeks ,but at 9-18 months his back was long and swayed and he had the most awful topline, :x it actually sagged and he looked herring gutted!he really looked awful!but at 2 years of age his nice short back and level topline came back and he looked completely different.he didnt win a carrot till he was turned 2 when he won his first res cc from ann arch,who gave him a fab write up and said when this dog finishes maturing hes going to show the winner of the c.c. a clean pair of heels!.so i would say dont give up,some dogs mature quicker than others. :thumbsup:Karen said:Thanks TC, probably the best answer yet!
Those of you picking WET puppies. What are you looking for apart from length? A lot of novices seem to think they SHOULD know what to look for when a puppy is just born and see it as an expierenced breeder thing so justify your replies. What can you see wet that you cant see later?
More questions. What about toplines? what about necks and feet?
Vicky said:I dont get the picking them when they're still wet one bit :wacko: :wacko: :wacko:
yes but you arent breeding for looks youre breeding for speed. :thumbsup: however,a well known person in dogs once said to me that the fastest dog hed ever seen was the worst one conformation wise for showing!it didnt have the correct angulation,was upright in shoulder and straight in stifle.but boy could it move.but going on the breed standard it shouldnt have been able to run for toffee! :blink:Vicky said:I dont get the picking them when they're still wet one bit :wacko: :wacko: :wacko:
Hannah's breeding for speed too i presume :wacko: And a pup doesn't need to be newborn to see how lengthy it is, i usual like them when they're about 10 days old for that.kris said:yes but you arent breeding for looks youre breeding for speed. :thumbsup: however,a well known person in dogs once said to me that the fastest dog hed ever seen was the worst one conformation wise for showing!it didnt have the correct angulation,was upright in shoulder and straight in stifle.but boy could it move.but going on the breed standard it shouldnt have been able to run for toffee! :blink:Vicky said:I dont get the picking them when they're still wet one bit :wacko: :wacko: :wacko:
Hmmm see with racing dogs you'd have just as much luck doing exactly that!kris said:dunno how he did it! :blink: maybe flipped a coin? :wacko:
BALANCE and SYMMETRY.Karen said:Those of you picking WET puppies. What are you looking for apart from length?
Karen said:I would like to know from all you breeders how you pick your best puppy.
What age, and what you are looking for and why.
How often are you right, I know we sometimes dont see our second pick or it has gone a bit domestic but have all your must haves lived up to your expectations?
Lastly what advice would you give to someone picking a puppy for showing from thier first litter.
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