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I think it's a really positive thing to have individuals post about their breeding and the outcomes of their offspring, firstly those that can reel off their pups bred, their names, their location and their activities are in my eyes playing a vested interest in their breeding as a whole.
1. For those who may be interested in a particular lineage in the future, it may well be that the dogs racing may be unsuitable for one reason or another to be bred from but the fact they have siblings that can be accounted for may be useful to those searching.
2. It can be a good indicator of whether a litter was a success or not, especially when a lot of the litter have gone into lurcher racing, they may be succesful there without it being common knowledge in the non-ped racing world.
3. I think there's a lot to be said of those who breed a litter and retain a pup / pups as it's a personal reflection on how they feel about the mating.
4. I personally find it useful to know the incidence of injured dogs, especially if they're recurring injuries throughout a litter, for example if all a litter suffered from sprung toes etc. This isn't a straight forward matter though as there are so many variables to take into consideration, e.g. I'd expect pups homed to working lurcher homes would be far more vulnerable purely by the fact they're running on unfavourable ground.
5. There's also some use to all of us about the ability to gain suitable pet homes. Non-ped club racing figures have declined through a combination of pit's closing down, lifestyles modernising and hunting bans coming into place. Finding a suitable pet home where someone wishe's to stay fit by owning a dog, has the time and companionship needed and can cope with a breed that is strongly inclined to chase moving objects is not going to be the easiest thing to find these days. There's also the Peddy whippet that's flooding the market that can convince the naive pet owner that the pretentiousness of a KC name is some sort of guarantee to quality. :- "
This does sort of cross over into Sherry's thread, but these are all effectors to whippet racing at your local club especially as most newcomers start off with a pet quality whippet before they 'get the bug' as it were.
1. For those who may be interested in a particular lineage in the future, it may well be that the dogs racing may be unsuitable for one reason or another to be bred from but the fact they have siblings that can be accounted for may be useful to those searching.
2. It can be a good indicator of whether a litter was a success or not, especially when a lot of the litter have gone into lurcher racing, they may be succesful there without it being common knowledge in the non-ped racing world.
3. I think there's a lot to be said of those who breed a litter and retain a pup / pups as it's a personal reflection on how they feel about the mating.
4. I personally find it useful to know the incidence of injured dogs, especially if they're recurring injuries throughout a litter, for example if all a litter suffered from sprung toes etc. This isn't a straight forward matter though as there are so many variables to take into consideration, e.g. I'd expect pups homed to working lurcher homes would be far more vulnerable purely by the fact they're running on unfavourable ground.
5. There's also some use to all of us about the ability to gain suitable pet homes. Non-ped club racing figures have declined through a combination of pit's closing down, lifestyles modernising and hunting bans coming into place. Finding a suitable pet home where someone wishe's to stay fit by owning a dog, has the time and companionship needed and can cope with a breed that is strongly inclined to chase moving objects is not going to be the easiest thing to find these days. There's also the Peddy whippet that's flooding the market that can convince the naive pet owner that the pretentiousness of a KC name is some sort of guarantee to quality. :- "
This does sort of cross over into Sherry's thread, but these are all effectors to whippet racing at your local club especially as most newcomers start off with a pet quality whippet before they 'get the bug' as it were.