Thanks all for the updates :thumbsup:
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I am the owner of important English bloodlines, including 4 Cdn.Ch. get out of Eng.Ch. Nevedith Justa Jesta and I have to tell you that you simply cannot mix apples and oranges because if you do you devalue the merit of the English championship title.petrezselyem said:Hm, and what about Starlines Reign On with his 125 Ch-offspring worldwide?
And a very good bitch: Bohem Of Thee I Sing (12 champions).
Lanny in essence I agree with you but if I could just put my cynic's hat on for a second (and I very rarely wear this hat because if I wore it often I would give up showing ) ... I see some UK champions that seem to get the tickets because of who's on the end of the lead (as happens anywhere at any given time) whilst some exceedingly good dogs seem to go begging. They might get one CC but never win another.UK championships are exceedingly hard to get
aslan said:Lanny in essence I agree with you but if I could just put my cynic's hat on for a second (and I very rarely wear this hat because if I wore it often I would give up showing ) ... I see some UK champions that seem to get the tickets because of who's on the end of the lead (as happens anywhere at any given time) whilst some exceedingly good dogs seem to go begging. They might get one CC but never win another.UK championships are exceedingly hard to get
Whilst in essence yes it is very difficult for a dog to become a UK champion it also seems incredibly easy for some.
Nowhere is the Utopia of dog showing.
Agree with everthing you have said there ........... good post :thumbsup:Avalonia said:aslan said:Lanny in essence I agree with you but if I could just put my cynic's hat on for a second (and I very rarely wear this hat because if I wore it often I would give up showing ) ... I see some UK champions that seem to get the tickets because of who's on the end of the lead (as happens anywhere at any given time) whilst some exceedingly good dogs seem to go begging. They might get one CC but never win another.UK championships are exceedingly hard to get
Whilst in essence yes it is very difficult for a dog to become a UK champion it also seems incredibly easy for some.
Nowhere is the Utopia of dog showing.
There is facey judging everywhere, and I have seen it in play in England where good dogs are put up by judges who rely on the well known face at the end of the lead to put up something safe and certain, but I have also seen well known breeder judges exercising their politics to put up something that looks like a field mouse because of breed politics -- right colour dog, right person at the end of hte lead, and maybe a favour traded in return for a CC down the road when that person is judging the other's dog.
But in all the years I have attended champ shows in England, and I have attended several score, I could generally see why the dog put up was put up. There are a lot of decent whippets, and a lot of mediocre ones, but the outstanding ones really do stand out if you carefully watch judging with nothing in it for you. Some decent dogs would do immeasureably better if their owners conditioned and exhibited them better, a fault not of the judges but of the owners themselves.
I have been very disappointed in recent years with the quality of the males out there -- too many bitchy dogs who can't move out decently (little drive in rear and too short upper arms which limit front extension... never a good thing and something desperately needing fixing before the straight shouldered American dogs now being introduced into pedigrees really wreck the whole front construction of English whippets), and a lot of big doggy bitches. I am also surprised at how many people use a champ show not as an occasion to really assess every dog going into the ring and assess why someone places and someone such as themselves doesn't, beyond assuming it is purely facey, but as a social occasion where the majority of those really watching the dogs seem to be the foreign visitors who sit taking notes of dogs, their movement and other assets, their pedigrees etc. while the rest are worried about what's on offer in the canteen.
People have to start picking their shows dogs not on the pretty head or the fact it is fawn and staying stuck in that colour warp (which exists nowhere in the world to this degree except in England) but on everything from topline to structure well linebred bloodline and critically, structure, including front and topline, and movement. In addition, too many of the dogs I saw at South Yorkshire a year ago, as a for instance, looked like they had rolled off the counch, ambled over to the food dish and back to the counch for their exercise. They were plump and un or under-conditioned -- I wanted to scream these are whippets folks not lapdogs -- and no matter how good someone may think they are an unconditioned whippet is not a pretty sight nor can you get the best out of it.
I also despair over the way their owners exhibit them -- casually like they are out for walkies so you cannot see their best merits, with far too many strung up on a tight short chain leash slapped close to their owners side so that even if the dog wanted to or were capable of moving out it is restrained from doing so.
And before anyone turns on me and says, well you are a foreigner and those are your opinions -- well yes and no. I am actually English born and carried an English passport for many years.
Some really good points made in your two posts! :thumbsup:Avalonia said:
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