I was recently asked a question that
led me to write out a bunch of thoughts that have been germinating for some time.
After writing it all up for her, I thought it might be worth sharing with a
larger audience.
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In my job as a humane educator, I
am often called on to promote the adoption of shelter dogs over anything else,
and spend a fair amount of time teaching people the difference between a
"puppy mill" and a "responsible breeder." I have a general
list of things that I give people to think about, but I am always refining my
own personal thoughts and feelings about such topics, so I thought I would
throw it out there for more input in tweaking my list and counseling people who
for whatever reason choose to purchase a dog rather than getting one from a
sheltering situation, as obviously I have myself on several occasions. I can
easily articulate my own reasoning and criteria, but I always like to add to
the list of things to look for and things to avoid.
I have heard you should
"never" breed a bitch more than once a year or certainly never back
to back, and that a bitch should be never be bred more than 4 times etc... and
I don't know that these "commandments" are necessarily all that black
and white. How do you decide how often to breed a bitch and when to retire--even
if she is an exceptional mother producing wonderful pups like Xita is? How much
is too much?
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I don't think
it's that clear-cut — a single number is not going to be the right answer for
all cases, and I think it's a false premise to try to dictate one-size-fits-all
rules. I have bred Xita back to back once already—after she went 8 months
between heat cycles. So, I will breed two seasons in a row if the dog is in
good shape and it's the right decision for many other reasons. However, one
must always place great importance on the welfare and happiness of the dog.
That can't be broken down into a simple rubric of A is right and B is wrong.
First off,
the question arises: What is the objection to breeding? What is really the
reason this is argued to be a bad thing?
1.
Is it
overpopulation?
2.
Is it the
fear of finding good homes for the puppies?
3.
Is it a
concern for appeasing someone else's agenda?
4.
Is it concern
for "oversaturating" the breed with a certain bloodline?
5.
Is it fear
for the health of the female in the short or long term?
As far as overpopulation, I
think of the following questions: Are the puppies being produced likely to end
up in a shelter; are the people who would be interested in these puppies ones
who would otherwise be getting a dog from rescue or a shelter; are the puppies
able to contribute something that is hard to find elsewhere? To reply, I look at what is happening with the
puppies I am responsible for producing. These puppies come with lifetime
support and also a “golden parachute”—any puppy of mine can come back to me at
any time. The homes that are found are carefully selected and no pup should
ever end up in a shelter or rescue situation (hasn't happened in 17 years as
far as I know). The people getting puppies from me have considered and discarded
the idea of rescue and shelter dogs for various reasons—but whenever it seems
like that might be the better choice, I do mention it as an option. The reasons
why they want a purebred GSD are varied—but in all cases, I know that it has
been a thoroughly considered decision.
The second objection depends
entirely on the breeder and the market--I have not had problems finding homes
and I have the means and space to keep any dog until such time as it finds an
appropriate home.
Outlaw and Musket -- both stayed with me until they were young adults. Outlaw is now titled in Rally and is working as a Therapy Dog in a VA hospital. Musket is working toward SAR certification. |
The third objection, appeasing
someone else's agenda, or making a decision just because it's "said"
to be the right action, I discard out of hand--I refuse to make my decisions
based on some generic dogma. I would rather base my decisions on facts, the dogs
before me, and current best practice as determined both by years of experience
and scientific research.
Blackthorns' Oda, RN, PT (OFA H&E) |
As far as concern for
"oversaturating" the breed--from Xita's first litter, one female (Oda) has
been bred (in 3.5 years, so far), two more (Organa, herding titled, OFA Excellent, and Onyx, Int. Ch, RA, BN, TDI, OFA Good) may be bred but haven't yet been. In
her 2nd litter, no puppies will reproduce--the females have all been spayed and
the males have no plans to be bred (neutered, or in a non-breeding working
home). In her 3rd litter, the dogs are too young (about 18 months), but only
one of the females is unspayed; 2 of the males and 1 of the females are working
toward titles and health certifications and *may* be bred. Her 4th litter is
still younger.
In Xita's case, we are also
starting with some rare bloodlines that are hard to find and even more rare to
find where they are being bred with careful regard for health, temperament, and
titles. (So many good DDR bloodlines are now most commonly found in the hands of
breeders who pay no attention to titles, have little knowledge or regard for
the breed standard, and all too often don't even x-ray hips or elbows on the
dogs they breed.)
Xita herself is V-rated
(“Excellent” conformation evaluation), schutzhund titled, and breed surveyed
(this entails hip and elbow x-rays, a dental exam, measurement of height and
weight, two separate conformation evaluations, a 12-mile endurance test, and a
working title in either IPO/schutzhund or herding), and she comes from generation
upon generation of V-rated, breed surveyed, working titled dogs. (Not all of
the dogs I breed are surveyed or schutzhund titled, but I still place great
value on the genetic history that comes with a pedigree full of dogs who were
screened carefully before breeding.) Xita’s breeder (and her family) have been
in the breed for more than 50 years in Germany, so she was produced with those
years of knowledge going into creating her. Her puppies are working as therapy
and education dogs, SAR dogs, service dogs (in various areas), and in herding,
obedience, agility, tracking, and schutzhund. They are versatile and generally healthy
and very sane.
So I find the fear of
oversaturation inapplicable in this case.
The primary objection that I
place value on, then, is concern for the health and welfare of the breeding
female.
Blackthorn's Oda, RN, PT (OFA Good H&E) |
In and of itself, having puppies does not cut a bitch's life short, it doesn't "suck the life" out of her. It doesn't shorten her lifespan, either. Some research has found that females not spayed until after 5 years of age live an average of 3 years longer than females spayed in their first year. Nike had 7 litters, her last one born when she was 9 (her last litter was going to be the I litter, but she made no girls in that litter, so I tried one more time to get a Nike-Ash daughter--the J pups). She's now 15 and in better shape than any GSD I've ever seen at this age. Another friend of mine had a bitch live to be 16--that female had 4 or 5 litters in her lifetime. Breeding does *not* reduce a female's lifespan in and of itself.
Nike (Ike v Del U Haus, Sch2, KK2, OFA) at age 14 |
If proper nutritional support
is given, a female will should recover quickly from her litter. In her last
litter, Xita gained weight after
giving birth and while nursing her pups. Breeding back to back is not
inherently a problem for a female--in fact, many reproductive vets recommend
breeding back to back to back while a female is young--they say it is harder on
a female's uterus to go through heat cycles without getting pregnant.
Xita, after caring for a litter of 12 puppies (S litter) for 7 weeks |
However, if a female is left
to fend for herself in a rabbit hutch in the back yard or chained to a dog
house in the mud, yes, of course she is going to go down in health with the
nutritional drain of the puppies. But the problem there isn't that she is
having puppies, it's that she's not given proper care or nutrition in the first place.
All that said, having puppies
is inherently hazardous to your female. Bitches can die during or after labor.
A c-section is major surgery—one that will risk her life. It is not a decision
to be made lightly--for human or animal.
Hunter with one of the N puppies |
Nike age 13, surrounded by grandchildren |
Xita and a couple of the U puppies |
The other question I never
hear brought up is whether a bitch likes
having puppies. Danca was very clearly *done* at age 7--the pups hit 3 weeks, I
started feeding them, and she pretty much walked away with hardly a glance
back. She was bored with it and didn't want to take care of pups any more.
Nike, at age 10, was still trying to convince me that she could take better
care of Danca's puppies than Danca could and that I should just give them all
to her. She felt that way until she was about 12--then she finally stopped
trying to sneak into the whelping boxes.
Is a bitch bored or fulfilled
by having the pups? Do they enter into the endeavor happily and enjoy the process—breeding,
pregnancy, tending puppies, feeding, weaning, and then playing with them? In
Xita's case, she absolutely enjoys every part of the process--she especially
seems to love hanging out with and teaching her puppies from the age of 4-8
weeks--she teaches them to nurse without biting her and lets them nurse up past
8 weeks! She teaches them how to play and how to read dog language. Even though
Oda is 3 now, she still enjoy her daughter’s company in a very motherly way.
So, for me, in my decision
process, I don't weight the number of litters very heavily. My general rule of
thumb is that if I do a back-to-back breeding (which I very seldom have done),
then I will make sure the mom gets a year off afterwards.
Jubilee and her son Storm (Reckless) |
One final aspect that I
haven't mentioned so far, and that none of the propaganda talks about, is how
are the puppies turning out? Are they healthy? Are they physically sound? Are
they attractive physically--are they correct for the breed? Are they good at
whatever their jobs may be? Are they capable of doing what they are bred to do?
In the case of my dogs, I am breeding for versatility—not just for one sport or
one job or just to be pets. And, then, are they better than most
of the other GSDs out there? Are they an improvement on the breed? (Tens of
thousands of GSDs are bred in the US every year. I haven't seen the more recent
figures, but back around 1999, I think it was 65,000 AKC registered GSD pups in
a year!)
So, I have come around to thinking that it is far better to produce healthy, sane, handsome, correct puppies, as long as there are people who are interested in them from me, than it is to try to bend to someone else's idea of what is OK or not OK to do.
Happy momma |
If all the good, responsible,
careful people who want to breed are deterred by all the rules and propaganda
from breeding because they are trying to do what they are told is right, then we will be left with the
vast majority of puppies being produced by those who don't care what others say
is right, who don't care about the well-being of their females or their puppies,
and who don't try to take a responsible and well-educated approach to breeding.
There's no way that can be a
good result.
2 comments:
Excellent Christine,
I consider you to be one of the most knowledgeable persons involved with the breed.
And, you seem to have the best interest of the dog, breed in mind when you speak.
Like I said elsewhere, opinion without agenda
How refreshing.
Thank you
Joni
Love this blog and the sensible reasoning behind it. Breeding good solid healthy dogs is responsible breeding if there is a high demand for them.
Enjoy your blog and your website.
Thanks,
Ellen Ransom
Ransomshire Shepherds
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