The
Beginner: Doing everything wrong. Buying wrong. Feeding wrong.
The
Learner: Who now realize they have started badly and while still keeping their
original mistake, have now learned better and are doing their best to set out
on the right path.
The Novice:
Who have corrected their mistakes and are starting to win and are beginning to
be known and recognized by other breeders and exhibitors.
The
Everlasting Novice: These are always nice people with an equally charming dog.
To them, dogs are a pleasant and interesting hobby.
The
Middle-Range Breeder: This is the largest section of all. This is the average
breeder who is definitely one of us. Recognized as reliable, breeding decent
litters, rearing the puppies properly, with a good eye for a dog and the
facilities to keep the odd stud dog and a nice bitch or two. These are the
backbone of any breed and are indispensable because they supply the majority of
the average puppies for sale; serve their own area with a decent stud dog and
form the mass of ringsiders. These breeders are members of various breed clubs
and support all activities. Being dead keen exhibitors they try their best to
be an asset and a credit to their breed.
The Good
Breeder: This is a rarer category because these breeders have realized
something the middle rangers have not. That is that there is a definite thing
called a good dog and that a decent dog is not quite good enough. The good
breeder is always ready to learn and has taken the trouble to find out most of
the advanced points, such as what constitutes a good lay of shoulder or a good
length of hock and where other virtues may be found. The good breeder knows
what a good head feels and looks like; what constitutes good expression and
understands structure with an eye to the dog's use as a herding animal. The
good breeder has nice stock and has learned how to use it to best advantage. He
may still depend on other people's studs to try and improve each litter, but
has learned that the title of 'Champion' does not automatically mean the dog
carrying this title is necessarily the best for his purpose. The good breeder
is trying to improve all the time and will sell a bitch or dog that the middle
ranger would have stuck to, realizing that either he has better in his kennel
or that these good dogs are not quite good enough. These are the breeders that
supply the middle rangers with better stock when they themselves wish to raise
their standards. The good breeder has nearly always had ten years or more
experience with dogs and is recognized as such.
The Top
Breeder: This is a very difficult category to define, although we all know
them. There will be about 20 of them at any given time. They go on, seemingly
forever, always able to produce a good one, always with quality finished dogs,
these usually having failings rather than faults, and give nothing away in
type, style, make and shape. Usually they have been at the top for many years
and have a strain of their own, readily recognized as being of a distinct and
individual type. They never seem to disappear and very few breeders join their
ranks. They are often than not internationally known names and if we get two
new top breeders in ten years who are really going to last and have an
influence on the breed, than we are lucky.
(Author unknown)
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