Quote:
Originally Posted by miezzi I am confused? How are you going to start your own breed club for off colored yorkies, when they are just not the right colors? I don't get it. No matter how you put it, they are and will always be a yorkie.
A biewer is not a yorkie. We are trying to seperate ourselves from the yorkie world all together. Biewers have a set standard that the Biewer breeders must abide by.
So I guess I am curious, how do you go about getting the ok to start your own breed club for off colored yorkies, when all they are, are really yorkies with a color variation? Have you set forth a standard? Have you been ok'd by a parent club, and in this case, I would think it would be the YTCA.
I am just curious in how you are to go about all this?? Inquiring minds want to know! LOL! |
Well first of all, new breeds are established all the time. Look at the Norfolk and the Norwich Terriers, same dog, one has ears up and one has ears down. At one time they were judged together, now they are not.
If you believe that Biewers are not yorkies, then you need to do more research. The first Biewer had two traditional colored yorkie parents.
Someone decided to establish a breed club to separate the Biewers from Traditional yorkies. Why can't the same thing be done with partis? The partis started the same way the Biewers did, from two traditional colored yorkshire terriers both carrying the white gene and it produced the tri colored offspring.
The only difference is that now there is a breed club for the Biewers and they have set standards as to the color and patterns etc.
And I'm not sure on this part, but I'm guessing you can now only register Biewers that have two Biewer parents, and not those that are born to two carriers.
So please explain why you feel that the partis are any different from the Biewers