Quote:
Originally Posted by Nancy1999 No, I didn't say that, and this is another example how you twist people's words. Please reread my reply. |
Yes, dogs with faults should not be bred. A dog that produces a fault does not necessarily have to stop breeding, depending on the fault, the breeder might not want to use that pair again.
Those are your words.
So you are saying that if a pair of dogs produces one puppy that is not show potential, that pair will not be bred again, even though it is a champion and that particular mating has produced other champions? If every puppy in every litter is not perfect???
Those are my words.
Please tell me how I twisted what you said.
Does this go for all faults? Or just the color? If a puppy is born with a slight over bite, or an ounce or two over 7 pounds, or black and gold instead of blue/tan, or a coat that isn't quite perfect. Do you spay/neuter all of those parents too, or just the ones that produce parti puppies?
that was my original question.
Please Explain to me how it works.