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Major skin issues that contribute to losing coat. These dogs do not have the ability to grow coat. These dogs can crop up in a breeding at any time. What contributes to them is putting the wrong two dogs together. Remember every dog can have the required tests performed. Tests only tell you that the dogs do not have a disease, they do not tell you if the dog is a carrier of a problem. There is no genetic marker that informs you of that. |
So what do you do to attempt and prevent this sort of thing? |
Blue born pups - most of them can also not live to maturity. So this is a huge health risk. You do not want a blue born. Black and tan yorkies (that are black and tan as adults) usually are your woolies. I have one that I got many years ago as a pet and is neutered. I would never want to breed him, since he is not to standard. My feeling is - if you cannot show them, why breed them?? :thumbup: One should want to uphold the standard and to do right by the breed. Breeding is a very serious science and not to be dabbled in lightly without knowing what you are doing - reason you need educated mentors to teach you. Some mentors are good and some are not. So when choosing a mentor, one needs to choose wisely. |
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yes Disney..you dont want to have a blue born yorkie..........this is the thing with them........you can have perfectly healthy tested mommy and daddy....always throw standards for litters and litters ....and then all of a sudden throw a blue..........it is a recessive gene....and from my understanding the MARS test is the only one that the gene shows up with......the basic testing that is done on dams and sires prior to breeding doesnt show it. |
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But, it does go to show you that breeding the Yorkshire Terrier it is one of the most difficult breeds to breed. While studying genetics is a great asset, there is no absolutes in this breed. As most breeders will tell the breed is difficult to get exacts with. You can't breed pheno type to pheno type as you do with say Poodles and know what you're going to produce. Most judges will tell you that it is a difficult breed to judge. No absolutes. |
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What is it about the Yorkshire Terrier genetic makeup that makes them so much more at risk? |
Mary mentioned a seminar with Dr. Centers. I would be very interested in attending. Does anyone know when/where they are scheduled? |
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What is happened with the Yorkshire Terrier is that it became such a popular breed and people saw a money making business and decided to capitilize on it. These breeders only perpetuated health issues by breeding indiscrimenatly....not taking the precautions, hence that is why you see so many health issues on this forum. Breeding is not anything to take lightly. It takes years and years of studying before one should embark on it. |
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Well luckily Yorkie not common breed at all in Australia so we don't have yorkie puppy mill. I completely agree on the years it takes before you breed. I'm taking five/six years of study before I even begin to SHOW yorkie. If I ever bred, it wouldn't be for tenish years and I would breed purely for the ring. |
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