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Katrina had a litter on Sept. 23, 2010 Our Biewer female had a new litter yesterday. 2 boys and 4 girls. We ended up with two Goldust female Biewers in this litter and the remaining 4 are regular Biewers. In a week or two we will be showing photos in the nursery section of our web site. We also co-own a Biewer female that has produced the very rare Biro Biewer. Photos of these can be seen on our web site soon. The Biro and the Goldust Biewers have distinctive standards from regular Biewers. |
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All 3 biewer types are shown on our website at www.biewers.com under the Biewer standards section. We are showing some photos now in the nursery section. |
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I didn't know there were different classifications within the Biewer standard. They are stunning. Thank you for sharing that. |
The Biro and the Golddust are Biewers of alternate coloring as compared to the original Biewer which has black marking. We are breeding Biro to Biro to maintain the brown markings. The Golddust that we have now are just the luck of the draw. One of our males carries that particular gene and our standard Biewer had 4 normal Biewers and 2 Golddust. We may eventually breed Golddust to Golddust to keep their unique coloring. But as of this time we do not have a non related breeding pair to work with. I do know that some Biewer breeders now have some Golddust in their breeding program and are reproducing Golddust to Golddust puppies. |
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What Do You Breed To Make Up The GoldDust? And Also What Is Used For The Biro? Is It Biewer_Biewer Or Something Else? Im Still New To The Biewer World. Almost 2 Years. And I Never Knew They Could Produce A GoldDust |
The Golddust is a genetic variation of the traditional Biewer. Same goes for the Biro. Some breeders are now breeding Biro to Biro and Golddust to Golddust to preserve the unique markings and improve the breed over time. A standard has been established for all 3 variations. |
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I realize you are speaking of a Biro (chocolate) Biewer but, felt this side should be mentioned as well. Chocolate Yorkshire Terrier - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The Chocolate Yorkshire Terrier (also referred to as Chocolate Yorkie, Red Yorkshire Terrier or Red Yorkie, and Brown Yorkshire Terrier or Brown Yorkie) is a Yorkshire Terrier carrying a double recessive gene for a red or brown coat.[1] The result is a Yorkshire Terrier whose color and coat do not conform to the breed standard.[2] The gene will also often result in brown or liver pigmentation of the eye rims, nose and paw pads, another flaw in a Yorkie.[1][2] Yorkie puppies should be born with a black coat, but Yorkies having the double recessive gene for a brown coat are a lighter color at birth. The American Kennel Club has many colors on the list as acceptable for a Yorkie, which means that some off-color Yorkies may sometimes be registered. However, the Yorkshire Terrier Club of America (YTCA) opposes the breeding of these dogs: "Blue born puppies and red/chocolate born puppies are not acceptable colors of the Yorkshire Terrier. The Yorkshire Terrier should only be born black/tan and later turn to a dark steel blue. The blue born puppies and red/chocolate born puppies are recessive colors being passed to the progeny and a repeat breeding should never occur. Puppies of these colors should not be sold as "rare colors." Yes hopefully it is very rare to get them, but these are totally unacceptable colors and it’s not so much that they are rare, as that they are not true representatives of the breed. . . A breeder should not knowingly breed a dog that is producing such a known defect. The breed could shortly become other than what it is. . . The standard laid down by the YTCA is very specific about the Yorkshire Terrier. It states the puppy should be born black/tan and change color to a blue/tan dog later in life."[3] Breeders of Yorkshire Terriers generally agree that breeding of such off-color dogs should not be repeated.[4] Breeding of non-standard Yorkshire Terriers is usually done only by backyard breeders and puppy mills. The "Chocolate Yorkshire Terrier" is not considered to be its own breed distinct from the Yorkshire Terrier. It is not recognized by any kennel club and it has no breed club; the same is true for brown and red Yorkshire Terriers. The off-color is a mutation to the Yorkshire Terrier breed and not in line with the breed standard. |
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Not everything that is seen on the internet is factual. Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia is free because it is made up of opinions of many contributors all over the world. Are you saying that all Biewer breeders are backyard breeders? And correspondingly all Biewer owners are backward people as well? |
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The article that you quoted had this highlighted: "Breeders of Yorkshire Terriers generally agree that breeding of such off-color dogs should not be repeated.[4] Breeding of non-standard Yorkshire Terriers is usually done only by backyard breeders and puppy mills." That is why I questioned your posted reply. |
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