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Kennel Blindness
(an ariticle for breeders)
Kennel Blindness: A Closer Look
By Claudia
Waller Orlandi, Ph.D.
A dog breeder’s
knowledgeable use of genetic principles is of paramount importance to
the success of a breeding program. But an all-too-common phenomenon
known as kennel blindness can stop some breeding programs dead in their
tracks. Most works on dog breeding devote relatively little space to the
concept of kennel blindness, although the seriousness of this “breeder
defect” and the lasting harm it can have on breeding success merit a
closer look.
Found in many
purebred dog kennels, kennel blindness is a “disease” that results in
breeders’ inability or refusal to admit to the failings in their own
lines of dogs, whether they relate to conformation to the AKC breed
standards, behavior or genetic disease. Kennel-blind breeders are given
to justifying the dogs they breed by developing warped and unrealistic
interpretations of their breed’s standard, said Ann Seranne in her book,
The Joy of Breeding Your Own Show Dog
Prognosis
Because a kennel-blind breeder can become “blind” to serious faults and
health defects in their dogs, these problems may become fixed in a
couple of generations. Unless quickly diagnosed and treated, kennel
blindness can lead to the demise of a successful breeding program.
Symptoms
Fortunately, most common symptoms of kennel blindness are easy to spot.
Following are three of the most pervasive symptoms:
Symptom 1
The tendency to ignore the virtues and focus on the faults of a
competitor’s dogs. Kennel-blind breeders tend to focus on negative
features in dogs that are not their own. Oftentimes, what they view as a
fault in someone else’s dog may be an acceptable variation of a style in
that breed.
Treatment
Reread your breed’s AKC standard and understand that standards outline
the essential aspects of a breed and that more than one style
may be acceptable in your breed.
Be sure you understand
the difference between breed type and style. A dog’s breed type is
defined by its breed standard, which is the written description of the
ideal dog of that breed. Style, on the other hand, is how individual
breeders interpret the standard and artistically express various
elements of breed type in the dogs they breed. Each breeder’s
interpretation of the standard can therefore result in a variation of
styles within a breed. This may produce a range of excellence in a breed
and allow dogs of various styles to be correct and fit their breed
standard.
Finally, pretend you are
a dog show judge, and get into the habit of looking first for the
virtues in dogs bred and owned by others. If a dog is consistently
winning under a number of different judges, it usually means that the
dog has obvious virtues compared to its competition.
Symptom 2
The belief that you have bred the “perfect” dog. No “perfect”
dog has ever or will ever be bred in any breed. Even what you consider
your best can usually be improved upon.
Treatment
Realize that your concept of what is an ideal representative of your
breed may become modified with the passage of time. Experience with a
breed may gradually change the priority a breeder gives to certain
features. A breeder who is a stickler for correct heads may gradually
start realizing that angulation and movement are also important aspects
in their breed.
Symptom 3
Blaming the fact that your dog is not winning on bad judging,
politics or anything except the possibility that there may be something
wrong with your dog. Bad sportsmanship and kennel blindness can go
hand-in-hand. Kennel-blind people always have an excuse for why their
dog didn’t win. While some of their reasoning may be legitimate,
consistently losing under a variety of judges usually means a dog does
not fit the standard in one or more important aspects.
Treatment
If your dog is not winning, ask several knowledgeable people to
objectively evaluate your dog. Tell them to be honest, and listen to
their comments with an open mind.
Are you at risk?
Kennel blindness is more
apt to be a problem for …
Breeders who do not have
an “eye” for a dog.
An eye for a dog is an almost innate ability to view a dog as one piece
and to recognize balance, quality and correctness in any breed. Some
breeders are simply not born with an eye for a dog. Despite having read
and studied their breed's standard, they may be incapable of correctly
evaluating structure and movement in the dogs they breed. Hence, they
are blind to their dogs’ shortcomings.
Novice or even long-time
breeders who are strongly affected by a dog’s temperament and
personality.
Many kennel-blind breeders think all puppies are cute. These owners
usually decide to breed their dog, not to improve the breed, but because
they love its personality and want more puppies just like it. Breeders
such as these are blinded by the love they have for their dog and can
remain “blind” to the fact that their dog may lack quality.
Breeders who have
produced quality animals in the past but are now struggling to stay on
top.
Breeders who may have had a superstar in the past are usually looking
for their next big winner. In some cases, their superstar may have
resulted from good luck as opposed to thoughtful breeding practices
based on genetic principles.
One scenario is a
breeding program based solely on non-genetic breeding practices, such as
like-to-like matings. Offspring of like-to-like matings cannot usually
be counted on to pass on their traits because their homozygous need to
explain gene pairs are not identical by descent. It is an
accepted genetic principle that offspring that carry higher proportions
of identical by descent genes have a greater chance of passing on traits
that are influenced by these genes. As a result, there may be less
consistency and quality in the offspring.
A second scenario
concerns the breeder who is confronted with inbreeding depression but
refuses to consider outcrossing (the mating of unrelated individuals of
the same breed) to bring in hybrid vigor. With each generation, the
quality of dogs declines. In both scenarios, a burning desire to produce
the next star may make breeders blind to the fact that they are
producing below-average dogs.
Breeders working with
small numbers of dogs.
Because small breeders have less to choose from, there is more pressure
to make a litter “work out.”
Breeders for whom every
waking moment revolves around dogs.
Making dogs a live-or-die situation can hamper the breeders’ ability to
objectively admit to their dog’s shortcomings.
Individuals who were
mentored by kennel- blind breeders.
In these cases, like may beget like.
Characteristics of the
NON-kennel-blind
-
They are truly
objective concerning what they produce and are always aware of what
they need to improve in their next generation.
-
Regardless of time
and effort already spent, they are ready to remove dogs from their
program that do not pan out, even to the point of starting over with
new foundation stock.
-
They have an eye for
a dog and can appreciate an outstanding dog regardless of who bred
or owns it.
Tips for correcting
vision
If caught in time, kennel blindness can be cured before it has a
lasting, detrimental effect on your breeding program. Try these tips:
-
Avoid
over-emphasizing a certain feature in your breeding program to the
detriment of overall correctness.
Although many breeders try to emphasize the excellence of the whole
dog, it’s human nature to be drawn to certain features. In fact, the
importance we give to a particular trait in our dogs may be part of
how we express our breeding style. One breeder may be a stickler for
fronts and another for backlines. The danger here is that by
focusing on just one feature we can become blind to other faults
that may be creeping into the breeding program.
-
To assess
your kennel blindness level, ask someone whose opinion you respect
to objectively evaluate your dogs.
Some of the best people to ask are knowledgeable breeders who have
produced good dogs and who are not kennel blind themselves. Request
they honestly critique the virtues and shortcomings in your dogs.
Ask more than one qualified person, and compare their evaluations
with your own.
-
Be prepared
to make changes, even to the point of eliminating or adding new dogs
to your breeding program.
As difficult as it is to admit we are not succeeding, the
realization that our dogs are not measuring up to our expectations
can be the first step in devising a plan to obtain what we really
want.
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