spazhogdog
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« on: March 31, 2010, 10:47:32 pm » |
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I have been reading alot about crossing bird dogs with curs, and cats. If one is trying to get the nose and drive of the bird dog, is it better to have the stud dog the bird or should it be the gyp. Do you feel both parents influence the pups the same or is one of them more dominent in producing certain traits in pups?
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Gods gifts grandkids and puppies
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TexasJ
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« Reply #1 on: April 01, 2010, 07:18:21 am » |
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I'm not 100% sure but I think somebody told me once that in dogs, 60% passes from the gyp and 40% passes from the stud.
Probably some of the others on here might have better detailed input...
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Cutter Bay Kennels
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« Reply #2 on: April 01, 2010, 08:27:31 am » |
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50/50
Some individuals are better at throwing their likeness, but both parents contribute 50% of what makes up a pup. Either way you go with it, make sure both parents have the hunt and desire you would like to see in future pups.
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« Last Edit: April 01, 2010, 08:30:20 am by Cutter Bay Kennels »
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"To me it is not always about the game you caught, but the memories you can't let go of. " Josh Farnsworth
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Bryant
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« Reply #3 on: April 01, 2010, 08:49:33 am » |
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Each parent provides 50% of the genetic makeup (39 chromosomes) but in my PERSONAL opinion, the female has a stronger influence on what the end product will be. This is assuming the hypothetical scenario that both sire and dam are equally proven producers. This OPINION is widely shared across the equine community as well.
Heard many an 'old timer over the years say a good male dog will make you famous, but a good bitch will keep you that way.
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uglydog
Jelk's & Brick House Catahoulas
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« Reply #4 on: April 01, 2010, 09:12:12 am » |
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I am in agreeance with female being very important, however you have to consider what the genetics throwing back to grandparents and great grandparents from either dog involved in the breeding. I used the EP female in my breeding, and a Ugly Chuppacabra UglyDog as the sire. Because my dogs are ugly and the EP a very pretty dog, it was easy to see that some pups took on physical charistics of ugly parent and the temperment/personality and hustle of the birdog. Some of those same pups in the litter were way uglier than the father, or grandfather. Some of the pups came out slick haired with both Charistic combinations of temperments, and some were slick and more calm relaxed like the father, took some of his hunting style too. So I don't think you can look at the pups and decide which will be your "hustling banchi" or which ones will better trailing dogs, physical appearance won't tell you squat when you are mixing the "Types" of dogs (cur vs. pointing). I have kept up with the entire litter, all 7 and know what each is doing to this day, only 3 left out of 7,
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make-em-squeel
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« Reply #5 on: April 01, 2010, 09:33:45 am » |
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Not sure the best answer to you ?, but mine had a bmc mom and ep dad- he is doing well. His sister was culled by joe but a few others in the litter are making a hand as well.
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parker
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« Reply #6 on: April 01, 2010, 09:46:14 am » |
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were fooling with animals that have multiple offspring at a time ....... with that the only way to cross and get a truer representation of the two is with line bred parents ..... next each litter can or could throw leaning to either side or a cross between the 2 ..... i been breeding dogs for years .....all this % stuff gets threw out the window in my opinion with dogs crossed ....
i also believe line bred dogs will throw more of a likeness to themseleves (bloodline) nomatter male or female .......
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Hog Dog Mike
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« Reply #7 on: April 01, 2010, 04:20:48 pm » |
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I have owned alot of bird dogs in my life (well over 200). Some dogs are more prepotent than other dogs. There is a guy named Frank Thompson that did a study and what he measured was the number of winners produced compared to total number of offspring. Some dogs produced many winners but were bred to anything that would hold still.
The male has an x cromosome and the female a y and a xy cromosome. A genitic expert doctor told me that the famale definitely puts more into a pup than the male. The horse folks have said that for years.
This is not to say that you can take a sorry male and breed him to a outstanding female and get good pups and vice versa. I had the best luck breeding an outstanding female from a line of dogs known for producing outstanding dogs to the best male I could find.
Some blood does not mix well and I do not know why. There was a great dog named the Kansas Wind that won double digit open championships and NEVER produced anything. A dog named Jumper Jim that never won a championship produced a dog that won more open championships that any dog in history at the time. He could produce great dogs and that was just a fact.
If you can find a repeat mating of a breeding that has produced good dogs you cannot go wrong. Some say that a male cannot produce as well in their older age.
In bird dog terminology a great producing female is called a "blue hen". They can produce bred to almost anything. A great female named Hot Haunches produced champions in six different litters bred to six different males.
Alot of folks hunt their good females and breed the sorry ones which is bass akwards of what they should be doing. Give me a pup out of a blue hen any day over anything else.
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spazhogdog
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« Reply #8 on: April 01, 2010, 08:52:49 pm » |
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If you can find a repeat mating of a breeding that has produced good dogs you cannot go wrong. Some say that a male cannot produce as well in their older age.
I know in Thoroughbred, the older mares don't normally produce their best offspring when they are older. I am not for sure about the studs. but do you all think that holds true to gyps too? If so, what is prime breeding age and when should one quit thinking about breeding?
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Gods gifts grandkids and puppies
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3-Bdogs
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« Reply #9 on: April 01, 2010, 09:37:41 pm » |
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Idk about age but i know one thing that happens all to often when breedin dogs ppl focuse to much on what they like in a dog and don't focus on what they don't want everytime i breed i look all the options that couldhappen that's why i think ppl have litters that don't produce anything good if you are breeding and a couple yrs go by and you haven't out produced the parents your not doin somethin right in my opinion
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parker
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« Reply #10 on: April 01, 2010, 10:11:03 pm » |
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well you can get a 100 different opinions on breeding ....one out of the hundred will be the best opinion for getting the best consistant resullts .....
good luck everyone .....
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waylon-N.E. OK
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« Reply #11 on: April 01, 2010, 10:52:27 pm » |
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Heard many an 'old timer over the years say a good male dog will make you famous, but a good bitch will keep you that way.
x2
The guys i have known who ever bred aby type of working/hunting dog agreed with that line of thinking.They would sell a few male pups but kept there females back for themselves. I always wanted to try one of those bird dog/bull dog crosses but never did
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« Last Edit: April 01, 2010, 10:54:06 pm by waylon-N.E. OK »
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parker
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« Reply #12 on: April 02, 2010, 08:15:22 am » |
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my opinion i crossed to a birddog as a project to play with .......i think they will do well .... and may add more speed than what i have .....but far as hunting or nose ....NO ......i look at a birddog as a working dog ....... what i have now will out hunt a birddog ,,,,,,running wildly all over is not what i call hunting its more working ........ takeing a track several hours old and tracking the animal up is hunting ...... or a dog that will loop in a quarter mile or so looking for sign then trailing it up is hunting .....it is gonna take hound type traits for this .... i picked the german shorthair because they seem to trail more on the ground than wind ..... if this works out i am looking for more speed and a dog that is just as eager to come out the box at the end of a long day....also i wanted something that was extremely line bred ....( NO THROW BACKS ) .... i have all the hunt i would want already ........
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uglydog
Jelk's & Brick House Catahoulas
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« Reply #13 on: April 02, 2010, 09:05:06 am » |
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Parker, I agree with you alot about the hunting verses working and bringing the speed. The dogs in my yard that I use are not that cold trailing type, but would trail hot tracks, wind pretty well, enough to use for rigging, and well they are just what I like and thats why I kept breeding to provide myself with what I like. The EP I got, would trail some but was much better at "running full blast, and stopping in her tracks when she hit scent and them would trail from there. However the speed got her on top of a track much faster, therefore the speed was puttingher ontop of hogs much faster than most of my curs, and she was out finding the hogs, only because of the speed. I would say she had alot of heart and never wanted to quit hunting, she would blow past me in the woods on the sides of her feet because the skin was gone, the next layer of foot was gone, and she would leave bloodtrails from her feet bleeding, but NO QUIT. The reason I would not use the EP exclusively is that when it comes to baying and holding the hog, she lacked what my curs "stock type" dogs bring to the hunt. THe pointer bred to "HOLD" point would not move her feet enough, she would Bark her fool head off, and I guess most folks consider that baying, but to "bay" I like a dog that knows when to stand still and not make a hog nervous, and one that knows by moving and quartering to and fro, will keep the hog nervous enough to stand and stay put, a dog needs to be able to do what it takes (thats awhole other subject) but the Birdie dog would let a hog run smooth over the top of her, she was very smart and was able to learn some degree and got better with experience in the woods. My point being its in her DNA to point. I would be interested in hearing back from you the updates on the pups and what you find and your opinions on the cross, PLEASE Sir.
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make-em-squeel
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« Reply #14 on: April 02, 2010, 10:03:54 am » |
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were fooling with animals that have multiple offspring at a time ....... with that the only way to cross and get a truer representation of the two is with line bred parents ..... next each litter can or could throw leaning to either side or a cross between the 2 ..... i been breeding dogs for years .....all this % stuff gets threw out the window in my opinion with dogs crossed ....
i also believe line bred dogs will throw more of a likeness to themseleves (bloodline) nomatter male or female .......
I agree 100%, the litter I got my pup from was an obvious outcross but both parents were line bred very tight. Whats the saying "If i do it its line breeding, if you do it its in breeding"
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