Bryant
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« Reply #20 on: April 04, 2010, 09:41:52 pm » |
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Linebreeding is just a milder form of inbreeding, but technically they're the same thing and each has their place for a breeder who has a goal in mind, and a pretty good understanding of how to achieve it.
The purpose of linebreeding is simply consistancy. This breeding method doesn't produce better or worse dogs, just dogs that are consistant with the line. With linebreeding, your goal should never be to produce a dog that is any better than the dogs you start with.
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A truly rich man is one whose children rush to fill his arms even though his hands are empty.
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parker
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« Reply #21 on: April 05, 2010, 12:01:26 am » |
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how many colleges or dr's does anyone know that has studied breeding results of hogdogs ? and if they did they would have different conflicting opinions .....
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO OUTCROSS TO ADD TO YOUR LINE ....... most likely there is individuals in your line that posses what you are trying to acheive ....might take you several litter's to get one that shows it ....
dogs are subject to have lots of throw backs .....thats why dogs are different than breeding livestock ..... also why they are great for line breeding ....you can select breed from within ...then line breed from there ....may be alot easier to just outcross or start over but it can be done .....
i've started me a little project breeding to a female german shorthair ......do i need too ....no .....i'm looking at maybe just maybe i will get something more physical ( faster) just a better athelete .......
but nose,hunt, brains no i can get that from what i have .....most dogs breeds i know of if not all have common inherited traits just from being a dog ..... and can be bred up or bred down from within there own lines ........its the color and physical aspects we may have to out cross for .... idefinately am no exspert just my limited opinion ///
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raider54
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« Reply #22 on: April 05, 2010, 12:28:18 am » |
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I just want to say that the theory of only breeding dogs who are great to other great dogs is the only way to get great offspring is not true in my opinion. A dog has genetics just as people do and those genetics are what will make your dogs. For instance if you have two littermates and one of them is average and one is really good, in my opinion their offspring will have the same genetic make up and therefore be the same dogs. Something else to consider when calling a dog or dogs great, are the oppurtunities they have to learn their craft.
you make two great points, however breeding greatness to greatness should be a breeders montra!
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raider54
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« Reply #23 on: April 05, 2010, 01:00:43 am » |
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how many colleges or dr's does anyone know that has studied breeding results of hogdogs ? and if they did they would have different conflicting opinions .....
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO OUTCROSS TO ADD TO YOUR LINE ....... most likely there is individuals in your line that posses what you are trying to acheive ....might take you several litter's to get one that shows it ....
You definately do have to make an outcross to obtain missing traits in your own line! all the line or in-breeding in the world will not put a cold nose on a line that are hot nosed! Here is an example- if you had 100 mares you could line breed them to 99 different studs but if you want a colt with STRIPES you will have to outcross #100 to a ZEBRA to get a colt with STRIPES! Does this make sense? When you desire a trait your line doesnt posess you have to go outside your line to get it! This is a matter of genetics. if you breed minature poodles to minature poodles they will NEVER NEVER NEVER have a standard size Poodle, but if you outcross the minature to a standard you could have either or both in one. The exception to this rule is a RECESSIVE GENE! If you are counting on a recessive gene to strengthen and consentrate your line you are probably in for a long wait! and it may NEVER happen.
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« Last Edit: April 05, 2010, 01:04:30 am by raider54 »
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duece24
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« Reply #24 on: April 05, 2010, 07:05:57 am » |
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parker and raider54 you are both right! how you like them apples...lol. parker if your line has the traits you are looking for you can stay within your line to get what you want. problem is like you said you may have to go through several litters to find what you want, then you have to breed that individual to their parents to get what you want. then in that litter you may not get ANY that show that trait so you have to repeat that breeding to get what you want again, hoping it shows. if you have a trait in your line that doesn't show prominently you have to do a lot of breedings to get what you want and most people don't have that time, so most people outcross to QUICKLY get what they want. i use pitbulls because that is what i have the most experience with. if you take the eli line of dogs there are several different STRAINS within this LINE. if you take nigerino, this line of dogs produce dogs that are long athletic and really fast dogs. the eli jr dogs are bigger, stonger and have WAY more bite, the jeep dogs are more traditional in size and don't produce as much bite but are generally more game than either of the other two. three lines that originate from the same dog(eli) but you can't tell they are related by looking at them or by their traits. some of the best pits of all time were father to daughter(we call that double bred), and some were triple bred(a pup whose sire is also the grandsire and the great-grandsire). when they are bred that tight you then have to go a realted dog that has an outcross in there also. this wakes up the blood when you do this. inbreeding is a great tool if you know what your doing. just going best to best is a great idea, BUT it has to be not just great dog to great dog BUT a great dog from a great line of dogs bred to another great dog from a great line of dogs..my last thing for everyone to think about is the ablity to reproduce. if you take a great dog that doesn't come from a line of dogs that reproduce then you are pissin in the wind..
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Pet's Choice BP, Houston Distrubution
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BarrNinja
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« Reply #25 on: April 05, 2010, 08:10:43 am » |
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" just going best to best is a great idea, BUT it has to be not just great dog to great dog BUT a great dog from a great line of dogs bred to another great dog from a great line of dogs..my last thing for everyone to think about is the ablity to reproduce. if you take a great dog that doesn't come from a line of dogs that reproduce then you are pissin in the wind.. "
LOL. I can agree with this statement 100%. Im an expert at pissing in the wind!!!
No matter how you look at it, line breeding and outcrossing that line when you need it works! Figuring out how to do it right is the tricky part for me.
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"No man should be allowed to be President who does not understand hogs." - President Harry Truman
“I like hogs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Hogs treat us as equals” - Sir Winston Churchill
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parker
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« Reply #26 on: April 05, 2010, 09:09:27 am » |
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raider 54 ....... read what i said ......you will need to outcross for physical aspects as well as color if you don't have what you desire in your line ....but far as nose and hunt .....NO .......those are dog inherited traits ....perty much all lines of dogs have it ......you just may have to breed several times to get one with it then line breed from there ........ your trying to use horse logic to dogs in some area's it just doesn't aply ......
for instance some of the working lines of dog have been show bred so much they don't show much of the traits they were bred for .......nose /hunt/ now in reverse respect if you can breed it out you can breed it back ......
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raider54
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« Reply #27 on: April 05, 2010, 09:11:46 am » |
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I couldnt agree more! parker and raider54 you are both right! how you like them apples...lol. parker if your line has the traits you are looking for you can stay within your line to get what you want. problem is like you said you may have to go through several litters to find what you want, then you have to breed that individual to their parents to get what you want. then in that litter you may not get ANY that show that trait so you have to repeat that breeding to get what you want again, hoping it shows. if you have a trait in your line that doesn't show prominently you have to do a lot of breedings to get what you want and most people don't have that time, so most people outcross to QUICKLY get what they want. i use pitbulls because that is what i have the most experience with. if you take the eli line of dogs there are several different STRAINS within this LINE. if you take nigerino, this line of dogs produce dogs that are long athletic and really fast dogs. the eli jr dogs are bigger, stonger and have WAY more bite, the jeep dogs are more traditional in size and don't produce as much bite but are generally more game than either of the other two. three lines that originate from the same dog(eli) but you can't tell they are related by looking at them or by their traits. some of the best pits of all time were father to daughter(we call that double bred), and some were triple bred(a pup whose sire is also the grandsire and the great-grandsire). when they are bred that tight you then have to go a realted dog that has an outcross in there also. this wakes up the blood when you do this. inbreeding is a great tool if you know what your doing. just going best to best is a great idea, BUT it has to be not just great dog to great dog BUT a great dog from a great line of dogs bred to another great dog from a great line of dogs..my last thing for everyone to think about is the ablity to reproduce. if you take a great dog that doesn't come from a line of dogs that reproduce then you are pissin in the wind..
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I TALK ALOT OF SMACK-COME GO WITH ME AND I'LL SHOW YOU IT ISNT ALL SMACK Facebook Check Out-Hog Hunting Texas Style See our web site www.XXXtremehogdoggin.com
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raider54
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« Reply #28 on: April 05, 2010, 09:17:00 am » |
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Nose and Hunt I disagree, if your line doesnt have it you are out of luck. I used the horse analogy as a black and white illustration. as far as breeding back in what you have bred out? if it is bred out it is GONE! you can spend 20 years in a breeding program to find this out if you like but I believe I will make an outcross as a quick fix with better odds. raider 54 ....... read what i said ......you will need to outcross for physical aspects as well as color if you don't have what you desire in your line ....but far as nose and hunt .....NO .......those are dog inherited traits ....perty much all lines of dogs have it ......you just may have to breed several times to get one with it then line breed from there ........ your trying to use horse logic to dogs in some area's it just doesn't aply ......
for instance some of the working lines of dog have been show bred so much they don't show much of the traits they were bred for .......nose /hunt/ now in reverse respect if you can breed it out you can breed it back ......
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I TALK ALOT OF SMACK-COME GO WITH ME AND I'LL SHOW YOU IT ISNT ALL SMACK Facebook Check Out-Hog Hunting Texas Style See our web site www.XXXtremehogdoggin.com
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parker
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« Reply #29 on: April 05, 2010, 10:27:29 am » |
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throw backs is the key .....it can work two different ways ......it can bring you too or away from what you want ,,,,,, line bred have less odd throw backs .......
i don't think you can breed something like nose or hunt totally out ........ its what makes a dog a dog ....... you cannot use horse logic on dogs as far as nose and hunt ......
anytime a person needs a quick fix there breeding practices wasn't that good to start with ......
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hogdoggintn
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« Reply #30 on: April 05, 2010, 10:33:54 am » |
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I agree with most of what everyone is saying, some more that others. Genetics is extremely complicated! Not only genetics determine how a dog hunts, but also their TRAINING. Most dogs (not all) that people consider "great" are that way because they have had alot of "great" training and experience. Anyway back to genteics, a dog can carry genes and not express them and some genes can effect other genes.Some genes may be passed through several generations before they show up. My opinion is ALL breeders should try to study and understand the genetics of the dogs, set a goal as to what they are looking for in the "perfect" dog, and then it is up to chance that they ever get it right!
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Other than that, we ain't nothing just good ole boys.
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make-em-squeel
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« Reply #31 on: April 05, 2010, 03:17:01 pm » |
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Boarninja to answer your ? from a few posts back I guess honestly put I dont care what the forums opinion is because I am getting pups from him regardless, however I am curious to know the opinions of everyone and find this to be an intersting post.
I simply dont believe you can breed great dog to great dog and reproduce good dogs on avg. I have seen it fail over and over. Talking about most pups in the litter not the exception's, and who wants to feed an entire litter for 9-12mo to save a 1 or a few. However Bob Cox's line bred curs throw consistant hard hunting go yander dogs with great bottom etc. Even though the papers are inbred something is working.
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3-Bdogs
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« Reply #32 on: April 05, 2010, 03:36:56 pm » |
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bob coxs has got some real good blood wouldn't be scared to hunt with any of his dogs
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You goin to do somthing or just stand there and bleed (tombstone)
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BarrNinja
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« Reply #33 on: April 05, 2010, 04:33:14 pm » |
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Boarninja to answer your ? from a few posts back I guess honestly put I dont care what the forums opinion is because I am getting pups from him regardless, however I am curious to know the opinions of everyone and find this to be an intersting post.
I simply dont believe you can breed great dog to great dog and reproduce good dogs on avg. I have seen it fail over and over. Talking about most pups in the litter not the exception's, and who wants to feed an entire litter for 9-12mo to save a 1 or a few. However Bob Cox's line bred curs throw consistant hard hunting go yander dogs with great bottom etc. Even though the papers are inbred something is working.
Seen failure over and over? Sounds like they were using my breeding program from 15- 20 years ago! lol. Line breeding/inbreeding definitely works but only a small handful I know of has got or had a good handle on it. I also agree that done wrong or handled recklessly it can and will produce junk. I seen it in my younger days by others and thats why it took me so long to change my way of thinking about it. Heck! Im still trying to get a handle on it myself and thats why I am so interested in these threads. Maybe I never really will but, If I had a man like Mr. Cox to take notes from, I would be miles ahead! Men like that are way more valuable to you than a good dog thats for sure. They can teach you how to make a bunch of good dogs!
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"No man should be allowed to be President who does not understand hogs." - President Harry Truman
“I like hogs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Hogs treat us as equals” - Sir Winston Churchill
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Dexter
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« Reply #34 on: April 05, 2010, 04:42:56 pm » |
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yes some forms of line breeding can and is called iningbreeding i will agree with that and disagree with that depends on what percentages of one or both foudation parents genes you are trying to achieve there will alway be an arguement of breeding practices til theend of time here is on type of line breeding i think most are talking about and yes i will agree with this it in the end only ends with 37 % of the one said gene type in the final offspring i think i can do this
Trippz Ginger Queen
Ringo
Chooper Boomer Lacy
------------------------------ Twisted Sister with 37 percent of the parent genes this is the truest form of line breeeding
Trippz Ginger Queen Jasper Joker Spanky Darla
as its said mybe so in breeding i might be doing but i sill get consitant dogs of size mind and work ability even doing the in breeding or line breeding or how ever they are bred and will continue to do so til im dead and have bred dogs cattle gamecocks with great results and also have follow the true form of line breeding but only got about a 1/3 of what i wanted verses over 3/4 and a less amount of time and dogs and i will say this i have had some throwed off POS's that was culled permantlly and never repeated that breeding if the % of pos dogs was greater than a 1/4 Dexter o and i dont knock dead folks its just bad karma
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waylon-N.E. OK
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« Reply #35 on: April 05, 2010, 05:05:34 pm » |
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What about evolution, if my grandpa had 100 hot nose dogs never outcrossed ever and pushed them to cold trail, my daddy did the same thing, i did also then my son did. would anyone say the dogs would never get better nosed than the first dogs my grandpa started with, I cant buy into that at all. some will say well they might learn to use there nose better thats all, or i would just be line breeding the better nosed dogs and it would just show up that way, i dont beleave that either. I don't think it takes 1000's of years either. In a given pack of any wild animal it takes only a few generations to alter there natural make up to adapt to there surroundings and I think dogs work the same way. Line breeding will be argued about until Jesus comes back, but if you dont work what ever dogs you have to there full ability then it doesnt really matter cause you will never know what you had anyway. I don't think most guys need to be breeders, myself included because it takes you spending alot of time, more than most of us really have, with your dogs watching them and working with them daily to really know what your working with, then you need to keep every pup until there atleast a year old, i think longer. then cull like hell and if you do that for 50 years your well on your way to being a breeder................................................ but JMO
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Florida Curdog
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« Reply #36 on: April 05, 2010, 05:15:30 pm » |
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I have a question. I have a female that is the best hog dog I have ever owned. I bred her one time before and a buddy of mine has a male from that litter. I wouldn't change a thing about either one of them. If I bred those two would I have a real good chance of the pups coming out like them ? Someone told me it's better to breed from the top but I have no idea Thanks.
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Smiling like a killer
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3-Bdogs
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« Reply #37 on: April 05, 2010, 06:07:39 pm » |
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my opinio i would do it i normally breed dad to daughter but if you truly like everything about the two then go for it the only thing like stated above is your goin to have different genes show up in some of the pups so to get the good ones your goin to have to keep the whole litter and cul hard that's where in my opinion ppl mess up and dog jockeys take advantage they don't cull i cull hard if you don't want junk gett rid of the rejects JMO
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You goin to do somthing or just stand there and bleed (tombstone)
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raider54
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« Reply #38 on: April 05, 2010, 10:22:30 pm » |
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throw backs is the key .....it can work two different ways ......it can bring you too or away from what you want ,,,,,, line bred have less odd throw backs .......
i don't think you can breed something like nose or hunt totally out ........ its what makes a dog a dog ....... you cannot use horse logic on dogs as far as nose and hunt ......
anytime a person needs a quick fix there breeding practices wasn't that good to start with ......
Parker if betting your program on a throwback is the way you would aproach it be my guest. I would put my trust in an outcross. If you are trying to insult me it wont happen, just because you want to be right or think you are right doesnt make it so. If you wanna wait on a throwback Im not mad at you, my friend Grant started this thread and asked a legitimate question and with a response that just isnt right I will rebutt it and thats exactly what I have done. Sorry if I offended you
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I TALK ALOT OF SMACK-COME GO WITH ME AND I'LL SHOW YOU IT ISNT ALL SMACK Facebook Check Out-Hog Hunting Texas Style See our web site www.XXXtremehogdoggin.com
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duece24
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« Reply #39 on: April 06, 2010, 05:57:34 am » |
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I have a question. I have a female that is the best hog dog I have ever owned. I bred her one time before and a buddy of mine has a male from that litter. I wouldn't change a thing about either one of them. If I bred those two would I have a real good chance of the pups coming out like them ? Someone told me it's better to breed from the top but I have no idea Thanks. in my opinion your chances depends on if both those dogs come from dogs that have produced dogs like that before. if those two are the only ones that have come out like out of several litters then your chances are no greater than any of ours. now if those dogs come from a line of dogs that are throwing real good dogs consistantly then you have a better than avg chance. i would do it. the males out of that litter that are good i would take to their grandmother and the females i would take to their grandfather. i think you then have a great base of dogs to start with.
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Pet's Choice BP, Houston Distrubution
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