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Author Topic: HEAVY JEEP PITS  (Read 10073 times)
LTcaughthog
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« on: August 13, 2013, 12:16:07 pm »

I was wondering if anyone could enlighten me on the history or background of this bloodline? I'm looking too get a pup from a buddy but I was wondering if anyone's had any experience or background with them before. All Input is welcome, thanks.
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redriverslim
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« Reply #1 on: August 13, 2013, 08:05:07 pm »

Crenshaws Ch Jeep was sired by Finley's Bo out of Crenshaws (Irish Jerry's) Honeybunch.  Bo I believe was out of some Loposay dogs and Honeybunch was sired by Walling's Bullyson out of Carver's Amber.  Jeep became famous for winning a 3 hr and 40 min match over a dog called Homer.  Jeep was bred probably hundreds of times.  For years, he was the highest rated dog on the Register Of Merit list put out by the Sporting Dog Journal, which means the sire receives one point for every champion fighting dog produced.  I don't think Jeep would still be at the top of that list, but then again I aint seen a Journal in years.  Was Jeep the greatest dog that ever lived . . . NO.  Was Jeep a good producer . . . Yes.  Was Jeep the greatest producer that ever lived . . NO.  Jeep's daddy, Finley's Bo "QUIT' against Lonzo's Vindicator.  Jeep's mother Honeybunch (a great dog) was sired by Bullyson (who quit against Benny Bob) so this made Jeep a double bred "cur".  Then Jeep goes on and goes 3:45 against Homer and proves to be a super game dog . . . GO FIGURE.


First thing you should understand before you get a "Jeep Bred" puppy is this.  Just because Jeep appears on the pedigree, that really don't mean anything.  Jeep died somewhere in the late 80's if I remember correctly, so do the math and tell me how much of Jeep puppy it is.  And because of the overwhelming popularity of Jeep, and the hundreds of breeders who capitalized on the name "Jeep" for 2 decades after his death, there were thousands and thousands of cull "Jeep" dogs bred and puppies sold because breeders saw dollar signs.  20 yrs ago, we had a son of Jeep that was double grandson of Honeybunch, and he was a mediocre very average producer AT BEST.  Seeing the name "Jeep" in a pitbull pedigree in 2013 really doesn't mean anything.  Unless the breeder has had exclusively Jeep bred dogs, going back to Jeep himself, and linebred Jeep traits, Jeep look, Jeep genetics, etc . .  then just having the name Jeep in the pedigree once or twice back in the 4th generation doesn't make it Jeep dog.  Unless it is a linebred Jeep puppy, with parents, grandparents, etc going back to and being directly out of known Jeep dogs that produced and were reputable . . it really doesn't make the puppy a Jeep dog.  I guess the question should be, how many times does Jeep appear in the pedigree of the puppy and how up close is it in the pedigree, and who are the specific JEEP DOGS that appear in the pedigree?  Is it some non game-bred dogs that have been splashed with some Jeep blood here and there?     

Jeep blood was crossed with Redboy blood and Rascal blood a lot throughout the 80's, 90's and 2000's.  So a lot of the dogs being labeled as Jeep dogs could very possibly have just as much Rascal blood, Redboy blood, Jocko blood, in them as they do Jeep blood, but they get called Jeep dogs.  Alot of times, Its just because the guy looking at the pedigree sees the word Jeep, but doesn't recognize any of the other dogs' names, so he just says its JEEP BLOOD.  It's kinda like having a yellow dog that has some percentage of Weathorfords Ben blood in him, but has some Catahoula and some plot in him too.  But because the guy looking at the pedigree sees a name he recognizes (Weathorfords Ben), the dog get wrongly classified as a Ben bred dog.

What percentage Jeep blood is the puppy?  What other dogs appear in the pedigree?  The point is, unless the dog is heavily linebred and even inbred on Jeep, the chances of the dog carrying any distinguishable characteristics or traits of Jeep himself, are almost ZERO.   

 
                 
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redriverslim
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« Reply #2 on: August 13, 2013, 08:12:01 pm »

PS . . . hope I didn't come off sounding too abrasive, I was actually trying to help you.  You may ask yourself this question?  If your buddy who has the Jeep puppies can't tell you everything you would want to know about Jeep dogs . . . then he may not be the best person to get JEEP puppy from.
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Reuben
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« Reply #3 on: August 13, 2013, 08:16:20 pm »

redriverslim...that was an excellent post...and that applies to so many other bloodlines in other breeds that folks like to claim as to what their dogs are as well...the first cross outside the line and it has changed the line...
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« Reply #4 on: August 13, 2013, 08:32:58 pm »

PS . . . hope I didn't come off sounding too abrasive, I was actually trying to help you.  You may ask yourself this question?  If your buddy who has the Jeep puppies can't tell you everything you would want to know about Jeep dogs . . . then he may not be the best person to get JEEP puppy from.

Yes sir, i agree with reuben......awesome posts indeed. Im not a big bulldog guy, ive almost always got one around but ur guess on pedigree would be as good as mine lol. I personally didnt see anything wrong with your post. 1 of the most informative bulldog related post ive read on this site honestly!
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LTcaughthog
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« Reply #5 on: August 13, 2013, 09:49:42 pm »

I appreciate the info from all of y'all. Thanks, I'm 20 and have alot too learn. I didn't even know Jeep was a fighting dog. Not that it means anything too me because I believe all dogs can do well with proper attention and training. But with that I'll have too ask him some questions about the pups more now. I know he told me they could be papered if I wanted but other then that I honestly have no clue. Thanks again!!
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Shotgun wg
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« Reply #6 on: August 13, 2013, 10:24:59 pm »

LT if all u are wanting is a CD being jeep bred don't matter. If the pup is free it don't matter. If u plan to breed to sell on the jeep name it's another story. There are lots of good CD's out there that aren't game bred or even full pit for that matter.
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« Reply #7 on: August 13, 2013, 10:50:40 pm »

Yeah shotgun I'm not in it for the breeding I just like the smaller frame one my buddies have and I've seen how strong and fast they are well his 2 atleast and I like them alot
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Shotgun wg
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« Reply #8 on: August 13, 2013, 11:01:31 pm »

That's all u need then. I may be different than most but I don't put as much stock in a name as some. I do put stock in performance. To me that's where the rubber meets the road.
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« Reply #9 on: August 13, 2013, 11:23:54 pm »

Tell me if I'm right about this fellas. Game-bred s almost more of a type of pitbull now than it is actual bloodline. For this reason...if Jeep for example was in a pedigree 30 times but jeeps been dead so many yrs now and presumably none or very few of the dogs in the pedigree since him have been fought we don't know if they were game or not half of them coulda been curs but were nvr tested.

Hard to say what I mean but I hope y'all catch my drift.
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TheRednose
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« Reply #10 on: August 14, 2013, 01:51:23 am »

Tell me if I'm right about this fellas. Game-bred s almost more of a type of pitbull now than it is actual bloodline. For this reason...if Jeep for example was in a pedigree 30 times but jeeps been dead so many yrs now and presumably none or very few of the dogs in the pedigree since him have been fought we don't know if they were game or not half of them coulda been curs but were nvr tested.

Hard to say what I mean but I hope y'all catch my drift.
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« Reply #11 on: August 14, 2013, 07:34:53 am »

Thumbs up east tex
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redriverslim
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« Reply #12 on: August 14, 2013, 07:44:24 am »

Tell me if I'm right about this fellas. Game-bred s almost more of a type of pitbull now than it is actual bloodline. For this reason...if Jeep for example was in a pedigree 30 times but jeeps been dead so many yrs now and presumably none or very few of the dogs in the pedigree since him have been fought we don't know if they were game or not half of them coulda been curs but were nvr tested.

Hard to say what I mean but I hope y'all catch my drift.

EXACTLY.  I have been preaching this for a long time.  A bloodline (or family of dogs) is only as good as the person doing the breeding and culling.  I have made the argument before and will do it again.  We will use the dog Jeep as an example since we are on the subject.  However we could use any known famous dog from any breed of working dog that carries name recognition with it.  But for now we will use Jeep.

Here goes . . . . You could take 2 different dogmen / dog breeders, and go back to say 1988 and go to James Crenshaw's place and purchase 20 puppies directly Sired by Jeep and out of females sired by Jeep.  So these 20 puppies are by Jeep bred back to his daughters.  So this is as "up close" Jeep genetics as you can get.  You give 10 puppies to one guy, and you give 10 puppies to the other guy.  The rules are as follows.  Each man must raise his 10 puppies to adulthood.  He has to school them out, train them, select which ones are good and which ones aren't.  He has to decide which ones are good enough to be bred and which ones aren't.  He must breed them ONLY to each other for 7 years.  He is allowed every 7 years to breed outside his own program to make an outcross.  However, once he has made the outcross, he must breed back ONLY to the dogs on his yard that he has selected and culled from (that originally came from and go back to the initial Jeep puppies).  So after following these rules from 1988 to 2013, you would have two different breeders with 25 years of heavy Jeep genetics in their programs, with only 3 outcrosses so far.  Now ON PAPER, both sets of dogs are about as inbred Jeep as you can find.  Both sets of dogs are gonna have basically the same percentage of Jeep blood.  However, it is possible that these two separate sets of dogs could be as different as night and day.  One group could be FAR SUPERIOR to the other group.  They may even look different.  What people don't understand is that you can't inbreed FOREVER.  You have to go outside the blood at some point and make an outcross, or the dogs are gonna start breaking down (structurally, performance, mental, fertility, health, strength, etc, etc).  So while both of these groups are real heavy bred Jeep, it kinda depends on which dogs were used as outcrosses along the way as to which group will be better.  Also, maybe one guy culls harder than the other guy.  Maybe one guy makes excuses for poor performance.  Maybe one guy can't cull a dog, so he gives it away . . and the other guy is looking for a reason to cull because feed aint cheap.  Maybe one guy is testing his dogs and putting his reputation and money on the line, and the other guy is just breeding puppies.    

Now on top of all this, AD IN THIS MONKEY WRENCH . . . Either man can sell all the puppies he wants to during this 25 year period.

So the moral of the story is . . . What exactly is a Jeep dog?  One man's Jeep dog could be total garbage, and the next man's Jeep dog could be a superstar.

A bloodline is ONLY as good as the individual man who buys their feed.          

      
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« Reply #13 on: August 14, 2013, 08:00:23 am »

Tell me if I'm right about this fellas. Game-bred s almost more of a type of pitbull now than it is actual bloodline. For this reason...if Jeep for example was in a pedigree 30 times but jeeps been dead so many yrs now and presumably none or very few of the dogs in the pedigree since him have been fought we don't know if they were game or not half of them coulda been curs but were nvr tested.

Hard to say what I mean but I hope y'all catch my drift.

EXACTLY.  I have been preaching this for a long time.  A bloodline (or family of dogs) is only as good as the person doing the breeding and culling.  I have made the argument before and will do it again.  We will use the dog Jeep as an example since we are on the subject.  However we could use any known famous dog from any breed of working dog that carries name recognition with it.  But for now we will use Jeep.

Here goes . . . . You could take 2 different dogmen / dog breeders, and go back to say 1988 and go to James Crenshaw's place and purchase 20 puppies directly Sired by Jeep and out of females sired by Jeep.  So these 20 puppies are by Jeep bred back to his daughters.  So this is as "up close" Jeep genetics as you can get.  You give 10 puppies to one guy, and you give 10 puppies to the other guy.  The rules are as follows.  Each man must raise his 10 puppies to adulthood.  He has to school them out, train them, select which ones are good and which ones aren't.  He has to decide which ones are good enough to be bred and which ones aren't.  He must breed them ONLY to each other for 7 years.  He is allowed every 7 years to breed outside his own program to make an outcross.  However, once he has made the outcross, he must breed back ONLY to the dogs on his yard that he has selected and culled from (that originally came from and go back to the initial Jeep puppies).  So after following these rules from 1988 to 2013, you would have two different breeders with 25 years of heavy Jeep genetics in their programs, with only 3 outcrosses so far.  Now ON PAPER, both sets of dogs are about as inbred Jeep as you can find.  Both sets of dogs are gonna have basically the same percentage of Jeep blood.  However, it is possible that these two separate sets of dogs could be as different as night and day.  One group could be FAR SUPERIOR to the other group.  They may even look different.  What people don't understand is that you can't inbreed FOREVER.  You have to go outside the blood at some point and make an outcross, or the dogs are gonna start breaking down (structurally, performance, mental, fertility, health, strength, etc, etc).  So while both of these groups are real heavy bred Jeep, it kinda depends on which dogs were used as outcrosses along the way as to which group will be better.  Also, maybe one guy culls harder than the other guy.  Maybe one guy makes excuses for poor performance.  Maybe one guy can't cull a dog, so he gives it away . . and the other guy is looking for a reason to cull because feed aint cheap.  Maybe one guy is testing his dogs and putting his reputation and money on the line, and the other guy is just breeding puppies.    

Now on top of all this, AD IN THIS MONKEY WRENCH . . . Either man can sell all the puppies he wants to during this 25 year period.

So the moral of the story is . . . What exactly is a Jeep dog?  One man's Jeep dog could be total garbage, and the next man's Jeep dog could be a superstar.

A bloodline is ONLY as good as the individual man who buys their feed.          

      

Awesome post redriverslim...I totally agree...and the 3 outcrosses will change the line depending on those dogs and ho how their offspring are used in the program...

We need more like you on here..
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« Reply #14 on: August 14, 2013, 02:03:31 pm »

Very good post
Lots of info broke down and explained in easy to follow description.
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« Reply #15 on: August 14, 2013, 02:20:10 pm »

Very good post
Lots of info broke down and explained in easy to follow description.

Yes sir, doesn't get much more straightforward than that! good stuff redriver!
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« Reply #16 on: August 14, 2013, 08:54:01 pm »

When I read this post I really wanted to post as James was a good friend and I still have his blood but I couldn't have summed it up any better than RRSlim did. I have been catching with Jeep/Redboy/Rascal dogs and they work but I am getting a linebred APBT catchdog at this point because in my opinion you don't need a dead game dog to catch hogs with. Mine never did want to go straight to the ear and sooner or later it was gonna get them hurt bad. That line is not natural ear dogs. Yes I believe that with time they could probably get steered that way but I'm going with dogs that do it almost automatic. On a sidenote, I am one of the guys that don't believe Honeybunch was off Bullyson. Bill Pitre says Ironhead sired her and I tend to believe it when  how many favor him over Bullyson. But at this point it doesn't matter a lick.
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reatj81
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« Reply #17 on: August 15, 2013, 10:08:02 am »

West good luck with your new dog.
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redriverslim
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« Reply #18 on: August 15, 2013, 02:01:29 pm »

When I read this post I really wanted to post as James was a good friend and I still have his blood but I couldn't have summed it up any better than RRSlim did. I have been catching with Jeep/Redboy/Rascal dogs and they work but I am getting a linebred APBT catchdog at this point because in my opinion you don't need a dead game dog to catch hogs with. Mine never did want to go straight to the ear and sooner or later it was gonna get them hurt bad. That line is not natural ear dogs. Yes I believe that with time they could probably get steered that way but I'm going with dogs that do it almost automatic. On a sidenote, I am one of the guys that don't believe Honeybunch was off Bullyson. Bill Pitre says Ironhead sired her and I tend to believe it when  how many favor him over Bullyson. But at this point it doesn't matter a lick.

I have heard that story about Honeybunch being off Ironhead as well.  What a lot of fellows don't understand is that when looking at the papers / pedigree of any gamebred APBT, there is a pretty good chance that somewhere in that pedigree, there is gonna be some lies told somewhere.         
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LTcaughthog
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« Reply #19 on: August 16, 2013, 01:44:27 pm »

A bloodline is ONLY as good as the individual man who buys their feed.           -- true story
Thanks for all the info fellas
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