tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post2561913478454191538..comments2024-03-17T08:06:06.686+00:00Comments on Pedigree Dogs Exposed - The Blog: Fiona at Crufts - a win for the breedJemima Harrisonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05092892697145388048noreply@blogger.comBlogger37125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-85821777203228063012018-01-30T15:35:28.317+00:002018-01-30T15:35:28.317+00:00Short name pointer, long name ENGLISH pointer.Short name pointer, long name ENGLISH pointer.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-87670596867006789432018-01-30T15:31:37.306+00:002018-01-30T15:31:37.306+00:00She does not look overweight at all. Not NEARLY as...She does not look overweight at all. Not NEARLY as labradors are nowadays. She is not trying to "balme" anyone, only make dogs healthier.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-88639424170286134552011-10-05T01:03:25.341+01:002011-10-05T01:03:25.341+01:00Even after 15 generations there are very few LUA D...Even after 15 generations there are very few LUA Dals to use. They do not uniformly produce LUA in their litters, there are HUA pups too. Furthermore the backcross project went off the rails and nearly died out so not a lot of dogs produced so the genetic diversity claim for LUA Dals is doubtful given the bottle-necking. There is no plan on how to use these few handfuls of dogs in the breed without skewing the genepool in the direction of LUA backcross (Pointer x Dal crossbreeding). It's no different than a popular sire effect. Stones are not a widespread problem, a small number of male Dals form stones. The Dal club in the US is doing a study on why some males develop stones and their litttermates do not. The Dal breeders are wise to look at this carefully. BTW, Fiona over-reaches based on the movement shot on this page. I would not call that moving like a dream.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-26971446050323823332011-06-29T07:37:51.437+01:002011-06-29T07:37:51.437+01:00Who ever said that Pointers (AKA English Pointers)...Who ever said that Pointers (AKA English Pointers) suffer or a prone to HD in any way are just talking out of the thing they sit on. There is absolutely no HD issue in Pointers and they obviously make this comment based on a total lack of understanding or fact about the breed.<br /><br />Some people really should just shut right up.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-18889586434261883152011-03-15T18:10:03.349+00:002011-03-15T18:10:03.349+00:00THERE US NO SUCH BREED AS AN ENGLISH POINTER!!!!!!...THERE US NO SUCH BREED AS AN ENGLISH POINTER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!<br />nOR ARE THE RIDDLED OR PRONE TO HDGail Simmonsnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-24970900898579374862011-03-15T17:53:13.614+00:002011-03-15T17:53:13.614+00:00This is not a contribution to the discussion - but...This is not a contribution to the discussion - but Heather, you´re just lovely. Your "dragyoursorryassoutoftherubble" piece on GSD conformation made me laugh out loud. When I quoted in on my blog, there were responses like "Right on Heather!" <br /><br />Thanks again for saying the obvious again. You´re brilliant. Why aren´t there more people like you speaking up?Bodil Carlssonhttp://collievaenner.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-2382043830139614742011-03-15T15:00:22.419+00:002011-03-15T15:00:22.419+00:00Re: Hip dysplasia
The relevant CHD figures are, o...Re: Hip dysplasia<br /><br />The relevant CHD figures are, of course, the US figures, since that is where the backcross took place.<br /><br />In the US the rate of HD (per OFA stats, the only thing we have to go on) in English pointers (aka "pointers") is 8.1%, with 13.5% showing "Excellent" hip structure per radiograph<br /><br />The rate in Dalmatians is 4.6% dysplastic, with 10.2% showing "Excellent" hip structure per radiograph.<br /><br />The percent dysplastic does not reflect the percentage of dogs who will suffer clinical impairment, but the much larger number of dogs whose hips are not cleared for breeding. (By an ethical breeder who cares about such things; a dirtbag will just hide the results and breed 'em anyway, or never does the radiograph in the first place.)<br /><br />These are both very low numbers, as medium-large dogs go. Both gene pools have very sound hips, relatively speaking. I'd gnaw off my arm to have numbers like that in my breed.<br /><br />In any event, the approach to outcrossing when the "donor" breed has a higher load for a polygenic trait than the "recipient" breed is pretty simple -- choose a "donor" dog who has a low genetic load for that trait.<br /><br />Now I'm sure that practically no one was radiographing pointers and Dalmatians back in the 70's. (When CHD was a "German shepherd disease" if acknowledged at all.) If the Backcross Dals maintain a rate of radiographic dysplasia no higher than the breed norm -- assuming no-worse-than-average selection practices for hip conformation -- then I think we can dismiss the terrible sturm und drang over the foreign contamination of the pelvis, no?<br /><br />If I was repeating this experiment today -- and I would in a heartbeat -- I'd simply choose a pointer stud with excellent hips, from a line with excellent and good hips, and a proven producer of excellent and good hips. The breed average means nothing, the individual dog's genetic load means everything.<br /><br />But that is the problem, isn't it? The curious notion that "breed" is the same thing as "brand." That animals are products that should be uniform, rather than biological beings, expressions of Nature in all Her messiness.Heather Houlahanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13891198124130533198noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-28479695798828058912011-03-15T13:07:35.118+00:002011-03-15T13:07:35.118+00:00There are, I believe, several UU dogs in the world...There are, I believe, several UU dogs in the world now. When these are of breeding age and produce all low uric acid offspring, those numbers are bound to increase. I know there are people reading this that know how many exactly there are. 5? or 7?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-23310790160687024732011-03-15T12:55:19.201+00:002011-03-15T12:55:19.201+00:00I have absolutely no problem with outcrossing to a...I have absolutely no problem with outcrossing to a similar breed in order to solve a health problem when you have bred yourself into a corner. <br /><br />However, if this experiment was continued to it's logical conclusion and every single dalmatian in the world was now descended from the original pointer/dalmatian outcross, only 50% would be Low Uric Acid dalmatians (Uu).<br />Having sacrificed genetic diversity throughout the breed, the result would still be a 15% incidence of urate stones (30% of the uu dogs as is true at the moment). <br /><br />If outcrossing is to be the solution, you have to outcross to several genetically diverse dogs so that you can then create dalmatians that are homozygous for the desired gene (UU). These will then pass on the low uric acid gene (U) to all their offspring. By careful testing you can gradually eliminate the uu dogs and eventually the Uu dogs from the breeding programme without completely destroying the genetic diversity of the breed.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-27000061095684991502011-03-15T12:36:35.765+00:002011-03-15T12:36:35.765+00:00Why do you only put up negative comments from &quo...Why do you only put up negative comments from "fellow exhibitors" I show Dalmatians, only started fairly recently and have made comments on Champdogs and around the ring at Crufts that were positive but no-one want to hear them because that wouldn't be a story would it??????<br />Not all Dalmatians that are u/u live agonizing miserable lives, they don't all form stones, they just have the potential to.<br />We are not all against this project but some do feel that it has been rushed through by KC because of pressure brought on by PDE, why has America not agreed to register these Dalmatians? Hope something doesn't go terribly wrong, and the "experts" have had time to think this through.Paulanoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-25109898039430998362011-03-15T12:27:08.882+00:002011-03-15T12:27:08.882+00:00Suzi said.....She may not ever form urate stones b...Suzi said.....She may not ever form urate stones but she can still form struvite stones...just like any other dog..........<br /><br />Do you even see your words? "Just like any other dog" Its a very LARGE percentage of urate stones that Dalmatians produce. And that percentage does not even come close to the amount of Dalmatian owners where the dog was back flushed and the actual stone never sent to the lab for analysis. So, Yes, LUAs are "just like any other dog" in that they "could" develop other types of stones. It seems to me the breeders opposed to the use of LUAs in breeding programs, and opposed to showing them in the show ring are worried about the spotting rather than the actual health of the dog. While nothing is a sure fire fix for the stone/crystal problem in Dalmatians, having low uric acid eliminates the configuration of urate stones. Fiona has proven she can stack up with the best of them in the show ring. Lets face it, no dog wins 100% of the time. Kudos for Julie for standing up for what she believes and moving forward with it. Those of you that do not want to include these dogs in your breeding program, you don't have to.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-2524653780802259332011-03-15T11:40:22.242+00:002011-03-15T11:40:22.242+00:00Just because you live in the UK doesn't mean y...Just because you live in the UK doesn't mean you don't import foreign dogs, compete with foreign dogs, have foreign judges come to your competitions or even have a say in what a breed from Croatia should look like. If several other countries decide that the spots are not as important as the health of the dogs then this country should also comply. Since breeding dogs is essentially an international deal with several other countries and you NEED the imports and foreign contacts, you do not have the right to go nuts with your mistakes and think it'll be fine and dandy. <br /><br />And you especially do NOT have the ethical right to let your dogs be at high risk for a painful disease just because it is "supposed to" have certain spots. I will never ever understand how someone can believe that an esthetic feature is of higher value than health.Dijanahttp://valporama.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-59898724033851865562011-03-15T10:43:04.348+00:002011-03-15T10:43:04.348+00:00Beth F, yes I do know, and I don't personally ...Beth F, yes I do know, and I don't personally disagree about the spotting. But it is an issue in the UK and not something that people see as a viable "trade-off". If all dogs carry the u gene, but not all dogs are prone to disease, why would you compromise on spotting? That seems to me to be the crux of the argument, today. It doesn't matter what is going on in other countries. We are an island nation and reserve the right to make our own mistakes! If Fiona can make a positive contribution to the breed in the UK (i.e. getting healthy puppies into the mix)- and I sisncerely hope that she will - then I am sure we will see a change in attitude.Spotty Muldoonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09824810309757196312noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-42227394459257209902011-03-15T10:23:11.179+00:002011-03-15T10:23:11.179+00:00For those worried about what happens when the Poin...For those worried about what happens when the Pointer shows up twice in a pedigree--look at Fiona. There was a LUA x LUA mating in her background. No frosted spots or hip problems (she has the X-rays to prove it).<br /><br />The chances of a slew of unexpected genes rushing forward because of a dog appearing twice 13-15 generations back are astronomically small. The U gene is there because breeders test for it.<br /><br />You can't double up on the Pointer 15 generations back without also doubling up on the 32,766 Dalmatians also in that 15th generation. There are only about 19,000 genes in a dog, BTW. At least a third of those dogs will have no genetic representation in the pups as it is!Sarahnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-26885668121791526492011-03-15T03:27:36.262+00:002011-03-15T03:27:36.262+00:00Fiona IS a winner! What strength and courage her ...Fiona IS a winner! What strength and courage her owners/breeders have shown! Fiona is an excellent representative of the breed. Kudos to all who have helped with this project. I look forward to what Low Uric Acid can bring to this breed.Peggy Annhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10764424007657309285noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-66476293757889303932011-03-15T01:58:06.305+00:002011-03-15T01:58:06.305+00:00@ Spotty M.:
You know there are 14 generations of ...@ Spotty M.:<br />You know there are 14 generations of LUA Dals, right? I am sure whatever pups Fiona produces will be much like the other LUA Dals out there. And if "frosty spotting" is whats required to eliminate a disease, wouldn't that be a pretty good trade off? There's way more to what makes a Dal a Dal than perfect half dollar spots...Beth F.noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-78724926826276915762011-03-14T21:42:41.003+00:002011-03-14T21:42:41.003+00:00As for Fiona, she's really the only winner the...As for Fiona, she's really the only winner there as she'll never know the pain of passing broken glass through her body. <br /><br />14 March 2011 07:46 <br />*****************<br />Actually this is not true! She may not ever form urate stones but she can still form struvite stones...just like any other dog. <br />She is a very pretty dal and she looks very relaxed and happy! I was glad to see that she was judged along side the other dals and even happier to see that the judge made his decision based on which dal fit the standard the best on that day. From what I can tell by these photos (and others that have been posted on the net) there is a much different "type" in the UK than what we see out here in the rings of the U.S. It looks like Fiona fits right in over there! I'm sure she has much more winning to do!Suzinoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-80839394996296498122011-03-14T20:00:27.618+00:002011-03-14T20:00:27.618+00:00by the looks of the front and side movement of tha...by the looks of the front and side movement of that dog and the way it toes in, not to mention that is far to fat, is it any wonder the judge would of thrown it out. Againthis blog get so much wrong and try to balme others for is own mistakes and misdirection!!!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-45862629030132294132011-03-14T19:20:49.300+00:002011-03-14T19:20:49.300+00:00Beautiful dog!
As with Anonymous posting 14 March...Beautiful dog!<br /><br />As with Anonymous posting 14 March 2011 12:01, I too love the Dalmatian, but hate the health problems associated with the breed, and would never have considered taking one of these dogs on before now. Let us hope this line of LUA Dalmatians is continued and becomes the norm for the breed as a whole.G Preecenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-90822165187322597672011-03-14T18:35:59.403+00:002011-03-14T18:35:59.403+00:00QUOTE : One fellow exhibitor approached breeder Ju...QUOTE : One fellow exhibitor approached breeder Julie Evans at Crufts and said: "You've done the wrong thing, you know," she said. "Pointers have terrible hip dysplasia."<br /><br />No matter that the outcross was in the 1970s, that there was only ever the one mating to another breed and that there has been no evidence of hip dysplasia in the intervening 14 generations.<br /><br />The "fellow exhibitor" sounds like an ill informed trouble-maker. There is NO EVIDENCE AT ALL that Pointers as a breed are prone to hip dysplasia. So it is hardly surprising that the intervening 14 generations are HD free.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-15999229588424788772011-03-14T17:42:28.820+00:002011-03-14T17:42:28.820+00:00I applaud Julie Evans for taking a chance on Fiona...I applaud Julie Evans for taking a chance on Fiona and for standing up to the breed clubs that opposed her. But, let's remember that sweet Fiona, whatever else she might be, is an experiment. She will have to start producing puppies and Julie (and the rest of us, I hope) will have to see how they turn out in terms of the UU, the "frosty" spotting that people are so scared of, and the myriad other concerns people have. Dalmatian owners and breeders will have to make their own minds up about whether or not they want to breed to or buy a LUA/NUA dog. I don't blame them for "waiting to see". The research is controversial and if you are currently breeding dogs that don't suffer from urate stone formation, then why upset your programme? I'm not saying that's the correct response, but it is understandable. Like I say, Julie is to be admired for taking the longer view. How it will impact the breed remains to be seen. There was a huge entry of dals at this year's Crufts. Fiona is just as good as the rest of them. Most went home without place cards - and so did she.Spotty Muldoonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09824810309757196312noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-14420082501543641312011-03-14T16:38:50.520+00:002011-03-14T16:38:50.520+00:00I am shocked people are worried about mud-blood po...I am shocked people are worried about mud-blood pointers. Have anyone done research on how the British developed the early Dalmatians? Believe me, worrying about pointers is the least of your concern.<br /><br />the anti-Boxer/Corgi people has more reasons to be against such crossing than the people who essentially ignored fact Dalmatians were originally pointers!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-86924415955274038362011-03-14T14:20:22.312+00:002011-03-14T14:20:22.312+00:00"We have been doing uu/uu matings for years -..."We have been doing uu/uu matings for years - that is the usual Dalmatian mating. I think you mean UU/UU."<br /><br />You're quite right. The normal uric acid gene is dominant (U) and traditional dals are u/u. <br /><br />My earlier post, then, should have read:<br /><br />"There have not been, as far as I'm aware, any UU/UU matings been done, but there have been several Uu/Uu matings done that have produced homozygous UU dogs. No health problems reported so far."Jemima Harrisonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05092892697145388048noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-88205386323922748342011-03-14T12:01:38.312+00:002011-03-14T12:01:38.312+00:00I have only just been pointed in the direction of ...I have only just been pointed in the direction of your page. I have always liked Dals and some years back had considered getting one, but on reading up on the health problems I sadly decided against it.<br /><br />I for one am totally delighted to discover that someone has had the courage to say "enough is enough" and do something to help the dogs themselves. As a moral choice it is a no-brainer to go this route. I have little doubt that in 50 years people will look back in horror on the breeders who argued to knowingly continue breeding dogs that suffer pain. <br /><br />All dog breeders - not just Dalmatian breeders; should think on how a future and more moral society will regard them. Do they get written into history as compassionate forward thinking breeders, or get written into history, as a barbaric person who argued to continue to promote suffering? The choice will be their own, but we can be sure that one day in the future descendants researching their ancestry will either squirm with an uncomfortable feeling that they are descended from a cruel individual or preen with knowing their ancestor was a promoter of ethical thinking.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1183957703077342201.post-77836352056552683942011-03-14T11:58:20.963+00:002011-03-14T11:58:20.963+00:00Jemima Harrison said...
"There have not been,...Jemima Harrison said...<br />"There have not been, as far as I'm aware, any uu/uu matings been done"<br /><br />We have been doing uu/uu matings for years - that is the usual Dalmatian mating. I think you mean UU/UU.<br /><br />Please get your terms right so as not to confuse.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com