moonvoice: (tv - bones - sweets loves you)
[personal profile] moonvoice
So I went to Glen's parents house yesterday,
they were babysitting Glen's brother's dog Pumpkin,
a young golden retriever x poodle.
She is perhaps the sweetest dog I've ever met in my entire life.
And extraordinarily charming and well-mannered for a 7 month old.
If I could have a dog with her temperament, I might be the happiest person ever.


She's just had her Summer clip.










Moet doing his best beached-seal impression, while watching the seals on Frozen Planet



Date: 2011-11-20 04:55 pm (UTC)
silverjackal: (Default)
From: [personal profile] silverjackal
The puppy is adorable. You can see what a sweet girl she is in her expression in the first photo. One of my cousins actually has a Goldendoodle puppy as well (she's always been allergic and therefore had poodles before), and her girl is also apparently both very sweet and very clever. I suspect that Goldendoodles come out less obliviously energetically hard than Labradoodles, but I frankly don't have a large enough sample to say that conclusively. It's interesting to see the intersection of different breed traits, because I would expect a Goldendoodle to be as high energy as a Labradoodle (given that young Goldens can be very, very energetic!) but apparently that's not the case.

Moet reminds me of an older person at a park or concert, observing everything while comfortably perched, legs and arms crossed. :D

Date: 2011-11-21 01:07 am (UTC)
silverjackal: (Default)
From: [personal profile] silverjackal
There's another aspect to consider here, too. I don't know what it's like in Australia (or at home, for that matter in re: my cousin's dog) but I've heard multiple people remark on how how cancer-prone North American Golden retrievers have become. Both work and show lines, and apparently all manner of different cancers. :( Not surprising, I suppose, given how very popular the breed is, and how much BYB and close inbreeding has happened, but I've heard this independently from enough people (some into showing, some with pets, and some in the working gundog fancy) that I've added Goldens onto my "remember to caution people because they're a genetic minefield" list.

I *really* hope it's different both where you are, and in Europe. What a horrendous thing to have to live with, if one loves the breed. (Or rather, one doesn't have to live with it, but breeders are hardly going to practice the extreme caution and careful outcrossing required to rectify the situation, and even if some do fixing it would take multiple generations, and several decades.)

Date: 2011-11-21 01:31 am (UTC)
silverjackal: (Default)
From: [personal profile] silverjackal
We are a weird people. ;)

Heh. Nothing wrong with Staffies!

As for being overbred, sadly that depends a lot on the size of the foundation stock, too. If they were genetically constricted (i.e. very few dogs originally imported, from a limited number of lines), one ends up with an equally bad coefficient of inbreeding because everything is backbred to the same number of founders. If there is *any* sort of genetic weakness that tends to be brought out and exacerbated that way. Breeding properly is not a simple thing, which is something that many people who are seriously involved with dogs really don't even appreciate. They're looking at how a dog and bitch will complement each other, and what it will bring to their lines, but they're looking in the immediate short term, not "what's the genetic load from this stretching back forty years" and "how will this translate forward in time?".

Date: 2011-11-23 02:26 pm (UTC)
silverjackal: (Default)
From: [personal profile] silverjackal
Temperamentally I actually really like Staffies (and the whole bully breed complex). What's not to love in such genial dogs? But aesthetically I agree with you. They remind me of swine, honestly, and bulk aside you know I also prefer pricked ears over hanging. Essentially the bully breed complex equates to everything I find unattractive in the canine world, in re: looks -- though at least they have a muzzle, as opposed to those poor flat-faced things. I also don't like the very close, scratchy coat, and the fact that they don't have good insulation for colder weather is a no-go for me as well while I live where I do. I refuse to put a coat on a dog unless s/he's ill or something, and here with the amount of time I prefer to spend outside, even in winter, a bully would need a coat. To each their own with preferences, yes? :D I'm sure there are people who would be disgusted by the shedding I live with, and annoyed by how "on" and watchful the dog is (complete with barking).

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