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Author Topic: Line breeding  (Read 4732 times)
cajunl
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« on: September 12, 2010, 08:59:49 am »

Do you think breeding a littermate brother and sister is too tight?

I know it will bring out the faults of both. I am planning on keeping the whole litter.

The goal would be to keep the best two out of the litter. And perpetuating the line. However I am willing to cull all of them if it does not work.

I would rather breed father or grandfather over female 1 or breed mother or grandmother over male 1 but that is not possible.

What do you guys think? Is it a waste of time and $$ or should I just look for an outcross.
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duece24
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« Reply #1 on: September 12, 2010, 09:23:39 am »

look up linebreeding in the search box..there have been tons of threads about them..take sometime and look through them. some real good stuff in there..
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« Reply #2 on: September 12, 2010, 09:24:05 am »

Please list the top 7 pros of the dogs you breed to get them. Also list the top 7 negatives of those dogs as well. Are the parents related at all. Are they the same breed, or are they purebred at all. There are no right answers to my questions, but the truth will all add into the equation.
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cajunl
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« Reply #3 on: September 12, 2010, 09:42:14 am »

Top 7 pro

Drive ( willingness to find hog/ to please) whatever you want to call it.
hunt
nose
range
smarts
build
Grit (not too much...not to little)

top 7 con
Dad
Indepent where he would not hunt and stay with another dog.

he's dead and I cant still hunt him Grin real con

Mother

Hard to break from cows! Fault in my book but not in others
Would mouth very, very, very little as she got older behind a running hog

Dad is BMC mom is Leapord. Not related at all. Yes both purebred. Dad is linebred through his breed.

If they both turn out as good as either parent I would be happy. I am shooting for better.

I know all about it. You just get very conflicting thoughts from oldtimers and breeders alike on what is too close.
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Monteria
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« Reply #4 on: September 12, 2010, 09:42:28 am »

Please list the top 7 pros of the dogs you breed to get them. Also list the top 7 negatives of those dogs as well. Are the parents related at all. Are they the same breed, or are they purebred at all. There are no right answers to my questions, but the truth will all add into the equation.

Bingo, just knowing that they are litter-mates is not nearly enough information.

If they are an F1 outcross, you can probably do it with no real risk. If they are pure bred dogs with low coefficient, more risk. If they are the product of an already established line, more risk still.

No matter the situation though, what is the harm in trying if you are keeping them all and culling honestly?
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Monteria
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« Reply #5 on: September 12, 2010, 09:47:06 am »

Coming from two lines of totally unrelated stock, and assuming that they turned out exactly like I wanted, I would do it in a second.
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Reuben
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« Reply #6 on: September 12, 2010, 10:04:16 am »

Coming from two lines of totally unrelated stock, and assuming that they turned out exactly like I wanted, I would do it in a second.

and cull hard...
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« Reply #7 on: September 12, 2010, 11:59:28 am »

The first thing to remember is you cannot fool mother nature. I have found that bad traits will occur more frequently than good traits.

Also some dogs are prepotent and some dogs are not. A certain dog might be super double throw down bad to the bone. That dog might not be able to produce jack. Some dogs work very well bred to a certain dog and bad bred to another dog.

Look for a dog that is a proven producer. In bird dogs a female that is a producer is called a "blue hen". You can breed a blue hen to just about any kind of dog and get something. Breed her to a great producing male and you have a rubber stamp producing good pups.

Horse guys have already figured this out. Great producing females are highly coveted as they should be. If you can get hold of that great female that can produce guard her like your sister's virginity.
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Monteria
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« Reply #8 on: September 12, 2010, 12:04:59 pm »

The first thing to remember is you cannot fool mother nature. I have found that bad traits will occur more frequently than good traits.

Also some dogs are prepotent and some dogs are not. A certain dog might be super double throw down bad to the bone. That dog might not be able to produce jack. Some dogs work very well bred to a certain dog and bad bred to another dog.

Look for a dog that is a proven producer. In bird dogs a female that is a producer is called a "blue hen". You can breed a blue hen to just about any kind of dog and get something. Breed her to a great producing male and you have a rubber stamp producing good pups.

Horse guys have already figured this out. Great producing females are highly coveted as they should be. If you can get hold of that great female that can produce guard her like your sister's virginity.

Absolutely! But there is only one way to find out....
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Hog Dog Mike
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« Reply #9 on: September 12, 2010, 12:14:24 pm »

No doubt about it. You will never know unless you give it a try.

I bred one of my bird dog bitches to a really good male one time. The one I kept was worthless. She would not hunt to the front and I got rid of her after about 2 or 3 times in the field. I will not fool with a dog that won't handle. Several of the other pups in that litter were very good. In fact one of them won puppy and derby of the year for region 7 (Texas). Another one went over to Alabama and won quite a bit over there.

I bred my two best hog dogs and had 8 pups of which 7 died from mastitis. The one left looked great and I really worked with him but he just did not have it and I got rid of him. Who knows--he could have been the best I ever owned.
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craig
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« Reply #10 on: September 12, 2010, 12:59:26 pm »

Do you think breeding a littermate brother and sister is too tight?

I know it will bring out the faults of both. I am planning on keeping the whole litter.

The goal would be to keep the best two out of the litter. And perpetuating the line. However I am willing to cull all of them if it does not work.

I would rather breed father or grandfather over female 1 or breed mother or grandmother over male 1 but that is not possible.

What do you guys think? Is it a waste of time and $$ or should I just look for an outcross.


some lines can take a breeding that close and others cant you will find out alot about your dogs when you cross that tight, and it may work, i would say its worth a try if you are wanting to reproduce a certian individuals traits.  good luck
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Reuben
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« Reply #11 on: September 12, 2010, 02:20:35 pm »

Please list the top 7 pros of the dogs you breed to get them. Also list the top 7 negatives of those dogs as well. Are the parents related at all. Are they the same breed, or are they purebred at all. There are no right answers to my questions, but the truth will all add into the equation.

Bingo, just knowing that they are litter-mates is not nearly enough information.

If they are an F1 outcross, you can probably do it with no real risk. If they are pure bred dogs with low coefficient, more risk. If they are the product of an already established line, more risk still.

No matter the situation though, what is the harm in trying if you are keeping them all and culling honestly?

You said it right right there... Smiley
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cward
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« Reply #12 on: September 12, 2010, 04:22:37 pm »

My sister has a gyp that is the tightest breed dog of my line the little gyp is just a nice dog!!She was the only puppy in her litter I was going to do away with her and my sister raised her!! After watching her work as she got older I said lets breed her!! I took her to three different outside dogs and all three litters she had atleast 2 pups that had 6 toes on one foot!! Breed to yellow dogs the pups would come out like a spotted hound!!With maybe 1 yellow in each litter!! I would take the yellow pups and raise them! I do not on any of them to this day so that should tell you they did not work!!When they got to a mature stage they would just go crazy!!
But in your case it might work!!I have seen it work in another case but there was only one pup raised out of that litter and it was a good dog!!
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waylon-N.E. OK
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« Reply #13 on: September 12, 2010, 04:44:48 pm »

I am no expert on this and have not bred my own line of dogs for years like some of these guys on here, but we have a family of coyote hunters up here named DEE who have raised July hounds for over 100 years, Grandfather passed down ect. ect.. They have never bred outside there own yard except 2 or 3 times in all those years, I have personly hunted with them all my life, none of there dogs have ever been retarded, deformed, had 2 tails or anything like that ever. The only problem they ever ran into according to them was some male dogs would go steril earlier than normal, that is it. In those cases they would outcross and then not to total 100% outcross dogs. What they did and still do produce is July hounds that catch coyotes and breed true to type and form, My neighbour has the same Game Chickens on his yard as he had when he was 16 and he is 77, same breeding style. If you want either peoples number PM me and I'll give it to you and you could talk to them more in detail. Not saying anyone on here is wrong, just what I have seen in person

I modified to add this: Google and Look @ the New Guinea Singing Dog, believed to be a dog breed with zero outcrosses for 6,000 years due to it's isolation on the island of papua New Guinea. I think culling or natural selection in the singing dogs case is what really makes the difference if you decide to line/inbreed JM 2C
« Last Edit: September 12, 2010, 05:23:08 pm by waylon-N.E. OK » Logged

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« Reply #14 on: September 12, 2010, 04:48:49 pm »

if  you took  2  rabbits  out  of a  40 acre  block and  could  test  to  see how  many times  they are related what  would  you  think the  out come  would  be ...... if  you  have  problems  already  in the  line  it will  or  can  show ....  most  people  think  the  dogs  will be  some  kind  of  freaks lol ......i'd  bet  most  of  my  line  bred  dogs  are  more  tightly  blooded  than   alot of inbred dogs ....

these  three  picture  top  is  my  old  blackie  dog second  is  JR .....blackie is  great grandpa top and bottom and the father  of  JR ....... shad  is  third out  of  jr and queen  .... blackie  is  great  great  grandpa  twice and granpa once  on his  top  side and is  also great  great  grandpa twice and  grandpa once on teh  bottom .......and  i  just  bred  shad   to  his  momma  and  she  is  blackie top  and  bottom several times .....


do  you see  anything  wrong  with   those  three  dogs ...?






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Reuben
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« Reply #15 on: September 12, 2010, 04:54:33 pm »

I am no expert on this and have not bred my own line of dogs for years like some of these guys on here, but we have a family of coyote hunters up here named DEE who have raised July hounds for over 100 years, Grandfather passed down ect. ect.. They have never bred outside there own yard except 2 or 3 times in all those years, I have personly hunted with them all my life, none of there dogs have ever been retarded, deformed, had 2 tails or anything like that ever. The only problem they ever ran into according to them was some male dogs would go steril earlier than normal, that is it. In those cases they would outcross and then not to total 100% outcross dogs. What they did and still do produce is July hounds that catch coyotes and breed true to type and form, My neighbour has the same Game Chickens on his yard as he had when he was 16 and he is 77, same breeding style. If you want either peoples number PM me and I'll give it to you and you could talk to them more in detail. Not saying anyone on here is wrong, just what I have seen in person

That is what has worked for me. You just have to be honest with yourself and only pick the very best. When you outcross you really aren't outcrossing because you breed to some dog that is somewhat related that looks and hunts similarly to your dogs. Then you use the offspring because the bloodline has been freshened up enough with out changing your line of dogs... Shocked
« Last Edit: September 12, 2010, 05:18:05 pm by Reuben » Logged

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« Reply #16 on: September 12, 2010, 05:15:50 pm »

if  you took  2  rabbits  out  of a  40 acre  block and  could  test  to  see how  many times  they are related what  would  you  think the  out come  would  be ...... if  you  have  problems  already  in the  line  it will  or  can  show ....  most  people  think  the  dogs  will be  some  kind  of  freaks lol ......i'd  bet  most  of  my  line  bred  dogs  are  more  tightly  blooded  than   alot of inbred dogs ....

these  three  picture  top  is  my  old  blackie  dog second  is  JR .....blackie is  great grandpa top and bottom and the father  of  JR ....... shad  is  third out  of  jr and queen  .... blackie  is  great  great  grandpa  twice and granpa once  on his  top  side and is  also great  great  grandpa twice and  grandpa once on teh  bottom .......and  i  just  bred  shad   to  his  momma  and  she  is  blackie top  and  bottom several times .....


do  you see  anything  wrong  with   those  three  dogs ...?








That rabbit thing you just mentioned I have been saying for years. Wild animals don't care about brother, sister, mother, or father. They are oppurtunistic when breeding and sometimes it's the strongest males will breed. Mother nature culls harder than most of us do and she only looks at the bottom line. The offspring has to be smart, fight off parasites and predators, or larger predators, as well as any disease that comes along. The few that survive are resistant to all of the above. It doesn't mean that all will survive but enough will to carry on the species. If they don't overcome they will become extinct.

Then if it is a prey type animal it needs to be alert and fast to survive amongst its natural enemies.

If it is a predator it needs to be fast, strong, and smart enough to catch its natural prey to survive.

Mother nature culls hard to ensure that only the very best are left to reproduce thus ensuring the survival of the species.

By the way, That is some fine looking Parker curs  you got there Larry.
« Last Edit: September 12, 2010, 05:21:05 pm by Reuben » Logged

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cajunl
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« Reply #17 on: September 12, 2010, 06:23:00 pm »

Both are F1 outcross. Both are almost 3 years old and both proven.

The only reason I am contemplating it is I have yet to find an outcross that I would not be giving up something. Be it hunt, bottom or nose.

These are the only two left out of that litter. Out of the 6 that were hunted regularly all turned out above average. Thanks for the info.
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« Reply #18 on: September 12, 2010, 06:52:06 pm »

Both are F1 outcross. Both are almost 3 years old and both proven.

The only reason I am contemplating it is I have yet to find an outcross that I would not be giving up something. Be it hunt, bottom or nose.

These are the only two left out of that litter. Out of the 6 that were hunted regularly all turned out above average. Thanks for the info.

Do it!
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« Reply #19 on: September 12, 2010, 08:13:39 pm »

I breed Triggs for coyote & field trial  & hunt hard in the winter & have placed at the national level. I normally have two litters a year from my best stock & run them all so I can judge results of the breeding program. Many people do believe in line breeding at that level. Sometimes I have seen very experienced breeders who do breed say sister on brother & have sucess the first time, then the time or two they breed the offspring they get into trouble. It sometimes seems they are very good or maybe totally useless or anything in between. I personally dont believe in it & feel why should I do it. They say that if you do that, then both parents had better be very very good because of the likely hood of bad traits being emphasized. The one thing it does is give you unblieveable consistency, good or bad. This is fine if you have a purbred line with a history of conistency but when you are crossing two different lines where does this come in. Thats mine opinion anyway for what its worth.  I do have experience with breeding other livestock as well. I do know that if you cross two different breeds, be it dogs, cattle, horses or even chickens the first cross is usually very healthy & often very tough. I think the fact that they are completley different genes means they seem to get the best of both, thats my oppinion anyway.
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