Lab-O-Cob
RECEIVER DOES IT AGAIN
BAILEY'S as
we fondly call him won a couple of Reserve
Winners ribbon.
However, we decided to retire him early since he developed a
dislike for dog show judges. After a show where a judge must have
gripped his balls too hard, he never wanted to be touched &
inspected inside the show ring. Too bad, he was a promising hunk
line bred out of American
Champion Receiver of Cranspire.
He now stands at stud passing his genes to his get. His offspring
likely to be endowed with his strong natural instinct to retrieve
for he is trained for drug
sniffing & detection.
Out of the conformation and obedience rings, he performs a vital
role in the operations of our entertainment club checking out the
premises, employees and entertainers randomly. We like to keep the
ART's VENUE
drug-free.
I am just
a dog lover. I simply just wanted dogs at the start. I bought Cali with a promise
from her breeder that she will do well in the rings. I was
very impressed when Cali's breeder showed of Cali's dam's skills in
carrying baskets & retrieving newspapers. Because I was made to
believe Cali as a qualified representative of the breed, I showed her. I
bumped into Cali's breeder in a show at San Lorenzo Village, Makati and to
his surprise, one can not deny his facial expressions when he saw me with
Cali holding an entry number. From then one, every time I saw him at
shows in 1995, he walked in the opposite direction. As for Cali, I had
her trained for obedience trials and finished her Companion Dog Graduate
Certificate. I decided to end her show career. The exercises in the CDX
level would be too much for Cali's hips, she is mildly dysplastic. I have
managed to place her in a new home and I do miss her carrying baskets for
us.
ReCOHllections
With
the advent of high-technology and lightning speed communications
media, it is quite disturbing that with such wealth of information
within reach, people still end up uneducated. Oftentimes,
simply reading and drowning ourselves in tons of books, magazine
articles, videos or whatever the medium may be just does not cut
it for the majority. I remember while in school, a lot of
the subjects never really made sense until I was out of school and
practicing all the darn principles in dealing with life.
There were of course subjects in college that I avoided but later
on realized that had I paid attention, it would have probably gotten me
out of situations easier. Now, if only I paid
attention during my economics class, maybe I would understand the
hard times we are going through this Bin-Ladened times. But
of course, I am veering away from the subject matter. Marshall
Macluhan, if I may recall taught me that the medium is the
message. I suppose that what he meant is choosing the
correct medium to convey the message. Man, being a social
creature interacts with his surroundings and by doing so, he
learns. And learning is process without no end. It
evolves, from one idea to another, we become learned. These
ideas we pick up from whatever is within reach, we assimilate and
what we think makes us what we are. If we block our minds
and free it of streaming thoughts, we are left with nothing and
yet, subconsciously the mind wills it way. We feel the inner
recesses of our being and come face to face with our own
reality. Some may feel an inner remorse, others totally
depressed while the lucky ones may feel bliss, content ... peace
and oh, what a pleasure it is to be alive! I am truly
blessed! And
this I share with you. Live
each day of your life like your dog would. They
know nothing of what their masters' ethics are and they probably
don't care if they are bitches if they are bred every heat.
More so if they are studs, they can go on and on for all they
care. They also know nothing of what the trophies, ribbons and
rosettes mean. And after you have given them a bath, dried
them off with a huge blower, cleaned their eyes and ears ...
it never fails if you let them run lose in the garden, they always
roll around their back preferably if there's poo that you forgot
to pick up. They
know nothing of the the web, laptops, cellular phones and crap. But
they do know how to love you, their master and unconditionally at
that!
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ALL ABOUT ETHICS
Coming from the 3rd world country, we rarely receive our
copies of magazines on the same month. We're lucky if it is only 2 months
behind. Dog books too are some of the rarities. As I browse through a
borrowed Show Sight magazine, May 1997 issue, an article by the editor
certainly caught my attention. Where
do puppies come from? Certainly not from us!
With tons of books on the subject of dogs, most often than not, you will
come across sections devoted to choosing the right puppies. In this
section, you will find the reputable breeder, hobby breeder & the
puppy mill breeder.
In Mr. McGinnis' article, he writes
"It never ceases to amaze me how many people involved in this
sport will tell you they do not sell pups. Well, a guy cannot blame
them; we have all been conditioned to believe that high numbers of dogs
automatically signifies low ethics. We have even come to believe that
providing pets to the general population is beneath our dignity. Yet most
of us have derived benefit from the work done, in the early years, by
those mammoth kennels and breeding programs that cemented type and
soundness and promoted chosen breeds to the rest of the world. Those
breeders were not only respected, they were encouraged to produce enough
good dogs to provide for the homes and apartments into which their chosen
breeds best fit. They were, without a doubt, the source. Yet if
those same breeders were around today, I bet they'd get thrown out of the
kennel club. Or at least be whispered-about in a nasty fashion."
Sometimes, one need not find lesser quality dogs at pet shops. Worse,
these so-called pet quality dogs are even passed on as show stocks.
Somewhere along the road show people draws a wide line between them and
the people who simply just want household pets.
And as Mr. McGinnis continues,
"We, who if we do what we say we do, should be providing the dogs
that will grace the lives of the people for whom they were intended at the
start, have divorced ourselves from the process. That wide line would
split into a yawning chasm could not have been foreseen - it's become a
deep gorge into which have happily plunged other purveyors of purebred
dogs. To this day I find myself surprised if I see a good representative
of a breed prancing in a backyard with some kids. By any measurement it is
a rarity - the average household dog is below average by our standards. We
console ourselves with the thought that, had that owner turned to us, the
dog we could have provided through ethical breeding or a network of
like-minded friends, would have been much, much better. And yet we
continue to discourage new owners by being too quick to pronounce them
unfit. I often hear horror stories from good people, willing to be
responsible owners, about having been rebuffed by a breeder of purebred
dogs: some are interrogated; many are insulted, and some simply
sloughed-off. They then ask themselves a legitimate question: 'Why submit
to a rigorous vetting when one can go down the street, or to the mall, and
buy a dog with no greater qualification than the ability to write a
check?' By too-zealously 'protecting' our breeds, we're promoting those
who wish to exploit them. And they're not only usurping our job, they're
doing it bigger and better. That their allure is strong is understandable;
that their product is inferior, widely known. That their prices are, in
many cases, higher is enough to boggle the mind."
For every dog sold in a pet store, there is a puppy a breeder could not
place. We should not only concern ourselves with these pet store pets but
should be more cautious with breeders whose only concern is to make money
out of breeding dogs. Most often than not, people come in to visit and
when asked what they are looking for would answer with "We
just want a pet." When asked for their sex preference, they
are quick to reply "Female"
and without further ado, we all know that they do have intentions of
breeding in the future. They would of course, insist that they get the pick
of the litter for a price of pet stock. The games people play
certainly is mind-boggling. As breeders, we should be very careful in our
selection not only with our puppies but those who our puppies end up with.
Receiver
Does It Again, Certified Narcotics Sniff Dog While"Cali"
has won numerous "Firsts" of perfect scores of 200 in Obedience
Trial Competitions and is CDG. Now,
Cali's new owner is another story to tell! Another
One for ReCOHllections!
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