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BlueTickNC
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Registered: Nov 2009
Location: Millers Creek,Nc
Posts: 768

?????? about father/daughter cross

OK GUYS GOT A FRIEND THAT WANTING TO BREED A FATHER BACK TO ITS DAUGHTER (BEAGLES) MY ? HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE DONE THIS IN ANYKIND OF HOUNDS AND CAN THEY BE UKC REG??? THANKS AHEAD

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Old Post 03-27-2012 11:49 PM
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BWSupplies
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Registered: Nov 2009
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You got around a 25% success rate or less... That's pretty tight, they might just run around in a circle....Continuously

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smokin-1-mo
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DONT NEED A DOG THAT BAD MYSELF.....

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BlueTickNC
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LOL THATS WHAT I TOLD HIM MAYBE HE WILL NOT DO IT I DONT THINK IT WOULD WORK I JUST WANTED SOME OF YOUR GUYS INPUT

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Old Post 03-28-2012 12:09 AM
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Rip
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Registered: Jun 2003
Location: Morrison TN
Posts: 4927

Not much more risky than any other cross. It's done all the time with differing results.

They aren't gonna be scatter brained or have three tails or anything.

But they need to be bred because of their abilitys instead of their "blood" or whatever.

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rod cox
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Registered: Jan 2010
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i wouldnt do,way to close in my opinion im actually waiting to cross my female walker out of hardwood dreamer to a young male i have out of 100 proof doc that is if he turns out to be a coondog the female is well on her way i would rather breed coondog to coondog than worry about all the titles in a pedigree this is only my opinion im sure others see it differently

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kayapellijed390
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Leopards

It is interesting to me to look at Leopard pedigrees. It seems to me that a lot of the dogs that are doing a good deal of winning in the hunts are out of very close crosses. I can think of several dogs that are out of brother sister or half brother sister crosses that have really turned out well. I personally would not breed a father back to a daughter but I am positive that you would have no ill side effects if you chose to do so. Some lines of dogs do far better inbreeding than outcrossing.

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toe cutter
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if it were not for inbreeding and linebreeding for specific traits,,walkers and blueticks would still be english dogs.

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Old Post 03-28-2012 04:13 AM
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skeets
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ive done it several times, they wasnt crazy acting and they looked fine. if the father or daughter have any big holes in them i dont think i would do it, but if the dogs dont have any real bad faults it might work. the best dogs i ever hunted with were line bred or out cross, ive hunted with plenty of inbred dogs but i have to say they were far from the best i ever saw. good luck.

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l.lyle
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When I was a real youmg fellow I joined a coon club. Me and my buddy met a retired Colonel that loved his Blueticks for they were the fairest in the Land. We akso met an old man and his hunting buddy that hunted blueticks but they offered to take us hunting instead of bragging on dogs. One night they also invited the Colonell. We treed one that he did not want to turn out on. Then he turned his loose and they trailed and got a good ways off and trailed and trailed and trailed some more. His dogs did have good tongues and you could almest feel him quiver every time one of them opened. Aafter a couple of hours of that we decided to see if we could ride closer. The county had just put up a chainlink fence around a boat landing about an acre big . The river side was open and the gate end was open. The Colonel caught up his dogs and left. After he was gone the old man said " well, I think he finally got what he been breeding daddy to daughter for, dogs that can trail all night on a half acre.

Last edited by l.lyle on 03-28-2012 at 08:38 AM

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Old Post 03-28-2012 08:28 AM
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walker1978
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Registered: Dec 2011
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dont do it. i got a red an white beagle thatsbreed tight like that and hes dum as dirt. scared of his shadow and will bark at anything. hes just a pet that my daughter takes care of.

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Rip
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quote:
Originally posted by walker1978
dont do it. i got a red an white beagle thatsbreed tight like that and hes dum as dirt. scared of his shadow and will bark at anything. hes just a pet that my daughter takes care of.


Bein dumb as dirt has absolutely nothing to do with how tight it's bred. It came from a line that throws dogs dumb as dirt, nothing more.

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Old Post 03-28-2012 04:11 PM
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Larry Atherton
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Inbreeding is simply a tool. The goal of inbreeding is to reduce variability within a breeding program. If the father/daughter cross is well thought out and based on sound selection and the goal is to reduce variability then go for it.

Every tool available to breeders of working dogs has a positive and negative. There is NO tool that has just a positive benefit.

Line breeding offers the same positive of reducing variability, but it is also slower than inbreeding. Line breeding also has the same negative of bringing dangerous recessive traits to the surface as inbreeding. While some may view the latter as a bad result, there are those that feel knowing what they are dealing with is better than burying it through repeated out-crosses

Out-crossing increases variability, but decreases reproduce-ability. Of course cross-breeding increases variability even more than out-crossing

Each breeding scheme is simply a breeding tool. Each breeder should figure out what their goals are and choose the proper tool to reach their goal.

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walker1978
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quote:
Originally posted by Rip
Bein dumb as dirt has absolutely nothing to do with how tight it's bred. It came from a line that throws dogs dumb as dirt, nothing more.
thats not true, the parents were really good dogs and only one pup made anything. jmo. maybe its just something in the water then.lol

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cw wilson
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works sometimes depends on the dogs i used ed mauney tack dog on daughter and got some real good dogs.

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branchvillekell
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line breeding does produce the product you want at the end result you think it should be. but,,,, line breeding too close for too many years produces all the traits ( and the fine line of goofy) you dont want. knowing when and where to outcross is the line of it all. when you think you have the best and then the best has been bred back over again a little too close too many times brings out the worst in them all.
larry , you are so right on the recessive traits coming to surface.
jmo,
if this cross is one you know what you want out of and they havent been line bred (inbred) to close. do it. only, if you know what you want.
i am presently watching a kennel of the best go down hill at a rapid pace because of line breeding. aka, in breeding , for over 20 years. it is a shame because of refusal to outcross.
dogs born with half a tail, one pup in litter, etc. etc.,.... the end of an era because of a chip on ones shoulder.
line breeding and in breeding can become one in the same if done for a long enough time.

than again, jmo.
kelley

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Old Post 03-29-2012 12:11 AM
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Rip
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Them bein "goofy" from a line breed or "too tight" just isn't true.

The science does NOT support this. It is an old wives tale.

It can show you recessive traits, but those traits were in the parents or they wouldn't be there. It didn't just pop up because they were "too close". It already popped up in the line, breeding close just makes all things more consistant, the good and the bad.

It doesn't make "new" things. New mutations are still extremely rare, even in very strongly inbred animals.

Look at our white mice for science, they are very, very inbred and they aren't goofey. Matter of fact they are way more inbred than any dog cross ever probably, but that can't be proven. They have been bred like this for many, many, many generations.

Of course all those years of inbreeding makes them very consistant in what they throw and limits suprises.

Like Larry said though, it's just one tool and has to be used correctly.

If bad comes from it then it's because it was already in the line to begin with.

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Old Post 03-29-2012 02:23 AM
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MLA
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I think the father/daughter cross has been made for years in West Virginia without much success!

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branchvillekell
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quote:
Originally posted by Rip
Them bein "goofy" from a line breed or "too tight" just isn't true.

The science does NOT support this. It is an old wives tale.

It can show you recessive traits, but those traits were in the parents or they wouldn't be there. It didn't just pop up because they were "too close". It already popped up in the line, breeding close just makes all things more consistant, the good and the bad.

It doesn't make "new" things. New mutations are still extremely rare, even in very strongly inbred animals.

Look at our white mice for science, they are very, very inbred and they aren't goofey. Matter of fact they are way more inbred than any dog cross ever probably, but that can't be proven. They have been bred like this for many, many, many generations.

Of course all those years of inbreeding makes them very consistant in what they throw and limits suprises.

Like Larry said though, it's just one tool and has to be used correctly.

If bad comes from it then it's because it was already in the line to begin with.


dear sir, show me the blood line on a white mouse. please do. oh yeah, you cant. sure enough, i have seen a blood line to a specific breed be dominant in recessive traits for the last 5 years. but, i guess you can trace their blood line. too close for too many years equals more probability that the qualities you didnt want will show because you have bred for it.
of course it takes many years to perfect the imperfect dog.

kelley

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l.lyle
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quote:
Originally posted by MLA
I think the father/daughter cross has been made for years in West Virginia without much success!
There's Algore.

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Old Post 03-29-2012 03:35 AM
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l.lyle
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http://youtu.be/qu_Y1wQ923g


If you do it ? how will you keep up with it?

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Old Post 03-29-2012 03:42 AM
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Rip
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quote:
Originally posted by branchvillekell
dear sir, show me the blood line on a white mouse. please do. oh yeah, you cant. sure enough, i have seen a blood line to a specific breed be dominant in recessive traits for the last 5 years. but, i guess you can trace their blood line. too close for too many years equals more probability that the qualities you didnt want will show because you have bred for it.
of course it takes many years to perfect the imperfect dog.

kelley



Yes, I can and so can any other scientist.

They are much more inbred than anything we have as a dog and they don't come out stupid or with mental issues. The scientific evidence shows that doesn't happen. There are all kind of computations you can do, inbreeding coefficent etc.

But Mr. Larry Atherton who has already posted in this thread can give you the inbreeding coefficient on his strain of white mice that he uses in his lab. Then you can try and compare it to most any dog pedigree you want and it won't even come close.

They are bred that way for a reason, consistancy. It doesn't make "new" things pop up. If it didn't exist in the line already then inbreeding isn't going to make it show up.

And too close for too many years has the OPPOSITE effect of what you said. It will be LESS likely the bad qualities will show up if that tool is used properly and you cull heavily. Then the longer you go the more consistant you will get for the traits you breed for. Obviously you can go too far with anything but our dogs aren't even close to that.

It's much easier with mice due to their short gestation period and the fact that you can cull and go through many generations in a short period of time. That's why they are a good barometer for what would happen on a dog after so many generations.

Search Larry's posts. He has explained inbreeding coefficient on here very well. Us dog folks don't even get close to the levels needed to start causing problems, even with father/daughter crosses.

Heck the suggested inbreeding coefficient for working stock is 20% yet most dog crosses are only around 10 or 15% even if it's "linebred". It's a big complicated formula but Larry is an expert in the field and is very good at explaining it. We don't come close to 20% in dogs most of the time. Some will but they know genetics pretty well.

I have had my share of genetics as well but he is better on the formulas and has a gift for explaining things.

I just used a calculator for the inbreeding coefficient for a father daughter cross. Dogs were not related except the father daughter cross. That inbreeding coefficient was only 12.5%, not even close to the recommended 20% and that was a father daughter cross. Of course the more common ancestors they have that increases the coefficient.

Even at well above 20% that's not increasing the odds of something "new" popping up. It's just increasing the chance that recessive traits show up, which you would want if you were wanting more consistancy so you can cull it out and try to eliminate it, but those traits are ALREADY IN THE LINE. They are not new and the goal is to ge rid of them. Very, very difficult thing to do, much easier in mice. And for the record, some strains of mice have been documented with an inbreeding coefficient of 100%.

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GLANCY'S 7 MILE
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Breeding in itself is a mystery, we can talk science, genetics, formula's, etc. but no one has it mastered, and probably never will. If their was a true science to breeding or if it was mastered we would all have coon dogs, and every litter produced would be successful. To me a father/daughter cross is to close, but who am I. All we can do as responsible breeders, is breed for specific, consistently replicable qualities and characteristics, keep our fingers crossed and hope for the best.

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l.lyle
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quote:
Originally posted by l.lyle
http://youtu.be/qu_Y1wQ923g


If you do it ? how will you keep up with it?



Whatever, I don't balame UkC for not keeping up with it. Stupid stuff.

Then when I get my perfect no flaws extra wonderfulls incested up . Then I pronounce that I got the most wonderful wonderful studhoss I'se gona release out on to de Public. Think about it ??? What can I breed him on to??? Sure can't be Clover or House, Findly River nor Bozo nor Banjo, and for sure not Dahoney's junk. I would have to be "OUT Crossing" my superior superlative on the lesser brands . Ya'll sound like Englishmen or Southern Aristocrats to me LOL.

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Chris Dillard
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WHY WOULD ANYONE INBRED? REMEMBER WE AS HUMANS NEED TO BE SMARTER THAN THE ANIMALS WE RAISE.

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