larrypoe
Banned
Registered: Jan 2006
Location: bronaugh,MO
Posts: 2595 |
I have spent many hours on the phone with Mr Kemmer. He is probly the finest example of a hunting dog breeder that ever lived. I didnt bring him up before, because he breed curs. However the princibles are the same for Mt Curs as for hounds.
At the time Blondi was born, Mr Kemmer was a pro guide. He required large numbers of curs, because of his guide bussiness. Mr. Kemmer told me that Blondi was the most perfict cur he had ever seen. She was completely natural, and required no training. He breed her to a few males but was never satisfyed with the outcome. He started breeding her to the best of her sons. He never outcrossed agian. Blondi was an example of genetic mutation, although it seems a resesive one. Which by the way most mutations are. Had Mr. Kemmer not inbreed, that strain of curs would never had existed. It may have come out once in a while, but never would have develoed into a breed. Beleive me the Kemmer Stock Mt curs are a completely different breed than the other curs. As they have drifted from the watchful eye of Mr Kemmer, they have lost some of there constincy. Due mostly to outcrosses. However when the strain first came about, littermates were almost carben copys of each other.From colar to ability. That is inbreeding at its best.
Untill the last 15 or 20 years, inbreeding was unthinkable. The old breeders were totaly agianst it. However look at how far we have came in that time. We get whole litters of steller preformers, 20 years ago if 1 dog made it, that was a good cross. A few inlightened indiviguals like Mr Kemmer, Kelly Stagner, and Mr Giddings, are responsible for the begining of where we are today. Inbreeding was there most reliable tool, and they werent afraid to use it.
By the way the AQHA beleives that the Impressive gene was a mutation, and required testing of any horse that carried his blood. They REMOVED this gene from the breed.
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