Blue Chi’s Ranch

Specializing in AKC Champion Bloodline Blue Long Coat Chihuahuas

Show Quality Prospects or just Quality Companions

 

High Point, North Carolina

Holly & Sean

805-794-1447

Email Us

The Pros & Con's of Designer Dog Breeds

 

It's kind of a mixed bag when it comes to this, and there are strong opinions on both sides of the fence.

· Health

It's well known that every purebred dog breed is troubled by at least one (and usually many more), genetic or hereditary illnesses or problems. This is due to the level of inbreeding that takes place in order to keep a breed 'pure'.

Available research shows that designer dog breeds, and mixed breeds, are less likely to suffer from genetic weaknesses and are generally healthier overall than their purebred cousins.


However, it's very important to pay attention to the specific purebreds that are producing a particular hybrid/designer dog. If both parent dog breeds share the same genetic weaknesses, there's at the potential for a double dose of problems in the resulting puppies.

For example, if you cross breed two purebreds who each have a predisposition towards eye and eye-lid problems (such as Pugs, Boston Terriers or Pekingnese), the puppies are very likely to have problems in this area. And they may be more serious than in the original breeds themselves.

· The best of both worlds?

Not necessarily. Admittedly one of the first designer dog breeds was the Labradoodle, which was originally bred to combine two individual, breed specific traits with a particular purpose in mind.

The Labrador Retrievers' superior performance as a service dog, and the Poodles' non-shedding, non-allergenic coat. This combination produced a great guide dog for people with allergies.

It works quite well in theory, but due to the nature of genetics, it's not always a 'sure thing'! An F1 (first generation) Labradoodle or Goldendoodle can have a lab like coat that sheds, an F2 is more likely to have a hypoallergenic, low to non-shed coat.

When considering a designer dog, it's also not safe to expect puppies from a certain breeding to get only the desirable physical/behavioral traits. They're just as likely to inherit the undesirable ones, and each individual puppy in the litter can be quite different from it's litter mates.

Be realistic when considering a hybrid puppy, and if there are characteristics in either of the foundation breeds that you really don't want in your dog, don't choose that particular combination.



 

Predictable or Not?

When it comes to being able to predict the size, coat, temperament and breed specific traits that a puppy will develop as it matures, designer dog breeds fall somewhere in the middle range.

Although every puppy is a unique individual, and will not look or act EXACTLY like it's littermates, it's much easier to determine the above factors in a purebred dog.

For example, all puppies of guardian breeds will naturally develop a desire to guard and protect their owners. Some obviously will feel more strongly about this than others, but it's there nontheless.

In the same way, puppies from the herding breeds will want and NEED to herd things, and this will be accompanied by a high energy level.

At the other end of the spectrum, a mutt, or mixed breed puppy of uncertain ancestry is totally unpredictable. His parents are probably mixed breeds themselves, with their own individual jumble of genetic traits. Mix them both together and the results are pretty much 'pot luck'.

Your cute, sweet little puppy could grow into an 80lb dog with an attitude, or vice versa!

On the other hand, hybrid/designer dogs produce puppies that fall somewhere in the middle.

They're not even close to being as predictable as a purebreed dog, but F1 and F2 generation hybrids will show a selection or combination of characteristics found in the original purebred dogs that founded the new 'breed'.

It's also important to realize that each individual designer dog breeders' stock will vary from those of another breeder, as there are no recognized 'breed standard' to adhere to (as there is with purebred dogs). The 'look' of each designer dog breed is pretty subjective.

 

Finally...

Designer dog breeds are not generally considered 'recognized breeds' as such.

There are no designer dog breeds that are even close to being recognized by the AKC.

 

No lag time, all information is current.  Web site is changed first then any listings.

 

All images and information on this web site belong to

Blue Chi’s Ranch and is not to be reproduced in anyway, shape or form.

Blue Chi’s Ranch ©Copyright 2008

All Rights Reserved.

No part of this web site maybe taken without the express consent of

Holly Maxwell, Blue Chi’s Ranch.