655 — Nancy Talbott on Dual Dogs and Breed Specific Judging

Nancy Talbott on Dual Dogs and Breed Specific Judging

Nancy Talbott on Dual Dogs and Breed Specific Judging

AKC judge Nancy Talbott joins host Laura Reeves for an in depth discussion on the philosophy of dual purpose dogs and breed specific judging.

I didn’t really embrace or understand the significant division between show and field until I started showing more and conformation,” Talbott said. “And then it started to really strike me, and increasingly, and continuing to strike me at just how extreme, not just conformation and conformation breeders, but also field and field breeders had become. The word extreme should never be in the vocabulary about a Golden Retriever in any way, physically, mentally, energy level, any of that.

As we know, if you specialize in a high level sport, there is a tendency to go to extremes. Modern day field trials, not hunting tests but modern day field trials are so extreme in what’s required of the dog. I admire the trainers and handlers truly. I could never do it. But it almost creates this idea that you have to breed for what in the field world is called ‘go.’ That would be extreme drive.
“I have heard field breeders who say, ‘I can do anything else as long as I have a lot of go. And so they’re breeding for more ‘go.’ Trainability, yes, but more go.
“The conformation side, as we see when we’re in the ring, when Goldens became a really impressive group dog, therefore it has become primarily a handler breed. There are still tremendous owner handlers, and I applaud every owner handler out there. It’s a tough breed to show and compete with.
“And that has led us to extremes of movement, where you have dogs in a flying trot, not a moderate ground covering gait, the extremes of coat, the extremes of bone and weight, because that’s what people think is necessary to compete in that venue.
“When hunt tests started, it gave a venue for those people who wanted a dog who met the standard physically and mentally, but still wanted to prove their dog’s birdiness, ability, interest in water, all of those innate skills that we have to breed for. You can train in a lot of things, but you can’t train in some of those innate talents.”
Listen in to hear Nancy’s thoughts on breed specific judging, specifically as regards movement.

KNOWLEDGE IS POWER — FRANCIS BACON

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