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Isn’t
the Internet a marvelous development?
Even those of us not born into the
computer age have to admit to the
wonderful job the magic box is doing in
uniting the world. Within minutes of
having received some news (or gossip!)
from friends in Australia, which came to
them by way of their contact in
Argentina, I pass it along to a pal in
South Africa. And all this for $19.95 a
month! (We won’t talk about the several
thousand dollars it took us to get
"Internet access.") The only thing these
new fangled computers and the world wide
access they bring us can’t do, however,
is personalize contributors to the
information highway. Contributors, with
a few notable exceptions, are simply
"names" or in some cases a cleverly
contrived series of letters representing
an "e-mail address." Thus it becomes the
receiver’s responsibility to separate
the wheat from the chaff, the value from
the clutter. Unfortunately, we are apt
to find as much trash being disseminated
(more?) as information of value.
That is why I was so delighted to follow
the recent "thread" (see, I too am
learning computer lingo) initiated by
Tim Hutchings from the U.K. Delighted,
not only because the topic he wrote
about has such importance but because
Hutchings himself has the the
credentials and experience with which to
back up what he says. I can only assume
any Boxer enthusiast who has done any
homework at all is aware of his great
success in the breeding department and
as publisher of the very well done
Boxer Quarterly magazine. What Tim
addressed that so fascinated me was the
issue of consistency in judging. The
issue and the responses it engendered
put me in mind of those marvelous
conversations we used to have around the
crates at benched shows so long ago here
in the U.S. That was before benched
shows were eliminated and it became the
fashion to leave (in or out of a huff)
immediately after one did/didn’t win
exactly what was expected. Tim’s posting
gave good reasons as to why it may not
always be possible or entirely correct
for that matter, to be consistent in
making placements. However, I do worry
that his excellent explanation may
unintentionally undermine the value of a
judge’s ability to attempt to be
consistent. This ability is something I
find it impossible to put anywhere but
among the most important qualities a
judge, or a breeder, can have. But just
so our readers do not misunderstand what
I mean by the word, allow me to explain
consistency as it applies to both the
breeder and the judge.
The Consistent Judge
I am afraid in the minds of some
exhibitors a consistent judge is one who
puts up their dog the first time it is
shown and then forever more. Some of a
more generous bent may accept not
winning with the same dog every time
they show under a given judge, but this
does not diminish their expectation that
they should win with at least one of
their dogs. To some others, consistency
means a judge values one part of the
dog’s anatomy far above the rest. Often
it’s head but it can be soundness or
movement or whatever. Regardless, the
judge is expected to go with that one
quality regardless of what the rest of
the dog looks like.
This is most definitely not what I mean
by consistent judging. When I speak of
consistent judging I speak of an
individual who has, over the years,
developed a clear cut interpretation--a
mental picture--of the standard.
Anne Rogers Clark succinctly described
this as developing a "template" through
which she views all representatives of
the breed. The template is forged
through years of study and having seen
many dogs of great type along the
way--perhaps even the truly great one
that takes all the bits and pieces of
information and serves to etch that
picture of perfection into something
very real and very identifiable.
A judge who is equipped with this
valuable tool then walks down the line
knowing exactly what he or she is
looking for. This is not to see where
dogs differ but to see which dogs have
most of those qualities that have it fit
into that mental picture of the ideal.
This is a judge who is able to take
judging a step beyond simply separating
the quality dogs from the run of the
mill. Without compromising proper
selection the judge can communicate to
the interested what he or she believes
is the most correct interpretation of
the standard. This is the person that
many of us travel great distances to
observe and to learn from. Only recently
I had such an experience. It was a
national specialty show of great
proportions for which I gave up a
holiday with family in order to observe
a judge I admire pass upon the entry.
The judge concerned could not have
painted a clearer picture of her ideal
in the breed had she been using a
palette of color and an easel. It did
not take many classes to determine what
the judge was after and it was just as
easy to see how the dogs that followed
the first place winner began to deviate
from the ideal. The event and the
picture created are indelibly etched
into my consciousness and serve as a
significant part of my own template for
that breed which I myself now judge.
Again I must reiterate, it is not always
possible for a judge to make a
statement. Some classes contain nothing
but mediocrity. Try as he might, there
is absolutely no way in which the judge
can create a picture of anything--he or
she is hard pressed to decide any order
at all. No artist is able to make a
picture if he doesn’t have the tools
with which to do so. Nor would the
artist be able to paint well if the
paints supplied available were of
inferior quality and imprecise color.
This takes us back to Tim Hutching’s
hypothetical class in which one dog
(Exhibit 2) differs significantly in
style from the best dog in the class
(Exhibit 1), but has more quality than
Exhibit 3. Certainly Exhibit 2 deserves
to place ahead of Exhibit 3. A good
judge would never put an inferior dog
over one that was superior simply
because it resembled one’s first
placement or for that matter, whose only
asset was that it was closer in style to
the judge’s ideal. Judges find need to
do this all the time but the judge’s
ideal day (like the breeder’s ideal
breeding) is the one on which there is
sufficient quality so that a positive
statement can be made--so that the judge
can create a clearly defined picture of
which dogs from the entry will in fact
help take the breeder one step closer to
the elusive "ideal."
I wonder if today’s judges are inclined
to lose sight of this tremendous
responsibility? A judge is sent into the
ring to acknowledge the stock most apt
to serve the best interests of the
breed. There is nothing in the judging
proviso that suggests a judge should be
concerned with adding to or subtracting
from win records.
The Consistent Breeder
I feel quite certain that you know more
than one individual who has bred and
shown many winners over the years. Their
champion tally is impressive as are
their win records. However, if you were
to stop and ask yourself what specific
qualities that kennel can be relied upon
to consistently produce, you might well
be a a total loss for an answer. But it
may not be you who is missing the point.
The answer just might be that there is
no answer. Big Winner No. 1 was of one
style and Big Winner No. 2 was of
another Numbers 3, 4 and 5 were again
entirely different variations of correct
type.
I don’t know about you folks, but that
kennel would be the last place on my
list of where to look for foundation
stock or for the proper stud for my
bitch. The pedigrees of dogs from that
kennel are solid red but the individuals
bear scant similarity. Nor can they be
relied upon to consistently produce much
of anything outside of the what we might
best call the generic show dog
qualities: charisma, soundness and
attractive color and markings. From
where I stand a true breeder (as opposed
to a kennel that breeds dogs) takes the
words of the standard that describe the
way a dog looks, the way it acts, the
condition it is in, the subtleties of
balance, eye placement, and expression
and translates those words into living,
breathing flesh. Just like Egyptian
hieroglyphics, the breeder’s translation
is a picture language. The breeder’s
translation is what stands there at the
end of the leash. In order to
consistently reproduce this picture the
breeder must also have a clear cut
visualization of what he or she is
trying to accomplish. If not, what is
the goal? How can there be a projection
of what constitutes the "ideal?" We
would never have been able to translate
the writings of the Egyptians if they
had used a picture of the moon to
illustrate the summer solstice one time
and then a picture of a cat to
illustrate the same thing the next time.
Some might ask, "Isn’t a list of winning
dogs enough validation of one’s ability
to breed quality?" This may sound a bit
old fashioned, but just between thee and
me, my win, my validation, comes from
planning a litter that results in "that"
pup. I take the pup to a show, call
around those whose opinions of the breed
I respect and ask what they think. If
they were to say, "You’ve done it!"
Well, that’s the win for me. What
happens when you take the wonder pup
into the ring depends on so many
variables it would be impossible to list
them all here--how the pup feels, what
else is in the class, what the judge
prefers and for that matter, which side
of the bed the judge woke up on that
morning.
A Dangerous Trend
Today there is a dangerous trend that I
feel represents a serious threat to our
pursuit of the ideal. We all know there
are variations within any breed which
fall to one side or the other of the
ideal--the "ideal" being what most of us
refer to as "correct type." I fear
however that far too many are
interpreting this accepted variance to
mean that there is no true type; no
bulls eye to aim for. They seem to
believe that insofar as an individual
specimen has the general breed
characteristics, has no disqualifying
faults and is basically sound, the dog
in question is just as good as the rest
being shown. Success in the ring is then
based entirely on an arbitrary
interpretation of the standard by the
judge.
Some time ago I read an article in a
widely circulated dog publication that
fully supports this "anything goes"
school of thought. The content
irresponsibly threw the door wide open
to a celebration of mediocrity. The
article began by pointing out that the
reason for absolute consistency in type
among wild animals is the result of
natural selection, directly related to
survival of the species. Any deviation
from the required type, unless an
improvement, threatens survival. So far,
so good--the writer’s point was well
taken. What came next however, I found
rather astounding. The author’s premise
is that since breeds are artificially
created, there is no need for human
breeders to be particularly strict in
culling, because most wouldn’t be able
to survive in nature anyway. That it is
all simply arbitrary to begin with.
Further, the author appears to believe
only enough uniformity is necessary in a
breed so that it can be easily
distinguished from all other breeds. The
resulting variation would then permit
sufficient room for flexibility in
determining what is acceptable. Finally,
the article states that those who
believe there is only one true type (and
apparently veterans are most guilty in
this belief) are prejudiced and
incapable of appreciating other views.
Elements of Success
Needless to say, I was dumbfounded by
the article. Can you imagine how this is
received by those of us who have for a
lifetime believed that the element of
success lay in developing a line in
which familial similarity is so great
that no show catalog was necessary to
determine the breeding? And consider the
heretical thought this represents to
someone who has spent a lifetime looking
for the ideal specimen against which all
subsequent members of a breed are
compared? Fortunately I was to read
another piece a short time later written
by Susan B. Lennard, the St. Bernard
Columnist for the American Kennel
Club Gazette. The article helped me
to understand just what is occurring in
regard to consistency of type and the
interpretation of the word type itself.
Ms. Lennard refers to the standard of
her breed as the definitive description
of breed type and a breeder’s expression
of that ideal as "style." She writes,
"The extent of that expression may
contribute to or deviate from aspects of
the phenotype described in our
standard." Ms. Lennard then goes on to
say, "Style may be an adjunct to type,
but it is not the same thing." I have no
argument with those who ascribe to the
theory that there are many expressions
of that ideal which we all pursue.
However, I am entirely unable to accept
the premise that all expressions of type
are equally valid.
In summary I might equate this
discussion to the way I judge people. I
have no time for those who say what it
is they think I want to hear. I admire
and respect the individual who has
something to say and says it. I might
not agree and in fact the speaker may
prove to be entirely wrong but then is
it not what the speaker has said that
inspires me to seek the knowledge that
confirms or denys his premise?
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