MEET THE JUDGES & JUDGES EDUCATION LINKS
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MEET
THE
JUDGES
Carolyn & David Alexander
Pat Hastings Multi-Gr.
Joe Gregory All
Breeds
Richard Beauchamp
Multi-Gr.
Dr. J. Donald Jones
Multi-Gr.
Ann Arch, Crufts BIS
Edd Embry Bivin
Multi-Gr.
Robert D. Sharp Multi-Gr.
Frank Sabella, Multi-Gr.
Peggy Mickelson Multi-Gr.
Beverly Vics - Working, etc.
David
Kirkland, Terriers, etc.

John Boozer Terriers
Dany Canino, Multi-Gr.
Barbara Ann Langlois, Multi-Gr.
Mardee Ward, Working, etc.
Rose O'Hara OB, AG, Breeds
Ric
Chashoudian, Multi-Gr.
Melbourne Downing All Breeds
Judi Daniels AKC Past President
Frank McCartha, Working, etc.
Dennis & Mary Lou Kniola Multi-Gr.
Dr. Richard Greathouse, Multi-Gr.
Chris
Walkowicz, Herding, etc.

JUDGES
EDUCATION INFORMATION
Judging One Dog At A Time
Peter Gaeta, AKC Judges Dept.
Preferred Breed Type
Judging Contracts & Dog Clubs
ACEF Judges' Institute
Judging The Akita - Head to Tail
Judging The Akita - Temperament
Judging The Chihuahua
Judging The Miniature Bull Terrier
Judging The Toy Fox Terrier
The Value Of Breed Seminars?
Those Darned Judges
The Evolution Of Judging
The Rule Of Fives
Judging Consistent - Credible
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GOOD JUDGES
SPEAK DOG
E.
Katie Gammill,
TheDogPlace.org Showring Editor
/
September 2010
In
MY day, we breeder/exhibitors were captive audiences at bench shows.
To fill the long hours, we discussed and examined many breeds. Few
stay for Best in Show today with our “show and go” attitude.
Whether breeding, showing or judging, everyone wants to do it right
and we can still learn a lot from those ringside discussions.
TheDogPlace
is a venue for real dog people. The editor and her staff are doing a
“kick-ass” job. For many, it takes the place of congregating after a
show. We are in such a rush today, sometimes it works to just sit
down at the computer and STUDY. I wish I had drawings for some of
the things we talk about here, maybe someone out there can
volunteer!
My column “Preferred
Breed Type” grew legs. Published in October 2008, it is “still
walking”. Published in year books, magazines, and newsletters
world wide, it seems to have reflected what many people are
thinking. That article traveled far beyond our expectations.
Editor’s note: It
was one of our most requested reprints.
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It’s getting
harder to study winners and know what to take to a judge today. |
Still, the great sport of dogs is dwindling. WHY? The economy, inept
judges, advertising budgets, and increasing expenses contribute to
lower entries. It’s getting
harder to study winners and know what to take to a judge today.
This “crap shoot” causes long time exhibitors to leave the sport in
droves and newcomers don’t stay as long. We have “instant experts”
in both fields and our breeds reflect the consequences.
The Breed Standard is for Breeding Stock! A breed standard is
the ideal dog in writing. In the early days, Judges awarded
“breeding stock” and honored them. Today’s exhibitors often are
confused by the winners. Some change their breeding program to
reflect that which is popular at the moment. Other die hard breeders
enjoy an occasional win under a knowledgeable judge but everyone
agrees that our sport is losing “seasoned judges” who contributed
greatly to our sport.
It’s as though some of the new judges have forgotten they are
supposed to put forward the next generation’s BEST BREEDING STOCK.
It isn’t about ratings or one’s popularity. The reason we have
judges is to judge dogs. As the wisdom of the older judge fades into
the past, today’s mind set seems to be “if it wins, it must be
good.” That is wrong headed. If it isn’t about judging breeding
stock anymore, what is it about? The AKC encourages newcomers to our
sport, but they need to take time to learn from the older wise ones.
Most standards describe body shape, top-lines, and breed specific
movement. Using these tools, one can sort puppies at eight weeks. If
puppy has it, it will remain. If it doesn’t, chances are it won’t
grow it. Keeping dogs for a single virtue is like eating a pickle. You
never know which way it will squirt.
Breeders dedicate their lives to breed excellence only to find their
dogs look “different” and are ignored. A newcomer purchases a dog
fitting the standard, only to find it looks different in the ring.
If judging is really according to the breed standards, then that
couldn’t happen. If we aren’t on the same page (of the standard),
why breed at all? Should judging reflect breeder preferences? NO!
Hands On or “Property Classes” are a bone of contention.
Several dogs are brought in. Mentors analyze as follows. “This is
the eye you want, this is the ear set you want, this is the coat
texture, this is the foot, this is the size, this is the expression,
and guess what? Each virtue is on a DIFFERENT exhibit! Is it any
wonder judges put too much emphasis on “pieces” and are unable to
see the dog as a whole?
Type and Soundness? There’s something I call TYPE
CHANGE. It occurs when the concentration of an obvious fault becomes
so dominant that it appears as a virtue! If you don’t believe this,
look at over angulated rears, size, coats, and bone. And have you
noticed the heads in some breeds? Changing skull length may change
peripheral vision and in turn, affect temperament. Slight nuances
differentiate many breeds. Those virtues deserve respect.
The word “balance” is questionable. A bad front and bad rear
working in unison is not correct. It can just be an excuse for lack
of knowledge. True, our common goal should be a symmetrical dog (no
one thing out of place) so if anything “sticks out” on the dog, it
usually is incorrect because it is an exaggeration and that is not
balance or symmetry. Good dogs “fill the eye”. The balance should be
between “type and soundness”. They depend upon each other. When in
doubt, go with TYPE.
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If the length from the nose to the occipital bone is the same length
as from the occipital bone to the withers, the legs are where they
should be. |
Symmetry? Visualize the legs beneath the dog. On many breeds,
if the length from the nose to the occipital bone is the same length
as from the occipital bone to the withers, the legs are where they
should be. YEP! Even on the bulldog. Check it out.
Front and Rear Assembly. Many dogs that feel good under your
hands but don’t have proper reach when moving need ½ inch more leg
so they can open their shoulder. When the leg is short, they open
from the elbow. Some with good fronts don’t follow through behind
because the legs must grab the ground quickly to keep up with the
front. Dogs are stretched to fix top lines and faulty angles. Try
this. Lift the hock toward the ischium (butt bone) and if the bones
touch, this indicates the stifle and lower thigh are the same
length. The result is the ideal perpendicular and parallel hocks.
Any deviation will affect the croup drop, and in turn, affects tail
set.
That song “The thigh bone connects to the knee bone, the knee bone
connects to the ankle bone etc., says it all. Any adjustment in a
dog's shoulder triggers a compensating rear adjustment and visa
versa.
So are breeders addressing faults today or adjusting to them? Do
judges choose winners on “pieces” rather than the entire animal?
Should judges just judge dogs and let breeders worry about type
nuances? Ah, questions demanding answers.
Wise dog people want to assist newcomers and they know how to SPEAK
DOG. Don’t wait too long to ask. And keep your e-mails coming.
http://www.thedogplace.org/Judges/Education/Good-Judges-Speak-10094_Gammill.asp
SEND GOOD JUDGES SPEAK DOG, by E. Katie Gammill
TO YOUR FRIENDS
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Let
"Digger Dog" dig up related articles:
The Evolution Of Judging
The Rule Of Fives
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