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Stoneface wrote:Felicia, Steve Snell and Steve Smith are both Elhew fans. I know Snell owns a half Elhew dog that is pretty well-known. I don't know if Steve Smith has an Elhew right now, but I think I remember him posting that he does. I don't think anyone would knock either of these guys' education on birddogs and lines and either could own virtually any kind of dog of any breed they wanted. On top of that, current studs with Elhew Kennels go for a $1,500 fee and pups are $2,000. I don't know many other "not good" birddogs go for that price.
All I mean is, "good" is in the eye of the beholder.
Ghosted3 wrote:Thank you all for the feedback it is much appreciated. I am not wanting to go all out and have 3 sires and 5 dams poppin out lots of litters a year. Like I said earlier, I want to share my love of the dogs with many people and place the dogs in great homes.
Corry
Greg Jennings wrote:1. Go get a dog.
2. Develop dog, train dog, hunt dog, test/trial dog.
3. If enough people come to you begging you to breed dog and with deposit money in hand, seriously think about breeding dog.
Ghosted3 wrote:Greg Jennings wrote:1. Go get a dog.
2. Develop dog, train dog, hunt dog, test/trial dog.
3. If enough people come to you begging you to breed dog and with deposit money in hand, seriously think about breeding dog.
My only problem with that is I have no desire to run my dog in trials. I am not saying it is a bad thing, its just not for me. I do understand that it would be better for the breeding by saying the sire / dam have placed or won in such and such, but that isnt a driving point for me.
It seems like the question that I asked in the beginning has been lost lol. Oh well its all good though.
Ghosted3 wrote:Thank you all for the feedback it is much appreciated. I am not wanting to go all out and have 3 sires and 5 dams poppin out lots of litters a year. Like I said earlier, I want to share my love of the dogs with many people and place the dogs in great homes.
Corry
ultracarry wrote:Ghosted3 wrote:Thank you all for the feedback it is much appreciated. I am not wanting to go all out and have 3 sires and 5 dams poppin out lots of litters a year. Like I said earlier, I want to share my love of the dogs with many people and place the dogs in great homes.
Corry
Share your love for the dogs and buy one, go to tests, get it trained or train it, and get a professionals opinion on if you should breed. Don't share your love by breeding a dog to have puppys. specially when you don't have the money or space to keep them all if they are returned for health issues, bad bite, too soft to train, lack drive, etc. Leave breeding to those that make sure the dogs are worth it and have the time and money to back it.

Ghosted3 wrote:Greg Jennings wrote:1. Go get a dog.
2. Develop dog, train dog, hunt dog, test/trial dog.
3. If enough people come to you begging you to breed dog and with deposit money in hand, seriously think about breeding dog.
My only problem with that is I have no desire to run my dog in trials. I am not saying it is a bad thing, its just not for me. I do understand that it would be better for the breeding by saying the sire / dam have placed or won in such and such, but that isnt a driving point for me.
It seems like the question that I asked in the beginning has been lost lol. Oh well its all good though.
Cajun Casey wrote:Gee, thanks, Munster. Now he'll pick shorthairs. Nice pets, too, you know.
EXCELLENT post. AKC isn't the authority, you are correct.
Stoneface wrote:Felicia, Steve Snell and Steve Smith are both Elhew fans. I know Snell owns a half Elhew dog that is pretty well-known. I don't know if Steve Smith has an Elhew right now, but I think I remember him posting that he does. I don't think anyone would knock either of these guys' education on birddogs and lines and either could own virtually any kind of dog of any breed they wanted. On top of that, current studs with Elhew Kennels go for a $1,500 fee and pups are $2,000. I don't know many other "not good" birddogs go for that price.
All I mean is, "good" is in the eye of the beholder.
gotpointers wrote:Stoneface wrote:Felicia, Steve Snell and Steve Smith are both Elhew fans. I know Snell owns a half Elhew dog that is pretty well-known. I don't know if Steve Smith has an Elhew right now, but I think I remember him posting that he does. I don't think anyone would knock either of these guys' education on birddogs and lines and either could own virtually any kind of dog of any breed they wanted. On top of that, current studs with Elhew Kennels go for a $1,500 fee and pups are $2,000. I don't know many other "not good" birddogs go for that price.
All I mean is, "good" is in the eye of the beholder.
Steve Snells dog Mac is a Phantoms Wizard x Phantoms Southern Sky breeding. Wizard is a helluva dog i think i have 4 out of him. Hes heavy Nemaha Dime no elhew. Southern Sky is all Miller and Go Boy and thats why i bought her. Skys sire Nat CH Millers Southern Pride is a full brother to my Kraftsmans Ko Kane along with Wiggins prarie Knot and Millers Dateline. The 1500 to 2000 per elhew pup buyers are also in the same crowd as those who pay 1500 to 2000 for the hybrids on the other thread. Elhew does real well when crossed with Miller, Rockacre, Guardrail. Dont get me wrong There are still some pretty much close to real Elhews running around my place too.
Munster wrote:Cajun Casey wrote:Gee, thanks, Munster. Now he'll pick shorthairs. Nice pets, too, you know.
EXCELLENT post. AKC isn't the authority, you are correct.
I told you I meant no disrespect to AKC or those who have AKC dogs. Just stating the facts. I just dont feel like this guy has done a bit of research or he wouldnt have bulked at the trialing statement.
I dont think he, or anyone, should breed hamsters until he gets the facts.
Stoneface wrote:Got Pointers, I wasn't talking about Mac, I was talking about Click. Dan Hendrickson said he's by Phantom, out of an Elhew bitch. I haven't seen the pedigree, so I don't know if he's using the term "Elhew" loosely or not.
I know Steve Smith really advocated Elhews and said he's had them for years. Other people who could have their pick of any dog and has the expertise to make an educated selection also own Elhews. They're not for everyone, for sure, but there are some who will not own anything else. I would really agree with you that the pups are sold for that price in large part because buyers want that name, but Elhew blood is still winning field trials. I'm not much of a trialer right now, but I can recognize the Elhew prefix when I see it in a placement listing. Maybe not AA and maybe not to the degree of some, but Wehle never wanted to breed trial dogs and made no claim to.
gotpointers wrote: I think its named after his proximity to Phantom Air Force Base.
Greg Jennings wrote:gotpointers wrote: I think its named after his proximity to Phantom Air Force Base.
I may not be an authority on bird dogs, but I can tell you definitively that there is no Phantom Air Force Base. I do not believe that there has ever been a Phantom Air Force Base or field. It is not on my list of closed or renamed AFBs or fields.
There is, of course, the famous McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II air plane. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McDonnell_ ... Phantom_II .
Not that it matters.
Greg J.
If you were to pick a breed of dogs to breed, would you rather choose something common, yet still in demand like a GSP, or something a little more rare like a Deutsch-Drahthaar even though they are not AKC registered? I would like to start breeding the Deutsch-Drahthaar within the next 3-5 years, but I am worried that since they are not a registered member of the AKC that they may not be as well received as some of the other breeds. Thoughts? Thanks for the feedback in advance.
Corry
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