honeyrun wrote:Ken,
That's an easy one......Absolutely nothing but color pattern. And I have a solid liver male along with many liver/white/ticked.
I'll agree wholeheartedly, when you're discussing a generic black dog or a generic liver dog. When you ask what a dog brings to the table, you have to look at a specific dog. The question can't be "what does the black coat color bring?", it has to be "what does this dog,
(insert registered name here), bring to the table?"
If the question isn't phrased that way, then you're being intellectually dishonest by asking for a specific answer to a generalized question.
honeyrun wrote:BUT....that color pattern is acceptable as the standard is written and has been since the inception of the GSP here in this country.
That's why people are working to get it changed.
honeyrun wrote:I have another question.....If the standard is written for all GSPs in the USA for AKC registration,
I cut the quote off here because the premise is wrong. The standard is written by the GSPCA and adopted by the AKC for conformation. That written standard is not required to be adhered to for
registration. The AKC has open registration when it comes to the GSP breed, which is why black is an acceptable color to be listed on the certificate. The better question would be "Why does the AKC allow open registration of dogs that don't conform to the written standard?" To that, I don't have an answer.
honeyrun wrote:Also, would it not have been more advantagous to get the standard changed to include Black prior to everyone breeding for it?
Maybe, but personally I think no. This is the catch 22 situation I expressed before. You have some detractors saying that they want to see black dogs be proven before they'll vote for the standard change. There's no way to "prove" a black dog in the U.S. if it doesn't exist in the U.S. This argument is chicken & egg. Coulda, shoulda, woulda aside, it has to be one way or the other, and it simply is the way it is.
honeyrun wrote:There were too many people breeding for black for color only and advertising the RARE Black GSP when this all started. I am thinking that maybe that has soured many GSPCA members to the acceptance of black.
That's probably true. How do you correct this situation? I would submit that the breed standard change would go a long way to resolve that issue, by reducing the so-called rarity as has been previously marketed.
honeyrun wrote:Here is another question.......Why was the color black listed as a DQ in the first place?
That's a very good question. I've heard a few theories. The first one is that black dogs were not imported as the first GSPs to hit U.S. soil, and thus were excluded. Second, going along with the first, is that black was excluded to make it harder to cross the GSP with the Pointer. (DNA profiling would theoretically resolve this today.) The third that I have heard is that the breed club used a written standard from 1902 Germany as a guideline when writing the standard here, and in 1902 blacks were not yet accepted in Germany; Thus, blacks weren't accepted here when that standard was written, even though, by that time, blacks were accepted in Germany.
I don't think we'll ever have a real, concrete answer. Just speculation.