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I've had a lot of different animals in my lifetime and each time if it was something I was wanting to breed, the first thing I did was to read the SOP and learn everything I could about the breed then get the best breeding quality I could find.....horses dogs or chickens. You produce a lot of PQ while trying to produce SQ...cull the pet and breed your best.
I now have two rescued dogs that I love very much. Both were bred by backyard breeders who bred pets to produce more pets. Both have overbites that make it very hard for them to eat. It doesn't mean I love them any less for their faults but I would never ever breed them because of it.
I also have pet Seramas that will never be bred because of their faults. No animal is perfect but I can't see breeding anything without trying to breed for improvement. That goes for any of the breeds, not just Seramas.
The Standard of Perfection is used as a guide as to how the different breeds should look.
Agreed!
Very well said! Thank you.
I've had a lot of different animals in my lifetime and each time if it was something I was wanting to breed, the first thing I did was to read the SOP and learn everything I could about the breed then get the best breeding quality I could find.....horses dogs or chickens. You produce a lot of PQ while trying to produce SQ...cull the pet and breed your best.
I now have two rescued dogs that I love very much. Both were bred by backyard breeders who bred pets to produce more pets. Both have overbites that make it very hard for them to eat. It doesn't mean I love them any less for their faults but I would never ever breed them because of it.
I also have pet Seramas that will never be bred because of their faults. No animal is perfect but I can't see breeding anything without trying to breed for improvement. That goes for any of the breeds, not just Seramas.
The Standard of Perfection is used as a guide as to how the different breeds should look.

Agreed!

Very well said! Thank you.
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