English Spots, Checkered Giants and Rhinelanders all obvs have no solid coated options and rely on the high white coloring so breeding those breeds means dealing with a lot of charlies.
Ummm . . . . Not necessarily. Just because you can't show 'em, doesn't mean you can't find 'em. One of the possible outcomes when breeding animals heterozygous for the spotting gene is solid, and there are solid-colored, pedigreed English Spots, Checkered Giants, and Rhinelanders born in nearly every litter (I remember a Rhinelander breeder bringing one to a show to sell to another breeder, and my fellow Harlequin breeder joked that they should put a number in its ear and enter it as a Harlequin). You can't register an animal that has a DQ, and obviously, a lack of markings on an animal of a marked breed is a DQ, but that doesn't mean that an animal can't be an absolutely dynamite representative of its breed in every way other than its lack of spots. Just as people who hate the thought of peanuts can avoid them and still breed showable dwarfs by breeding one to classy but unshowable false dwarfs, the breeder who loves one of these marked breeds but wants to avoid Charlies can breed spotted to unspotted if they want to [and since the subject of ratios has come up on previous posts, for show purposes, the odds are the same: heterozygous (Enen) to heterozygous (Enen) yields 25% solid (enen), 50% Broken (Enen), 25%Charlie (EnEn);
heterozygous (Enen) to homozygous for solid (enen) yields 50% Broken (Enen) and 50% solid.
Solids aren't showable, but nor are Charlies, so either way, only the approximately half of the offspring that are heterozygous (Enen) even have the potential to be showable - and anyone who has ever worked with a marked breed will tell you that the percentage of actually show-worthy offspring is much, much less. ] I remember seeing a post from someone who was working on Blue in the English Spot, proudly introducing their new herd buck - and he was a solid. So, no Charlies, no rabbits that either are unthrifty as youngsters, or may develop those issues later in life (at least, not for that reason).
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