I agree with this all the way. Although I don't show anything yet, this is one thing I will keep in mind.
I have racing pigeons, so when I see a breeder I might like, I take a look at the pedigree. I'm not looking for fancy smancy names and bloodlines, but rather race results. I'd rather have a bird who won 1st place versus thousands of birds with many people competing, than a bird who won 1st place at the club level, between a few people and maybe a hundred or so birds. Also, I'd rather have a bird who won at 500 or 600 miles than one who just got 1st place at 80 or 150 miles. Anyone can win on the club level or at short distances, since a pigeon can easily fly 100 miles. But to make it home from 500-600 miles on the same day, is pretty tough. I like birds who were bred to handle the competition and the conditions, and WIN.
I could enter some of my chickens in a county fair where there may only be one other person with that breed. Sometimes I only see a few birds of each breed - from the same person. Therefore, they win and lose
Haha. Getting 1st place is always fun and really boosts your ego, but then you have to sit back and consider...the only person you beat was yourself...or the person next door. Not such a big accomplishment when you consider shows with thousands of birds, and many, many of each breed, color, and class.
NOW. Saying one bird is better than the other just because of the shows they've won at...isn't ALWAYS true. It could simply be a lack of resources. A lot of places you won't find many local shows for chickens, pigeons, or other birds. But they can still be championship quality. I know I won't be making it to any nationals. We don't have the money to get there!
Heck, we can barely buy the gas to make it out of the state
I do think people should be a bit more truthful in their advertising though. But, if you buy lesser quality birds from someone who's only won on a small level...Perhaps you should have done your homework on how REAL SQ birds of that breed should look
One reason I like to see birds in person before I buy them, when it comes to careful selection like this.