Roodle
Designer Dog Breed - Meet The Roodle
Do you have a photo of a
Roodle?
Celebrities like Paris Hilton may carry their dogs in their
Gucci handbags, accessorized to the glittering collar. But the
recent trend in designer dogs seems to suggest that everyday
people are catching this unfortunate trend.
Instead of simply buying diamante collars, however, people
are demanding cross bred dogs with catchy marketing names.
We've had the Spoodle, the Groodle, the Labradoodle, the
Spanador, the Cavador, and the Retrievador. Now folks, meet the
Roodle.
The roodle is a cross between a poodle and a rottweiler. They are the successful
creation of a breeder from Melbourne, Australia. Fred Freeman
has successfully bred 3 litters of roodles, some going as far
afield as Hawaii.
Roodles have the crinkly coat of a poodle, but larger. They
are quite stocky, and fairly big, with long floppy ears. Mr
Freeman describes the dogs as having the intelligence of a
rottweiler, yet docile and easy to train. His roodles are also
non aggressive, do not moult, don't smell, and are low on the
allergy scale.
The idea of creating a non allergic dog was what started the
original breeder of the labradoodle, Wally Conran. Wally was
the Manager of the Royal Guide Dog Association in Australia at
the time. Someone needing a guide dog who was non allergenic
contacted the Guide Dog Association, and Wally successfully
crossed a labrador with a poodle that fitted this purpose.
So, the origins of the labradoodle were quite in keeping
with the way many of what are now considered pure bred dogs
were created. That is, they were created with a specific
purpose in mind.
But the popularity of the labradoodle has created a new set
of problems. Namely, many unscrupulous people, some with no
experience breeding dogs, and others with none, or little,
experience breeding labradoodles or other similar crosses,
jumped on the bandwagon. Demand meant that these dogs were
expensive, supply was short, and this attracted many into this
new field.
But breeding dogs, especially across different breeds, is
not simple. In Wally Conran's original efforts, not all
labradoodles were low in allergy. And when it comes to trying
to come up with new mixes, a lack of knowledge can produce
disastrous results. For instance, breeding two dogs with
similar genetic weaknesses can lead to the new litters born
with an increased chance of the health problems associated with
those breeds. Other factors include disposition. If people are
expecting certain traits based on what decent breeders have
produced, and they pay a lot of money for a dog that turns our
to be completely different, those dogs may well end up being
abandoned.
In the case of a dog bought to be low allergenic, this
likelihood is higher, and this is exactly what is happening to
many of the labradoodles being bought in the US now. They are
ending up in shelters because they do not have the
characteristics of the carefully bred stock the variation
originated from.
And given that badly bred rottweilers can be very
aggressive, if the roodle trend takes off in the same way, this
could be a disaster all round. Especially so if a family with
children bought one expecting the docile nature of the roodles
created by Mr Freeman, and end up with an aggressive, large
dog.
Labradoodles are not consistent breeds. And given that ten
years was spent trying to get a rottweiler poodle cross, there
is every indication to think that roodles are not a consistent
breed either. That means that simply mating a rottweiler with a
poodle is not going to automatically get you certain
characteristics, especially in temperament.
Normally, contacting an association for a recommended
breeder would solve this type of problem. But in this brave new
world of designer dogs, this may not always be the case.
Especially if the experience with the labradoodles is anything
to go by.
The breeders at Rutland Manor and Tegan Park in Australia
started their stock from labradors, poodles and labradoodles
from Don Evans, another breeder who had discovered the breed
independently of the Guide Dog Association. Those labradoodles
were legitimate labradoodles, and they kept records of all
subsequent breeding. They also determined which coats were low
allergenic. They conducted extensive research and breeding
programs to arrive at the dog that has become characterized as
a 'labradoodle'. Contrary to popular knowledge, they are not
the product of exclusively mixing in labradors and poodles.
Other breeds were used occasionally, for certain
characteristics.
The breeders at Rutland Manor and Tegan Park began calling
their dogs, and those descended from that stock by reputable
breeders, Australian labradoodles, to distinguish them from the
labrador-poodle mixes that were being indiscriminately
produced. The mixes were not quality controlled, many were
allergenic, yet people with allergies were misled into buying
them, expecting not to get allergic reactions.
The International Labradoodle Association was set up
originally to help maintain the quality and characteristics of
this new designer dog. Yet they now are seeking to call all
labrador-poodle crosses 'Australian labradoodles'. If this is
successful, consumers will have no way of knowing whether they
are buying what they think they are, and what their health
requirements determine they need. The end result will be more
abandoned dogs being euthanased because of a careless
association and even more careless breeders.
It does not bode well for the roodle.
By
Rebecca Prescott
If you need a low allergy dog,
try Bichon Frise
dogs. Or if you'd prefer to
read about more dog breeds, click
here. Rebecca Prescott runs
the website, http://www.thedogsbone.com/Article
Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rebecca_Prescott
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