Courtesy of Michael Cowan.
You can check out his website here http://www.heartbeest.com/
Mike chronicled his journey towards picking up his Chatham Hill Retriever Puppy.
And not only was his journey fun for him, its a joy to watch. A little peek into what a our family does to make the experience a memorable one.
Thank you Michael for a wonderful owner's eye view of your experience.
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Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Funny Explanation on how Man Ruined Dogs
Compliments of Adam Ruins Everything
Only in this case he clearly only enlightens his viewers with the truth.
This is extremely funny, yet brutally honest at the same time.
ENJOY
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Friday, March 28, 2014
The Flat Coat Mafia...LOL
ALL FCR can be traced back to just a few foundation dogs |
What is this Flat Coat Mafia? Who are they? Why are they important to Chatham Hill Dogs?
- This is the loving name given to control freaks that breed FCR.
- They are the biggest haters of the Chatham Hill Retrievers.
- Most of our Flat Coated Retrievers were provided by them
- Closely Line-Breed from their champions only
- Use a common SIRE to create more of the same
- Use a common DAM to create more of the same
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Friends of Chatham Hill Dogs- Dubhruja
Dubruja Flacoats located in Scotland
You can Check them out on Facebook here.
Visit their website here
• They have an excellent socializing process and have produced some rather impressive Flat Coats. And they remind us here at Chatham Hill so much about ourselves its just natural that we love them so much.
• I'm writing about them with a friendly shout of approval since we've received a recent e-mail that I've quoted here that in a round about way came from a fan of our friends across the pond. And its always nice to receive positive encouragement to continue to strive for a better future for our dogs.
Hi,
I've always had a lot to do with dogs - from my childhood imagining I had them and reading everything I could about them, to my adulthood during which I have been a dog trainer, researched dog body language and diets, and am now a pet photographer. So i thought I knew what I was talking about when I came out with all those phrases you likely know very, very well. Things like, "Mixing breeds is dangerous for their health," and, "Only backyard breeders cross dogs on purpose."
Then I saw Pedigree Dogs Exposed. And I thought about that, and about the fact that the SAME people who cry DANGER, ABUSE, on labradoodles and maltipoos and so on, were also the ones saying rescue mixed breeds were 'healthier than pure breds'. And that got me thinking. Because you don't know the parentage of most rescues, so how could they say that? What else were they wrong about?
And I realised - if you have a health tested, brilliantly put-together, loved, healthy labrador, what's to stop you mating it with a poodle with similar backing? The SAME dogs people would cheer being bred to their own breeds, people then complain when they're crossed. And that makes NO SENSE.
And then I thought about the fact that there are so, so many issues in show-type dogs. that cavaliers need breeding with bigger heads. Perhaps even with another breed with a bigger head and better breathing ability. That I saw a guy who was breeding english bulldogs with american bulldogs to lengthen the face and I thought that was EXCELLENT. And that frankly, if they scrapped german shepherds altogether and remade them from turverians, huskies and a couple of other breeds - they couldn't make anything WORSE than what is being paraded around the show rings, at least.
And then I fell in love with flat coated retrievers. My first dog was a rescue, and when she died I needed a break from rescue so I started looking at breeders. I found one I loved, and I talked to her for HOURS on the phone, at various times, and I met some flatties from her lines near me, and some others, and I decided they were for me.
That was Lea of Dubhruja flatcoats, who got Joka from you guys. I actually met Joka when I went to pick up my girl (who is a Willow/Murdy pup - from their last litter) and loved him. What a big, goofy, fantastic bear of a dog :-)
I loved what Lea said about trying to breed for less cancer in the lines, and about temperament and health being so much more important to her than the correct ear set.
And so my beliefs were changed a little more.
My flatcoat - Starbuck - is now 18 months old, and I adore her. A few weeks ago I picked up my second dog - a very frightened rescue lurcher Starbuck and I are slowly and gently rehabilitating together. Starbuck is so maternal (she has a 6 month old working cocker sister who belongs to my housemate, who she thinks of as her own puppy), and so nuts, and won't take no for an answer. As often as Mouse refuses to play, Starbuck asks her again, and one time in ten Mouse relaxes enough and they have a wonderful time.
So, back to the point. I'm on a few flatcoat groups on facebook, and I watch them dropping from cancer one after the other. Starbuck's dad is ten. He's never had cancer.
I've said a few times now that I will only ever buy from working lines, or get rescue, in the future. But I've come around to another type of line too - those from breeders who have the ability to THINK about the future. To see that in wanting that extra skin, or the squashed face, or only certain colours, they are driving the breeds they profess to love into extinction. And it's awful and heartbreaking and makes me want to shake them until they wake up and see what they're doing.
I'm in England, so to have a dog from you would be very. very expensive for me. But I can tell you that in the future, if I ever could afford it, I would be PROUD to have a Chatham Hill Retriever. I want to thank you for seeing a different way and for what you do for the breeds you love.
I figure you get a lot of hate mail, so maybe a little love now and then wouldn't be amiss.
Chris.
They have had an interesting Journey that had them relocating from Cheshire to Aberdeen...
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Are you color prejudice?
To learn more about Diversity Breeding Concepts Click here |
•For the record...we breed the Chatham Hill Retriever, which is an out-cross between two different breeds to create a smaller version of a Flat Coated Retriever, which comes in Black, Liver(Brown) or Yellow(Cream). It is our goal for it to be more like a miniature Flat Coated Retriever NOT a miniature Golden Retriever. So... What does this question about color prejudice mean on a blog about breeding dogs? Well simply that we've discovered that even though Flat Coated Retrievers come in Black, Liver or Yellow colors and we've now mirrored this color palette with our Chatham Hill Retrievers, it has become clear that the majority of people coming to us for a Chattie are just stuck on a color and don't do any research beyond that. They just prefer yellow and often think that we breed a miniature Golden Retriever. They are in fact so enamored with the romanticized stories of the Golden Retriever as the top tier family dog and have no clue what a Flat Coated Retriever is or that it even required a Flat Coated Retriever for a Golden Retriever to even exist. And even if there is a perfectly healthy Black or Brown Retriever pup available.... there are 10 to 1 odds that the next person contacting us is going to ask when the next Yellow, Cream, Chestnut or Red miniature Golden Retriever Puppy will be available. And that speaks so much about the lack of knowledge about retrievers in general that most of these curious people have. They've been brainwashed into believing there are two types of Retrievers...Labrador and Golden Types. And like the majority of us as children we've been conditioned to associated the lighter creamy color with being the more desirable, more angelic, more peaceful looking. Like every little boy or girl who grows up thinking that being a blue eyed blond is the best thing in the world because doors of opportunity will just swing open automatically for you when you arrive at your destination. Well... there are many Black haired and Brown eyed individuals in this world that would prove otherwise. Its unfortunate that these stereotypes for humans also hold true for dogs.
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