Patriot Lane Acres and EagleRidge Kennels

Patriot Lane Acres and EagleRidge Kennels Eagle Ridge Kennels, is a small kennel that breeds Australian Shepherds, and Labradors.

Freds First trial. He did a great job with Sharon Simmons Handling him
10/18/2024

Freds First trial. He did a great job with Sharon Simmons Handling him

Some Pictures of 2024
10/18/2024

Some Pictures of 2024

05/17/2024

Fred’s babies at the vets.

03/08/2024

LESSON ONE IN THE WORLD OF DOGS

Lesson One in the world of dogs is that if you put anything above breeding for utility, you will start to lose working abilities.

Work is a tough task master and it shows no favoritism. Fox and pheasant do not judge "up the leash" nor are they taken in by fads. Quarry is not much interested in nose or eye color, the set of the ear, or the "expression" on a dog's face as it creeps up a hedgerow.

In working dogs, utility is beauty, and "beauty is as beauty does."

E.L. Hagedoorn, a Dutch consulting geneticist to dog breed societies around the world, believed the show ring would ruin working dog breeds, and time has proven him right. As he noted in his 1939 book:

"In the production of economically useful animals, the show ring is more of a menace than an aid to breeding. Once fancy points are introduced into the standard of perfection, the breeders will give more attention to those easily judged qualities than to the more important qualities that do not happen to be of such a nature that we can evaluate them at shows. Showing has nothing to do with utility at all, it is simply a competitive game."

A noted breeder of alpacas said much the same thing, noting that when farm stock is judged on the basis of wool or meat it is a different standard than that used at shows:

"Breeding animals for the shows is a very peculiar business, because of the fact that it is wholly competitive. Whereas the breeder of utility sheep or utility pigs produces something that has a certain market value, which is not changed very much even if ten of his neighbors start in with him to raise the same sort of sheep or hogs, breeding animals for the shows can only pay the man who succeeds in producing such stock as is pronounced by the judges of the moment to be the most beautiful and the most fashionable."

The "judge of the moment" in a show ring may know very little about real terrier work.

In the AKC, for example, most judges are experts in a half dozen breeds. In the terrier ring, it's almost a guarantee none has ever owned a deben collar or cut a shoulder into a trench in order to get down another two feet. As a rule these authorities are experts by dint of having spent far too many nights in bad hotels attending show trials. In 20 years of owning dogs, they have logged a thousand miles bouncing around show rings in plaid skirts and blue blazers. They may have driven to the moon and back to pick up rosettes, but few have driven 10 miles out into the country to even see a fox den, much less put a dog down one or dig to it.

A few will claim expertise because they have bought an airplane ticket and attended a mounted hunt or two in the U.K.. They have seen "the real thing" they will tell you, and know what is required of a working dog thanks to their two-week vacation in Scotland! Just don't ask them how to extract quarry from the stop-end of a pipe or how to treat a bite wound.

Theory always ends where reality begins, and it always seems to have been this way.

The very first Kennel Club shows occurred in 1873 in the U.K., and 1874 in the U.S.. By 1893 Rawdon Lee Briggs was writing in his book, "Modern Dogs," that:

"I have known a man act as a judge of fox terriers who had never bred one in his life, had never seen a fox in front of hounds, had never seen a terrier go to ground ... had not even seen a terrier chase a rabbit."

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Note: This was written in 2022.

Feb pictures of our Farm
02/25/2024

Feb pictures of our Farm

02/09/2024
01/14/2024

Farms don't close down due to bad weather. If anything, farmers work even harder in extreme weather conditions, and we play this little game called Winter Farming Roulette.

Will the tractor(s) start?

Will a water pipe freeze and burst?

Will the generator work?

Will the feed delivery make it?

Will any equipment malfunction?

Will the water troughs freeze over?

Will the power stay on?

Will the milk truck make it?

Will my bladder explode because I don't want to take off layers of clothes just to go to the bathroom?

Nobody knows...

Farming is a gamble even in good weather. It isn't an easy life. But it sure is a good one, even if weather like this makes one question their life decisions😜.

Meanwhile, it may be a "feels like" of -3 degrees Fahrenheit, but the calves are all bedded with straw while the younger ones are also all wearing calf blankets. The week old Jersey that won the lottery is basking in the milkhouse with a heat lamp. And thanks to high-quality milk formula combined with things like yeast, yogurt, and caffeine, the calves are jumping around having fun in their domes. They have it made!

Address

68813 Highway 78
Burns, OR
97720

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