2018 Breeding Plans

Very excited to announce our upcoming breeding!

Harl x mantle breeding

We are breeding Heidi (Flighty Foto Yin Yang) to Henry (MBISS GCHS Payaso Alto Gavea Henry Kissinger AOM). We are anticipating a breeding in March, which would mean puppies to be born in May (2018).

Heidi: Health Testing (CHIC number pending; all health tests complete, but awaiting posting of cardiac screening to OFA website); Pedigree
Henry: Health Testing

Puppy pedigree information to come.

Our policies on placing puppies.  If you are interested in a puppy, please email me with a little bit of information about yourself, including your location.

I am also happy to offer referrals and to assist people in finding and screening breeders.  Email me at bev@fotodanes.com with your location and any color preferences.  We encourage you to do your own research on anyone’s recommendations, including ours. Don’t just stop at asking a breeder if they have Great Dane puppies for sale!

Foto Danes
Bev Klingensmith
Newton, Iowa 50208
641-792-8076 (available evenings/weekends)
bev@fotodanes.com

Sad News

Very sad to announce that we lost our sweet Kizzy.  We never have enough time with our beloved canine companions, but even knowing that, it’s always hard.

Thanks for being my constant companion for many great years. Oh the fun we had, my Kizzy Roo!

4/6/08-2/5/18

Newborn Kizzy
One month old
8 weeks old
Approximately 10 weeks old

4 months old
6 months old – first show at the Great Dane Club of America National Specialty

Kizzy with her baby brother, Wilson

Pregnant Kizzy
Kizzy with one of her puppies, Gigi
With her bests feline buddy, Oliver

 

Merles getting closer to being shown!

The Great Dane Club of America is working on revising the breed standard.  One of the biggest pieces to the revisions is the addition of the color merle.  This means that, hopefully in the near future, merles will be in the show ring!

Harlequin breeders have long realized that merles are part and parcel of the harlequin breeding program.  We love our merles.

Why is the addition of merles so exciting?  To understand that, one must first understand the importance of the merle gene in the harlequin world.  In order to produce a harlequin (over simplified explanation), we must have one copy of the merle gene, along with a harlequin modifier gene.

That means, we need the merle gene to produce a harlequin.  This also means that even when breeding two show-marked dogs together, right now, we always have the potential to produce non-showable puppies.  This is problematic to harl breeders because we cannot pick the best puppy in our litter…we have to pick the best show marked puppy.  We might be placing a better puppy in a pet home, merely because of their color.  This removes wonderful dogs from the gene pool.

When merles can be shown, harlequin breeders have much better odds of producing an all show-marked litter, allowing them to pick the best puppy overall.  Not just the best pup of a certain color.  There are still some harl family colors that cannot be shown (like pie-balds, whites, “merliquins”, etc.).

The newest revision, presented at the general membership meeting at the Great Dane Club of America National Specialty, has some great wording, making patterns and markings less important than structure and breed type.

The GDCA Standards committee is doing a wonderful job writing up changes and listening to the membership’s feedback.  They have went through multiple revisions and I think we are getting very close to a final version.

Kizzy’s sister, Bree

We have Kizzy’s sister, Bree, staying with us for a little bit. Sweet ol’ girl!

Kizzy (left) and litter sister Bree
Kizzy and Bree chilling

Sad News

We lost our sweet Gigi in August. Took her in for a spay and she had post surgery complications.  She was only three years old.

Flighty Foto Domino – Gigi 6/25/14-8/8/17
Gigi (in front) with Kizzy and Oliver (cat)
Upside down Gigi with her mom, Kizzy
Gigi with Oliver
Through the screen door

New Stacked Pictures

With Oden and his owner moving out of state, we had motivation to get some new stacked pictures before they left.  Got pictures of the girls, too!

Kizzy at 9 years old – still looking fabulous!
Oden at 3 years old
Gigi at 3 years old

 

Blood in a raw diet

On my last trip to pick up meat for my dogs, I was chatting with the lady at Big Dan’s Trucking and Dog Food.  She mentioned that she had recently gotten a complaint on, what that customer felt, was the excessive bloodiness of their beef.

It threw me for a bit of a loop as it never dawned on me someone would be unhappy about that.  Their beef is “excessively” bloody for a couple main reasons:

  • It is very fresh.  Often the beef I’m taking home on a Friday was a live cow that previous Monday.
  • Perspective.  The beef to which most of us are accustomed, typically has some sort of packaging to absorb blood.

As someone who has been feeding raw for many years, I admit, I am a bit desensitized to the blood.  But, I know that many who are first starting raw have to overcome a certain “ew” factor.

I like the bloodier meat as it makes it easier to mix in anything I want to add to the food.  In the case of the beef, I have to add bone meal powder, so I typically pour a little blood into each dog’s bowl.

The blood is also good for the dog to consume as blood itself is a quality source of animal protein.

The only time I discard the extra blood is if the meat is starting to get a little….well, ripe. 🙂  The blood is what gets the worst odor, so if you drain the blood off (and rinse the meat if you’re working with RBM’s), you get rid of most of the gross odor.

Ground beef