Labradoodle Creator Regrets Breeding 'Frankenstein' of Dogs

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Labradoodle Creator Regrets Breeding 'Frankenstein' of Dogs
Tucker, a 3-year-old Labradoodle, jumps on his owner Mike Pentz at their home in Columbus, Ohio on Oct. 21, 2011. Credit: Jay LaPrete

For the first time in the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show's 138-year history, mixed breeds are finally being allowed into the competition. Which is very nice and inclusive of them. Sadly, mutts will only be allowed to compete in the "agility" competition, because Westminster has no "standards" with which to judge how attractive they are. Those "standards" of course, are the reason the St. Bernard went from running around rescuing people in the Swiss Alps with barrels on their necks to being so big that they get overheated if they work too hard and being super prone to disease.

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Two Saint Bernard dogs sit in the snow on the Great St. Bernard Pass after returning from their winter quarter in Martigny, Switzerland. Credit: Jean-Christophe Bott

And, um, whatever it was that happened to the Bull Terrier:

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Violet, a 3-year-old White Bull Terrier from Somers, Ct., competes in the ring during the 134th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show. Credit: Mary Altaffer

Anyway, mixed-breed mutts are one thing - designer dogs, like labradoodles, puggles, schneagles and other varieties bred for specific reasons - are another. The designer dog craze has left shelters with a lot of "designer dogs" that didn't quite come out right, which means people don't adopt them and then they get euthanized.

It all started when Wally Conron, a dog breeder in Australia, first "invented" the Labradoodle. He'd invented it for a couple that needed a hypoallergenic seeing-eye dog. Because so many people wanted purebreds only, Conron decided to name his frankendog the "labradoodle" and market it as a "new breed" of dog. People, naturally, went nuts.

Ever since then, there's been a craze for these so-called designer dogs. But Conron is not proud of what he hath wrought, and regrets ever having created the labradoodle.

Via Salon:

Conron said there are far too many unscrupulous people eager to make a buck at a dog's expense. Rather than check the history and science, he said "horrific" puppy mills are springing up and producing unstable dogs that go unwanted and eventually are euthanized.

"Instead of breeding out the problems, they're breeding them in," he said. "For every perfect one, you're going to find a lot of crazy ones."

That's a concern Conron has echoed in the past, blaming himself for opening a "Pandora's box" and creating a "Frankenstein."

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