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| Clubs & law Information about CzW clubs in other countries, law concerning CzW and Kennel CLub regulations... | 
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|  12-10-2002, 12:17 | #11 | |
| Member |  Norwegian situation 
			
			Hi, Quote: 
 you know the breeding plan of CzW was under control of Czechoslovakian army and they made very strict selection during this breeding. The exterior of the wolf was very important for the army because together with the exterior the CzW inherited endurance of the wolves and also their ability to adapt to hard weather conditions. However the main goal for continuing the breeding was to make the wolfdogs trainable. First crosses were very hard to train but with special selection the army was able to choose those individuals which are promissing for work on the border. The true is the army had no scruples during the selection and there were no such cases as it could happen when the normal people breed the dogs and say for example "this dog is aggressive but so beautifull .... maybe we should breed him?". There were no such dilemmas in army... All wolfdogs which appeared useless in regards to work were excluded from the breeding. As far as I know every dog which were used in breeding needed a working title. This conditions changed recently when the civilians began to breed the CzW and the army was not longer interested in continuing the breeding. However you should always have in mind that for a few dozens of years this breed was developed by army in regards to its working abilities. Greetings, Przemek | |
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