Until next time,
Kelsey Nelson
Until next time,
Kelsey Nelson
Thank goodness my first year of college is over! It was not easy to keep up with the rabbits during this past semester, I meant to breed rabbits, I meant to do this, I meant to do that, did it happen? Heck no! Ah well, that’s the way things go.
This past weekend I went down to Statesville/Taylorsville NC to the Greater Appalachian Alliance Show. It was a double youth / double open show, and while the venue was beautiful (loved the drive and scenery), it was HOT. I only took 3 rabbits down to show and I picked up my newest Self herd buck, Wonder’s Kokopelli a youngish senior black who took 3rd place Self Jr. buck at the 2009 ARBA Convention in San Diego. This little boy is by Bluestar’s Sterling (broken blue buck with 15 legs) who took BOSG at the 2009 JW Nationals in Columbus Ohio!
In Show A, I took BOG AOV with WWR Sisily and BOG Shaded with Keep’s Dallas. WWR Alladin took 1st place Agouti Sr. Buck, but did not advance. The Agouti’s took the breed wins, but the judge (I cannot remember his name!) really REALLY liked Dallas and said that he really wanted to have him go on, but he lacked in coat today.
In Show B I took BOG AOV with WWR Sisily and BOSG Agouti (may have been BOG, can’t quite remember) with WWR Alladin. I was helping to make sure that all the group winners were on the table and that the others were off that I missed the judge announce the Best of Breed. I clapped, not knowing why, and then he announced Best Opposite. Brandi was helping Lisa write for the youth show and said congrats, and I didn’t know what for! Turns out WWR Alladin took BOS for a leg! I was very pleased with my little boy, as there are usually not enough in the class for group wins, so legs can be hard to come by.
I really enjoy the time I get to spend just talking bunnies with my good friends in North Carolina, so it was great to see Brandi, Joni and Kristen! I also got the chance to chat a bit with Laura, and of course spend time with a very close friend who travels down to NC quite a bit for rabbit shows who is a local 4-H buddy.
I haven’t bred any woolies yet that have produced viable litters, so these upcoming two weeks I am planning on breeding every doe. Yes, all 8 of them! I’m doing the breedings that make the most sense genetically, based on genetics and type. Here are the planned breedings:
WWR Alladin x WWR Rowyn - Chestnuts, Opals
WWR Alladin x Keep’s Dreamer - Chestnuts Opals
WWR Alladin x Lyle Creek’s Charmed - Chestnuts, Opals
Keep’s Dallas x Wooligan’s Arabella - Siamese Sable, Seal
Keep’s Dallas x Bluestar’s Candy - Siamese Sable, Seal (Brokens)
Keep’s Dallas x Keep’s High Spirits - Siamese Sable, Black
Keep’s Dallas x Sisily - Siamese Sable, Pointed White
WWR Micro Ears x Keep’s Raleigh - Chestnut, Black
Wonder’s Kokopelli x WWR Audrey - Black (Brokens)
I’ve also got some Hollands to breed for a friend, but the does are then going back to her house, so I won’t have any of those kits. My hopes are to get at least two kits from each litter to pick from, and will weed down to my favorite 6 to hang onto grow out. I’ll be culling very hard for my own purposes, and watching closely for genetic DQs. I’ve got limited holes or else I would be growing out more, but because I want to try each doe with each compatible buck before I move her on, I have to be picky. If you are interested in being notified about a particular litter, let me know, but I’m going through these kits with a fine toothed comb and picking out what I want first and foremost.
Our last show before my trip to Sweden will be June 12th, it’s a midnight madness show down in West Virginia, so it should be a fun close little show. I’ll probably only show 3-4 woolies, depending on coat and when they were bred.
Keep a look out on my website for updates coming over the summer, giving it a complete overhaul and my “goal” from now on is to update it on a bi-monthly basis.
Until next time,
Kelsey Nelson
Showing rabbits is fun, but what is even more fun is having a rabbit of your own breeding win! It's one thing to purchase a known winner and win, it's a split moment of joy, but you expected it to happen to a point. It's slightly more exciting when a junior or un-shown rabbit you purchased, and saw the potential in, wins, you get that pride that you know how to pick a good rabbit. But you didn't produce that rabbit yourself, it has someone else's prefix.
Creating a good show rabbit doesn't happen over night. Sure you can get that once in a "lifetime" rabbit that you produced by accident from a certain cross, but when you go to repeat it, they throw only brood animals. No matter how many times you did the cross, you never got the same quality again. New breeders hear of others who got a big winner in their first litter, and think that will happen to them, when in reality it was a fluke. It was that one in a million and it happened to another breeder.
In reality, it takes a lot of time depending on the quality of your starting stock. The point in breeding is so that you can consistently produce winning animals. I'd much rather have an animal that consistently places 2nd or 3rd no matter the judge than have one that wins the class once and then places in the bottom all the other shows.
I get disappointed in breeders when they only care about constantly winning, and get very upset when their rabbits do not win. Everybody has bad days showing, some more than others, but it happens to everyone at some point. My mantra with every hobby I have is "if it isn't fun anymore, don't do it". I am in this hobby because I enjoy it! I have fun, even when I loose, I take it as a learning experience and evaluate where I am heading with my breeding program.
I didn't expect to get my first wooly and be able to grand him in about three shows, I didn't know that would happen. Sure I was hopeful that I had purchased a rabbit that could win, but without knowing what I was looking for I just wanted a learning experience and something fun to show. I guess I knew I was heading down the road to only having Jersey Woolies after getting my first BOG, but it was still unexpected.
Being able to consistently put winners on the table is an awesome feeling that I hope I can have in the near future. But, I don't want to always win, I want to have competition because that pushes you to become better. How can I hope to do well at a national level if I am not competing against quality stock locally?
This blog is written more out of being slightly taken aback at what has been said by newer breeders in the hobby. They are wanting to produce show stoppers their first litter with complete outcrosses or the like, and don't understand why they aren't. It all comes back to knowing your lines and starting with related stock from one or two sources. I have been there done that, and I have sold out of 3 breeds before understanding what I wanted to do and what it would take to achieve it. I wish I had taken that advice my first time out rather than picking and choosing and hoping they would produce well.
Until next time,
Kelsey Nelson
I purchased Evans Rabbit Register Deluxe Edition last night, and was able to install it that night within an hour. As I entered in pedigrees of my current woolies, I was pleasantly surprised at the number of times certain rabbits appeared in all of my pedigrees.
I have to admit, I like certain wooly lines better than others. Who doesn’t have their favorite lines? Wooligans, Caudills, White Oaks, Erbs; I enjoy going onto their websites and drooling over their beautiful rabbits. While some are nationally competitive lines (Brian Caudill won Best Display at convention), this doesn’t mean I ignore more local lines. One of my favorite breeders is Kristen Drum of Keep’s Rabbitry.
Not only are her woolies drop dead gorgeous, they came from the lines I love, and she breeds for the type of wooly that I consider to be what the Standard of Perfection calls for. She has been competitive nationally, placing rabbits in the top 5 at both the 2008 ARBA convention and last years nationals. Kristen Drum is still working on establishing herself as one of the “big dogs” in the breed, but she is well on her way!
Sure you are supposed to judge a rabbit on what they look like, not their pedigree. But if you want to be competitive, you want to not only start with the best quality you can afford, you want to start with lines that mesh well together and only get rabbits from a couple of breeders. Completely outcrossing won’t results in winners consistently, and that is what you are wanting to breed for, a consistent look and quality.
I have had the opportunity to purchase many wonderful animals from a breeder who is drastically cutting down, rabbits that might not have been available were, and I was able to purchase those who I felt would benefit my herd the most. For my herd, this was a great choice because her stock is from similar lines to my current stock! I am able to take the work of an already established breeder and put it to use in my own breeding program.
Though I may only be working on my first generation of my own line, I am comforted by the fact I will be able to quickly see what parts I am lacking. I can take leaps rather than steps when it comes to improving my herd because I did start with stock that will cross well together and won't be completely outcrossing.
Until next time,
Kelsey Nelson
It's been a long time, but I figure new year, new start! I cannot believe a new decade is upon us, and I have a feeling that this will be a great year. 2009 has gone down in my books as the worst year ever for myself and my family, but there is a light at the end of the tunnel.
With a new year come goals, or resolutions. As a rabbit breeder I set goals that I want to meet by the end of the year. While I have personal resolutions that I am going to do, these goals for my barn are important to me, and I figure I might as well post them!
I want to not only Grand out a Jersey Wooly (homebred, purchased, whatever), but I also want to get a leg on a homebred Jersey Wooly, and a BOB with a homebred would be nice too. I want to get a leg in Open competition, which of course I need to do on a more regular basis starting in August, because I age out of youth!
I wold like to earn 1000 sweepstakes points. I do not mean be listed in the sweepstakes, or even place well in my district, I just want to earn those points! Because of how the NJWRC does their year, I would have have about 5 months of showing before the year ends. So while I will be joining in August, I want to make it my goal to earn these points and count them myself.
While winning is nice and all, if I want to be ready for open competition, I need to breed, breed, breed and then cull twice as hard. So my plan is to have lots more breedings and culling twice as hard. I'm a softy, but I know I need to do this to improve. This means learning how to palpate! Yes, I do not know how to do this, but I want and need to learn how.
I have a "project" of sorts, and while I am not ready to reveal what it is, I want to get carriers of this project well established so I can be producing the phenotypes of this color popping up more. By the end of the year I want to have at least 3 homebreds in this particular color, and well on my way to have all my colors in this particular group being carriers.
I want to internalize the Jersey Wooly standard, meaning I want to be able to know the point values of the different parts of the rabbit, and what a really good wooly is. This means that I know a bad wooly from a good wooly without looking at it, but by feeling. With focusing on one breed, it'll help to me more competitive.
Wow, that's a lot to accomplish in a year! But, I am working on them all, and as I accomplish these goals, I'll let you all know. I'm already on my way towards breeding more, with every doe in my barn being breed, some are still expecting while others are being rebred because they missed. As soon as I get litters, the culling will begin. I hope everyone had a great holiday and that we all are looking forward to this new year and decade!
Until next time,
Kelsey Nelson