When I have had time, I have been back and forth reading, trying to catch up so excuse the hodge podge sort of replying re: a few things I had put on my to do list and/or not posting in the correct thread.
@JoT:
Three of these were outcrossed Liberian camp-dogs. The record reveals that the Liberian camp-dogs were subjected to a controlled breeding program for more than 12 years selecting for "Basenji" traits. Only then did the get of this intensive selection effort become recognized as outcross founders. In fact, the results of the breeding program produced dogs that were exported to Zambia to be bred with purebred, registered Basenji bitches (bred down from Congo native stock) brought from England. Then those get were imported to England by Elspet Ford and to the USA by Gwen Stanich. Although they are considered to be native dogs because they were whelped in Africa, they were actually only a percentage African stock.
For anyone who would like to educate themselves on the Liberians - please check out the following link.
Standifer Liberians
In truth I encourage everyone to do their own research on everything vs. taking any person on this forum at their word regarding historical information not related to themselves personally; even me.<lol>
Remember - many people can read the same bible and walk away with their own interpretation of what was said and what was meant by those who wrote it. As an example Jo referred to the Liberian basenjis as generic "camp-dogs" when the author - who studied (then eventually bred) the dogs - clearly identifies them as native Basenjis.
This is the time line info re: Elspet Fords (Taysenji) blacks:
Taysenji blacks
@JoT:
The exercises was not only fun and easy with minimum instruction, but it illustrated to many that genetic diversity is NOT determined by the number of kennel names. ….....
...... I keep going back to the article by Mary Lou Kenworthy, "WHAT IS DIVERSITY REALLY?" (The Modern Basenji Worldwide, Vol. 1, No. 2, Summer 2011, page 3) and Mary Lou's statement, " If breeders create and monitor their own lines, the breed, as a whole, will prosper. No breeder can maintain diversity by himself, and any attempt to do so will lead to disaster for the breeder and the breed. It takes a network of breeders working together with individual lines to maintain diversity. " I think she is correct.
If I am understanding this blurb correctly - MLK is supporting creating and maintaining unique kennel lines in order to preserve genetic diversity, which Jo, you say you think is correct. Yet in the first sentence I emboldened (from the same post) - you emphatically say genetic diversity is NOT determined by the number of kennel names.
Sorry, I am confused - are you saying genetic diversity IS a network of breeders creating and maintaining multiple lines (even if highly related) or are you saying genetic diversity is NOT determined by a network of breeders creating and maintaining multiple lines (even if highly related).
{Highly related to me = high COI which LisaCA (Itzyu) was kind enough to share with the group for the original founders.}
Also Jo, in 2008, you wrote quite eloquently on the need for new foundation stock in the Basenji Studbook Petition
Now you write @JoT:
So, I still wonder if admitting new native stock EFb into the Basenji gene pool will actually help gene diversity in the long run.
What has changed between 2008 and today, other than the acceptance of 15 newly registered imports, of which yours are included?
@Therese:
We have all avoided talking about Rose Marie Holt because she is not on this list but just recently she posted a rescue dog was a basenji that immediately was identified as a NSD and when NSD breeders were contacted they immediately recognized the dog as NSD or a possible mix.
I believe this is a gross misrepresentation Therese, assuming of course you are talking about the recent posting to the MDG list - a private BCOA list where most on this forum could not look into if they were of a mind and validate the information as in fact true. I believe Marie posted the information she found on a rescue site "Animal Welfare League of Alexandria (Alexandria, VA )" in addition to a picture in response to another post sent re: the same dog but with less information; she did not call the dog a basenji, THEY (rescue site) called the dog a basenji. I believe she concurred that it could be a Singer or even a basenji mix - which is what several people speculated.
@Therese:
I have seen posts by Rose Marie and how she feels about not just coat color but texture and breeding type that concern me greatly. I have had concern for the care and maintenance of her dogs from posts she has posted on several lists…..
I have seen posts from many breeders over the years that concern me greatly about their breeding plans, their breeding programs and the manner in which they house their dogs; COI's so high they might as well be breeding a clone to a clone for the potential number of homozygous genes they carry, breeding non health tested stock ad nauseam despite knowing problems exist and have been produced in their line, basenjis crated 24/7, kenneled in basements, kenneled next to boilers that could explode at any time, dogs with urine scald due to living in their own waste, (need I go on?). It is not my place to air what I might think is their dirty laundry via a public forum, nor is it my place to make public judgments about any of their choices just because they are not my choices for me and/or my dogs.
Any random pictures I have seen of Marie's dogs show healthy weights, good body condition, nice/clean coat conditions, and their uncanny ability to drape themselves all over her furniture in a variety of positions. I do not see any evidence of excessively kenneled or crated dogs who lack condition due to such extreme containment, dirty coats showing any evidence of living in a dirty environment; I have also seen a yard that I would be quite envious to have. If eating well, living in a clean environment, with a good sized yard to run in, while being allowed to live loose and sleep on the bed or in a favorite chair is something that concerns you, I hate to imagine what you might think about any number of us.
Sorry if this offends but in truth, I am offended for Marie and since she is not allowed to have a voice here, I feel balance is needed to offset your (IMO) not so subtle implications regarding her character, based on I assume nothing more than your personal belief system vs. any substantiated evidence.</lol>