I'm going to play devil's advocate here and point out that virtually every recognized breed in existence is the result of cross-breeding and selective-breeding. Whether it be for size, colour, head-shape, coat-type... the list goes on and on.
While I'm not at all a fan of this whole "mini" movement... mini aussies, mini shelties, mini shephards... Or the whole "doodle" movement... I see that it's precisely the same practice that created many of the breeds we know and love today.
I think we may be looking at it with "poop coloured" (the opposite of rose-coloured
) glasses. That those small shelties can't possibly be healthy... can perform the duties of sheltie (poodles are supposed to be hunting dogs... mini-poodles couldn't possibly be hunting dogs... but you don't hear people crying foul about it)... have domed heads... too slight of bone... etc. However, I'm sure there are plenty of small shelties that are perfectly fine representations of the sheltie breed... they just happen to be small.
Anyway... I guess my whole point is that the process of creating something new is nothing new... None of us would have the shelties that we do were it not for the exact same process that is happening now. Having said that... I can't say I like it. It seems wrong to play with nature like that... but then I have to remind myself that I don't have 2 wolves laying in my livingroom!
While I'm not at all a fan of this whole "mini" movement... mini aussies, mini shelties, mini shephards... Or the whole "doodle" movement... I see that it's precisely the same practice that created many of the breeds we know and love today.
I think we may be looking at it with "poop coloured" (the opposite of rose-coloured
) glasses. That those small shelties can't possibly be healthy... can perform the duties of sheltie (poodles are supposed to be hunting dogs... mini-poodles couldn't possibly be hunting dogs... but you don't hear people crying foul about it)... have domed heads... too slight of bone... etc. However, I'm sure there are plenty of small shelties that are perfectly fine representations of the sheltie breed... they just happen to be small. Anyway... I guess my whole point is that the process of creating something new is nothing new... None of us would have the shelties that we do were it not for the exact same process that is happening now. Having said that... I can't say I like it. It seems wrong to play with nature like that... but then I have to remind myself that I don't have 2 wolves laying in my livingroom!


It certainly looked a miserable little thing for all that the owner doted on it. We might not see the appeal of sniffing poo and getting dirty but surely that's part of being a dog.
This is a modern trend - even the lap dogs of the past were still allowed to be canines and I would so hate to see a sheltie having to submit to being treated as a living doll.