aznmexaggie
Chinchilla Chateau
I've seen baby chins or ugly weak-furred chins of a "rare" color (beige or white...) advertised as "good for showing" or "from show lines".
Saying an animal is from show lines in chinchillas is... misleading. Any animal can be shown and bred to start a line of chins that can potentially be shown. It's a different story when you can look at the ped and say, "This chin's sire was a Class Champion at ECBC Nationals or the paternal grandsire took GSC at ECBC Nationals, etc." That at least specifies the quality of the animals in the background. This can be misleading too because someone can take a nice animal, breed it to crap, and get more crap...
The important thing is to the know about the breeder. If you are looking to purchase a show quality animal, has that breeder shown before? Have they done well in show and are they producing competitive animals?
However, for me to say that a chin I've bred is show quality, I expect him to do well in show (in my opinion, 2nd place or higher, preferably 1st or higher...). Sure, I have weanlings that look nice and are clear with good texture but I can't say they will do well in show - they may have potential but I have to wait until they are grown out, get more size, and come into prime. And if I chose the matings well, they should grow out to be nice animals.
Saying an animal is from show lines in chinchillas is... misleading. Any animal can be shown and bred to start a line of chins that can potentially be shown. It's a different story when you can look at the ped and say, "This chin's sire was a Class Champion at ECBC Nationals or the paternal grandsire took GSC at ECBC Nationals, etc." That at least specifies the quality of the animals in the background. This can be misleading too because someone can take a nice animal, breed it to crap, and get more crap...
The important thing is to the know about the breeder. If you are looking to purchase a show quality animal, has that breeder shown before? Have they done well in show and are they producing competitive animals?
However, for me to say that a chin I've bred is show quality, I expect him to do well in show (in my opinion, 2nd place or higher, preferably 1st or higher...). Sure, I have weanlings that look nice and are clear with good texture but I can't say they will do well in show - they may have potential but I have to wait until they are grown out, get more size, and come into prime. And if I chose the matings well, they should grow out to be nice animals.