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The thing that would worry me about a silver lab, is how they got the silver color. Not that it isn't purebread, but that it was bred for color not bred for health or hunting.
Don't totally agree. A person might be selecting a color for centimental value. I.E. thay had that color when they were young. It's the owners choce as to what he prefers. Of coarse other factors come into play along with the color but you can't and shouldn't throw out color.
Silver is a chocolate. You will be highly unlikely to find one with what I would consider an acceptable pedigree. Not to say it can't or won't be a decent dog but, would you buy a 1991 Geo Metro for the same price as a 2014 Camry because of the color?
http://www.circleblabs.com/Good Breeder know them personally. They have all colors of Silvers. They are in Yelm. If you google search: Silver Labs WA they are the first that comes up. Hope this helps.
Quote from: hunterrcc on December 11, 2013, 10:52:26 PMhttp://www.circleblabs.com/Good Breeder know them personally. They have all colors of Silvers. They are in Yelm. If you google search: Silver Labs WA they are the first that comes up. Hope this helps.Its funny they advertise a stud as coming from "Amazing Show Lines" yet, there isn't a show champion on his three generation pedigree? I looked at the website of some of the kennel names in three generations back and they had something like two "International Champions" in the entire pedigree. International Champion is a huge joke in the dog world. Basically, the dog stands in front of a judge, the judge looks at the dog and decides if it meets the breed standard. It does not win or have to accumulate points. Just one judges (interpretation is vague) of the standard. These are the kinds of statements on dog breeder websites that would make me run.