Articles about American Pit Bull Terrier
    For example, wild boar  hunting, in spite of the high level of risk to the dog involved,  doesn't really test the limits of a dog's gameness. The tangle  between boar and dog is fast, furious, and generally quite short  (compared with a pit contest). Athletic ability, agility, explosive  power, strength of bite, and smarts are of a higher priority here  than gameness, which never really has a chance to come into play in  so brief an encounter. The dog will either take the boar down or be  killed before the depth of his gameness can make much of a  difference. Several larger breeds of dogs--American Bulldogs and  Argentine Dogos--seem to be at least equally adept at boar hunting  as pit bulls. But this doesn't make them as game as pit bulls. Just  because a game disposition will aid a dog in excelling at many  different activities--such as agility competition, flyball races,  tree-climbing, etc.--doesn't mean that these activities are  sufficient tests for gameness. Gameness is multi-dimensional; the  above activities do not stress all of these dimensions  simultaneously to their extreme limits . Gameness is, in positive  terms, a happy eagerness to pursue a challenge; but it is also, in  negative terms, the stubborn refusal to heed the cries of the  nervous system to stop struggling and and to flee the situation that  is causing so much pain. None of the activities above can fully  assess this second dimension. Unfortunately,the only activity that  really tests the full extent of a dog's gameness is pit contests.  It's a pity that this is the case. Many don't much like the idea of  dog fighting, especially when money is involved and takes precedence  over the well-being of the dogs. If there is another method--say, a  DNA test--which could determine gameness, some'd be happily  promoting that method right now. But genetic research has a long way  to go before it could provide such a test. Many still prefer game  dogs. Understandably, breeders only want to choose the very best  exemplars of the breed in their breeding programs. If you breed  APBTs without regard for their degree of gameness, their gameness  will gradually be lost with each succeeding generation. This is  essentially what has occurred with Am Staffs and Staffy Bulls, which  for many generations have been selectively bred for appearance  rather than for the invisible inner quality of gameness.  (Furthermore, less than scrupulous selection of all these breeds  also risks the loss of the breed's excellent dispostion toward  people.) In order to maintain a high degree of the desired  qualities, a breeder must carefully select only those dogs that have  them in the highest degree. Gameness was an extremely difficult  trait to develop; it took more than a century of tiny, incremental  improvements through selective breeding to produce today's APBT.  Though achieved only with great difficulty, gameness is easily lost,  sometimes even in the hands of good breeders. If you mate two grand  champions, you will be lucky if just one or two of the pups is of  the same quality as the parents. Traditonally, the job of breeders  was to identify these offspring and use only them to continue the  breeding program. Sometimes it's the case that two great dogs will  not produce any offspring who are their equals....to  read the other interesting article please click on here...