02-11-2014, 09:52 AM
The key thing to remember when you're breeding true recessives is that you're often breeding for something you can't see. In this case, the most important thing is to know when the hidden recessive passes and when it doesn't. This is where dominant traits come in very handy.
Since Swanky whiskers were used as an example, and since I probably have as much experience with breeding them as anybody lol, I'll talk about how I worked with them.
When I got the first Swanky, I decided to gamble by selling it, counting on being able to breed them out from what I had left, which was the female starter, a decent male OS of that starter showing Curious whiskers, and a slightly less traity female OS also showing Curious. As I saw it, I had essentially 2 valid approaches: breed the male to one of the 2 females (the starter would have been the better approach in this case, since I could be certain that an OS of the Swanky-hiding starter showing Curious would definitely hide Swanky, whereas a sibling OS showing Curious whiskers, since both parents would have been showing Curious, could hide either Curious or Swanky, making the Swanky whiskers next to impossible to track),or (the approach I took) breeding all 3 cats to other quality cats showing a variety of slightly more recessive whiskers.
The first approach (a perfectly valid one), probably would have allowed me to get my second and later Swanky-whiskered cats to market about a month to 6 weeks faster than I inevitably did. The trade-off would have been that they would have likely been low-traited, with relatively dominant, less popular traits other than the Swanky whiskers (the starter that hid the Swanky hid nothing but older dominant traits other than the whiskers).
So I decided to breed my Swanky hiders with 9-traited, quality cats. I paired the starter with a nice Ocicat Ebony Silver with Mysterious whiskers, one of the OS's with an Ebony Silver with Frazzled whiskers, and the other with an Oci Blue with Boo Boo whiskers. Why did I do this? It allowed me a solid chance to track the hidden Swanky.
If the first pair had an OS with Mysterious whiskers, it would hide Swanky. If the second pair had a Frazzled-whisker OS, it would hide Swanky. If the third pair had a Boo Boo-whiskered OS, it would hide Swanky. Then I took the best Swanky-hiders of that generation, with different shown whiskers, and I would know that 25% of the time I would get shown Swanky, and another 25% of the time I would know I had a Swanky-hider.
This approach may seem a bit large scale, and well, it was lol, but one advantage with working with a true recessive is that any kittens you get that are provably hiding the true recessive that don't fit with your program can be sold pretty easily, and the program will generally more than pay for itself. While this approach took longer than the other one, I was quite pleased with the results: my second Swanky was a 7T hiding the other 2 traits, and within another month or so I was breeding 9T Swankies together (9+9=9: How I like KittyCatS! math to work
).
Notice I was using partners with whiskers that were only slightly more dominant than the Swanky-hiders shown whiskers. Why? It allowed me the best opportunity to know when Swanky passed. The only time I put Swanky-hiding and Light Wave-whiskered kitties together was to help prove that Swanky was recessive to Light Wave. I ended up passing that cat to a friend that I knew had a Swanky-hider to breed with it; I wouldn't have felt comfortable selling it to anyone as a Swanky-hider, because at the time, anyone trying to breed Swanky whiskers from it from scratch would be working totally blind.
Let me illustrate. Suppose a person had a then 2nd most recessive Light Wave hiding the then true recessive Swanky, with no Swanky-hiders of any sort to put with it. Whatever you breed it with will produce an OS that will have a 50% chance of hiding Light Wave, and a 50% chance of hiding Swanky. But unless you were breeding it with a Swanky-hider, YOU WOULD HAVE NO WAY OF KNOWING WHICH IS HIDING!!! If you take 2 OS's of that Light Wave hiding Swanky and breed them together, it is very likely at least one hides Light Wave, in which case the shown whisker of their OS's will always be Light Wave or more dominant. When you're breeding for true recessives, information is key, and the closer the showns are to the true recessive in recessiveness , the less information you'll be able to retain.
Hopefully this way-too-long post is helpful to somebody lol.
Since Swanky whiskers were used as an example, and since I probably have as much experience with breeding them as anybody lol, I'll talk about how I worked with them.
When I got the first Swanky, I decided to gamble by selling it, counting on being able to breed them out from what I had left, which was the female starter, a decent male OS of that starter showing Curious whiskers, and a slightly less traity female OS also showing Curious. As I saw it, I had essentially 2 valid approaches: breed the male to one of the 2 females (the starter would have been the better approach in this case, since I could be certain that an OS of the Swanky-hiding starter showing Curious would definitely hide Swanky, whereas a sibling OS showing Curious whiskers, since both parents would have been showing Curious, could hide either Curious or Swanky, making the Swanky whiskers next to impossible to track),or (the approach I took) breeding all 3 cats to other quality cats showing a variety of slightly more recessive whiskers.
The first approach (a perfectly valid one), probably would have allowed me to get my second and later Swanky-whiskered cats to market about a month to 6 weeks faster than I inevitably did. The trade-off would have been that they would have likely been low-traited, with relatively dominant, less popular traits other than the Swanky whiskers (the starter that hid the Swanky hid nothing but older dominant traits other than the whiskers).
So I decided to breed my Swanky hiders with 9-traited, quality cats. I paired the starter with a nice Ocicat Ebony Silver with Mysterious whiskers, one of the OS's with an Ebony Silver with Frazzled whiskers, and the other with an Oci Blue with Boo Boo whiskers. Why did I do this? It allowed me a solid chance to track the hidden Swanky.
If the first pair had an OS with Mysterious whiskers, it would hide Swanky. If the second pair had a Frazzled-whisker OS, it would hide Swanky. If the third pair had a Boo Boo-whiskered OS, it would hide Swanky. Then I took the best Swanky-hiders of that generation, with different shown whiskers, and I would know that 25% of the time I would get shown Swanky, and another 25% of the time I would know I had a Swanky-hider.
This approach may seem a bit large scale, and well, it was lol, but one advantage with working with a true recessive is that any kittens you get that are provably hiding the true recessive that don't fit with your program can be sold pretty easily, and the program will generally more than pay for itself. While this approach took longer than the other one, I was quite pleased with the results: my second Swanky was a 7T hiding the other 2 traits, and within another month or so I was breeding 9T Swankies together (9+9=9: How I like KittyCatS! math to work

Notice I was using partners with whiskers that were only slightly more dominant than the Swanky-hiders shown whiskers. Why? It allowed me the best opportunity to know when Swanky passed. The only time I put Swanky-hiding and Light Wave-whiskered kitties together was to help prove that Swanky was recessive to Light Wave. I ended up passing that cat to a friend that I knew had a Swanky-hider to breed with it; I wouldn't have felt comfortable selling it to anyone as a Swanky-hider, because at the time, anyone trying to breed Swanky whiskers from it from scratch would be working totally blind.
Let me illustrate. Suppose a person had a then 2nd most recessive Light Wave hiding the then true recessive Swanky, with no Swanky-hiders of any sort to put with it. Whatever you breed it with will produce an OS that will have a 50% chance of hiding Light Wave, and a 50% chance of hiding Swanky. But unless you were breeding it with a Swanky-hider, YOU WOULD HAVE NO WAY OF KNOWING WHICH IS HIDING!!! If you take 2 OS's of that Light Wave hiding Swanky and breed them together, it is very likely at least one hides Light Wave, in which case the shown whisker of their OS's will always be Light Wave or more dominant. When you're breeding for true recessives, information is key, and the closer the showns are to the true recessive in recessiveness , the less information you'll be able to retain.
Hopefully this way-too-long post is helpful to somebody lol.