confirming biewer Yorkshire terrier not biewer terrier BTCA of America has BEEN banned in Germany by international clubs of Germany for trying to force an agenda on biewer Yorkie owners to call them a separate breed the dog came from Germany not america international clubs of Germany have now banned breeding between american biewer terriers and German biewer yorkies if said on your pedigree biewer yorkie and your pedigree is German then you have a biewer yorkie not a american biewer terrier in 2014 the american kennel club excepted the word biewer terrier as breed after biewer yorkie were breed to other breeds of dog in america the american kennel states a dog must come FROM a 3 way cross breed to become a new breed at the american kennel club the btca of america after having biewer yorkies rejected began their own breed cross breeding dogs then waiting 5 generation to reapply the word biewer terrier at the american kennel club in 20 14 they were aloud to have the name but not the the dog. German biewer yorkie are pied mutation parti colour yorkie are fully recognised at the american kennel club it is not true the that the German biewer Yorkie is now the the biewer terrier they are separate breeds
IF A BIEWER YORKIE TERRIER IS NOT YORKIE (AND IT IS A YORKIE) WHAT BOUT BIRO YORKIES GOLD DUST YORKIES CHACOLATE YORKIES GOLD YORKIES SABLE YORKIES ETC ALL DOGS DECENT FROM THE WOLF THE YORKIE WAS MADE BY MAN IN 1860 FROM SIX OTHER BREEDS OF DOG IN YORKSHIRE ENGLAND
Breed identification DNA tests are a sure-fire way to make money for those who sell them, including veterinarians who are paid for product endorsement.
But do they work?
No. In fact, the results shown here are common: a pure-breed dog comes back as being a vague pastiche of three or four breeds.
Breed DNA tests are not too different from Gypsy Fortune telling, Fortune Cookies, the I-Ching, Numerology and Tarot Card reading: If you give a vague-enough answer, the believers will rationalize whatever result you give them, pounding the square peg into the round hole.
This is especially true for mixed-breed dogs. The folks sending in their dog's DNA for testing here do not care what the answer is, so long as it answers the question. Even an obviously wrong answer gives them a story to tell when someone, inevitably, asks: "What kind of dog is that?"
But do they work?
No. In fact, the results shown here are common: a pure-breed dog comes back as being a vague pastiche of three or four breeds.
Breed DNA tests are not too different from Gypsy Fortune telling, Fortune Cookies, the I-Ching, Numerology and Tarot Card reading: If you give a vague-enough answer, the believers will rationalize whatever result you give them, pounding the square peg into the round hole.
This is especially true for mixed-breed dogs. The folks sending in their dog's DNA for testing here do not care what the answer is, so long as it answers the question. Even an obviously wrong answer gives them a story to tell when someone, inevitably, asks: "What kind of dog is that?"