What the hell was the old guy talking about?
It's a bizarre new fad, it seems, in dog fashion, of crossing strange breeds, one with the other. Labradors meet with Poodles to create 'Labradoodles'. Pugs meet Cavalier King Charles Spaniels to create 'Pugoliers'. Schnauzers and Poodles, taken together, create 'Schnoodles'. How far will this grotesque trend be taken? Will the resultant labradoodles be crossed with beagles to create 'labeagragloodles'? What disgusting combination of constanants would we have to wrangle together when breeding a Schnauzer with a Chihuahua with a Shar-Pei? Clearly, we have to draw the line somewhere.
The Labradoodle: a shocking example of the horrors of cross-breeding.
After extensive research into this subject, taken at great personal risk to my personal safety, I have compiled the following four case histories into the cross-breeding of dogs nowadays, each more damning than the previous.
***
CASE HISTORY 1
Dog-eugenecists in the German city of Cologne set out to cross a poodle with a schnauzer to great the now well-known breed, the 'Schnoodle'. They then, controversially, crossed the Schnoodle with a little German girl they had procured for just this experiment whose name was Trudi Apfel. After several attempts at crossing the Schnoodle with Trudi, they succeeded in making Apfel Stroodle, or, in the English translation, "Apple strudel". They then sat down to eat this strudel. Shockingly, since they didn't even have any cream, they decided to have it with yoghurt instead!
(They are currently trying to work out how to remove the crucial 'Sch' gene from the Schnoodle in order to create the perfect Noodle, but they haven't quite got there yet.)
CASE HISTORY 2
During the 2nd World War, Nazi and Italian scientists collaborated in a secret attempt to breed a kind of 'super dog' by crossing the Schnauzer with the Pointer. They hoped to create a legion of Super Panzers, but they ended up just creating a hopeless breed with no sense of direction that they called 'Schnointers'. The English had a little more success; by crossing Pointers and Greyhounds, they succeeded in creating an elite breed of fast-running Goiters, which were later used to attack the German high command.
CAST HISTORY 3
By cross-breeding, over successive generations, Maltese, Sussex Spaniels, and Pugs, North Korean scientists, against all expectations, managed to breed a highly specialised race of dogs they called 'Smugs'. Smugs are just like Pugs, except whenever a person tells them to do something, they appear to have a look of idiotic satisfaction on their faces. A few examples from scientific research, with original notations, will suffice:
The Pug | The Smug |
The dogs involved are currently in counselling.
If you are horrified by that, just wait until you read the next case history.
CASE HISTORY 4
After years of being tormented by his pet Doberman Pinscher, Mr Doberman attempted to breed the dog with a poodle named Ponto from Toronto, in order to make and patent a Doberman Poncho. He actually succeeded, but then his old Pinscher pinched the poncho, too, which just goes to show, you shouldn't mess with nature, or something. Doberman retired shortly afterwards to a home for the infirm and elderly in Alaska. He suffers greatly from chills, and thinks more and more about that poncho as time goes on.
***
Ladies and gentlemen, I think the message is clear: when it comes to foxes and terriers, I think we should just leave it at that. No need to start worrying about oodles of labradoodles and legions of pugoliers. That way can only lie madness.
11 comments:
Apparently a guy from Queensland crossed his Siamese Cat with his hound one rainy day, and it started raining Gats and Cods.
Thank you ladies and gentlemen, I'll be here all night.
A really bitchy contralto: a basset.
Ha. Ha. Ugh. Sorry.
Specialising in motets by J S Bark?
Harrharrharr.
Also arias by *Wolf*gang Amadeus.
That'll have them yelping in the stalls.
And she'll be hounded out of town.
Shar peis are already tres weird. They don't need to be crossed with anything for extra weirdness. They just are.
What a wonderful and enlightening case study on the Pug vs. the Smug. Now I know which breed I want.
If I had to choose between a Pug and a Smug, I'd choose a rottweiler. Definitely.
Ok, so it's taken me about 15 attempts over the past week to finish this post, as I always start laughing hysterically and my family looks at me weird. Humph.
Very kind of you to say that.
Post a Comment