Interview with Annie Raker for the website.
1. What year did you become involved in the breed?
I purchased Driftwood’s Little Bo Peep from my mentor,
Hazel Foster Collins in 1960. I placed my first Rescue dog for someone in 1964.
(not Bo Peep)
2.
Can you tell us some of the great
dogs you have seen in your years of experience with this breed.
My favorites during the years I was a breeder were
probably Fezziwig
Raggedy Andy and Fezziwig Ceiling Zero, and Tarawood’s
Beau Billy D was another dog I admired. That is a biased answer based on the
few OES being shown at that time. I haven’t shown OES in 30 years. I still love
the old fashioned, classic OES..you know, where you could see the eye peering
between the fall.
3. What are the differences between the breed now and the breed then?
IMHO, more emphasis was put on good bone and movement and
much less on profuseness of coat in the old days. (BTand T…before teasing and
trimming) The OES truncated head, strong muzzle, and under jaw seem lacking in
some of today’s OES and there is a serious lack of pigment in many of today’s
breeding stock.
4.
You no longer breed OES but
rescue?
My last litter was whelped in 1976.
5.
What was the turning point for you
to go from active successful breeder to strictly rescue?
I worked very hard to produce sound bodied, sound
temperament, and good looking show quality dogs. I became very discouraged by
the number of dysplastic pups I produced in nearly every litter in spite of
only using x-rayed cleared stock. I was concerned by how many people didn’t make
a lifetime commitment for their dog and my genetic resources receded while I
remained determined to produce really nice dogs. I didn’t see anywhere else to
go in order to establish an “Ambelon” line. In short, I gave up. As a full time
groomer, I saw the deplorable condition that some people allowed their OES pets
to get into. During all those years, people kept contacting me to place their
adult OES, in what became a disposable society. I guess I got pretty good at
finding homes for the cast-aways!
6.
In your experience, what do you
suggest to breeders that would help prevent some of the rescue situations?
If every breeder took every dog that they sold back and
had all pets sold with limited registrations, requiring spay/neuters, it would
help the rescue cause. If nothing else it would set a good example. The most
important way to reduce the failures that come to rescue is for breeders to
become more selective in choosing the homes they sell to. It isn’t enough to
just sell a puppy. There needs to be a lifetime
of follow up for each pup sold. If puppy kindergarten, followed by regular
obedience classes was mandated by the breeders, there would be far less work
for Rescue.
7.
In that same vain, what can OESCA
do?
The Code of Ethics is a sticky subject because it is vague in this area. I
think the wording can be tightened up so the OESCA can really stand for quality
dogs, quality breeders and educated owners. The price of puppies has become
totally out of range for the average person. It is far easier to order one, delivered,
for a third the price over the internet with PayPal. No questions asked! There
is a dearth of healthy reasonably priced OES puppies available for the average
pet home. How is THAT promoting the breed? OESCA could launch a campaign to educate people that
"papers" do not mean anything without the OESCA seal of approval. We
could produce and distribute educational pamphlets, teach the public what
"well bred" means! Right now the “pet” public doesn't appreciate the
difference. The average pet owner doesn't think Champions matter. We need to
teach them that it does matter. Chosen (tested) genes are used to produce the
pet they are investing their hearts and their pocket books in for the next 12
years or more. Make a campaign of it. Get the breeders on it. Motivate them.
Offer an award to the Breeder/club/group for "Outstanding Contributions to
Public Education about the OES" The way of the world is the internet. The
education needs to be carried over the internet.
8.
You are the placement director for
the New England OES Rescue. Can you
give us a typical day in the life of Annie Raker?
The office for New England OES Rescue is in my house so it
is very busy here. Before my coffee, I ‘exercise’ and feed my own dog(s) and
any foster dogs that are staying here. I then face the computer to discern the
biggest crisis of the day! <g> There are always questions from other
rescues around the country, and the usual string of behavioral problems. (there
are many) Much of the day is spent in ascertaining which of the many
applications we get on line should be responded to and in doing evaluations on
the dogs coming into the program. While they don’t all come here, they are all
processed here. Part of my job is sending the web master (hubby) the latest
updates, answering the zillion phone calls and in between, my time is spent in
what I call rehabbing the dogs at G/A’s Boot Camp. <G> Evenings and
weekends are spent showing the dogs to prospective new owners. Much of the
phone/computer time is at night when folks return from their day jobs. Ooops, I
forgot to add: the vet trips, grooming
hours, Board issues..(I’m the current Vice President of NEOESR), preparation for the NEOESR newsletter called
the Tale’s End, which includes a write-up on every dog we place as well as
updates and other interesting articles. Of course, every dog gets to go on our
famous walk in the woods in the late afternoon. The OES (and placement director)
need lots more exercise than most of us get.
9.
In closing, thank you for taking
the time to answer these questions for the OESCA website. Do you have any final thoughts you would
like to share with the readers?
Thank you for inviting me to this interview. I haven’t
reviewed much of my last almost 48 years with the OES. I do miss breeding and
showing, but am too busy doing Rescue to have regrets. I so enjoyed bragging the
first OES female in the breed to earn a U.D. I am still proud of producing 19
Ambelon OES champions, including two BIS in Canada, and I can boast being involved
with the placement of 1,714 OES since we started keeping written records.
Already 56 new ones for this year. I guess I feel valued for my having founded
NEOESR in 1994; an awesome group of volunteers that focuses on picking up the
pieces that others leave. I dream of the day when the average pet owner will
make an educated decision about the best timing if and when to buy an OES puppy. Unfortunately, for all
others there is master-card. Grannie Annie Raker, NEOESR www.neoesr.org