Saratoga Dobermans: Home of Champion Dobermans
Our first doberman, Fayek Fancy Don’t Let Me Down – Reba, finished at 15 months, a Grand Champion at 22 months and is now retired as a Silver Grand Champion.
We have brought three of our dobermans to Silver Grand Champion levels, GCH Fayek Fancy Don’t Let Me Down – Reba – and two of our others which were in the DPCA’s Top 20, Multiple Best in Specialty Shows – GCHS Black Bart’s Calamity Jane, WAC (Raven) and Best in Speciality Show winner GCHS Sherwood’s Saratoga Sensation (Toga) at just 12 months. Raven was shown at Westminster in 2015 and was awarded SEL Bitch. Toga was shown in 2016 and awarded SEL Dog.
Toga was bred to GCH Mary Poppins De Black Shadow and we had our first litter (August 2015). Two males from that litter finished at 11 months – Tie and Cocker (GCH Saratoga Black Tie Affair and CH Saratoga You Can Leave Your Hat On). Tie has gone to finish his Grand Champion title the following month by being awarded Best of Breed three times over the #2 Top Twenty Doberman for a total of 5 Best of Breeds in a month, placing him ahead of his sire, TOGA, in the current Top Twenty rankings.
Littermates Fabian (BISS GCH Saratoga Turn Me Loose) and Olivia (GCH Saratoga You’re The One That I Want) both finished at 12 months a month later with 4 point Majors each the same day by going Winners Dog/Best of Winners and Winners Bitch/Best of Opposite, respectively, in Springfield, MA . Fabian was awarded Best of Breed at the Doberman Pinscher Club of the Tappan Zee Specialty and now can add “BEST IN SPECIALTY SHOW” to his name at just 14 months. Now known as BISS GCH Saratoga Turn Me Loose. Littermate Karma (CH Saratoga Karma At Its Finest) finished at the Albany Kennel Club in Springfield, MA which now completes this champion litter.
We are actively involved with Conformation. ” Conformation” is the official name for “dog shows.” While they may seem glamorous, the true purpose of conformation showing is to evaluate breeding stock. The dog’s conformation – his overall appearance and structure – is an indication of the dog’s ability to produce quality purebred puppies, and that is what is being judged in the ring. That is why mixed-breeds and spayed or neutered purebreds are not eligible to compete. May times a new exhibitor will get started in dog shows by finding a mentor, usually the breeder they acquire the puppy from. Many AKC Clubs also offer handling classes to teach owners how to present their purebred dog to a judge at a dog show.
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We do not condone or support the breeding of the “white”/albino Doberman as it is a genetic mutation.