The Golden Retriever Club of America is
dedicated to the health and welfare of the
Golden Retriever breed while conserving the
original breed function - that of a "working
retriever." A purebred dog offers to his owner
the likelihood that he will be a specific size,
shape, color and temperament.
The predictability of a breed comes from
selection for traits that are desirable and away
from traits that are undesirable. When a breed
standard or type is set, the animals within that
breed have less heterozygosity than do animals
in a random population The Goldendoodle is
nothing more than an expensive mongrel. Because
the genetic makeup is diverse from the Poodle
genes and the Golden Retriever genes, the
resultant first generation (F1) offspring is a
complete genetic gamble. The dog may be any
size, color, coat texture and temperament.
Indeed Goldendoodles do shed. Their coat may be
wiry or silky and may mat. Body shape varies
with parentage but tends to be lanky and narrow.
Behavior varies with the dog and within a litter
with some puppies poodle-like in attitude and
others somewhat like the Golden Retriever.
The Golden Retriever Club of America is
opposed to cross-breeding of dogs and is
particularly opposed to the deliberate crossing
of Golden Retrievers with any other breed. These
crossbreds are a deliberate attempt to mislead
the public with the idea that there is an
advantage to these designer dogs. The crossbred
dogs are prone to all of the genetic disease of
both breeds and offer none of the advantages
that owning a purebred dog has to offer.
Printed with permission of the
Golden Retriever Club of America (www.grca.org)
2007
Permission to amend the Labrador Retriver
Club statement to Golden Retrievers given by:
Frances S. Smith DVM, Ph.D.
LRC, Inc. Board of Directors
Diplomate American College of Theriogenology
Original Author of Labradoodle statement
Marianne Foote
Director, Labrador Retriever Club