I
drove around to the back entrance of the Wienerau Kennels. The
narrow, bumpy dirt road lined with tall trees and lush
vegetation suddenly widened to allow parking for a few cars. As I
walked to the gate I was greeted by four of the most beautiful
Shepherds I have ever seen. This growling, barking, raised-hackled
welcoming committee was composed of none other that the Sieger, The
Siegerin, the V4 and the V23 dogs at this year’s Sieger Show.
I
was almost tempted to put a finger through the fence so that "Vanta,"
the crazier one of the bunch (as confessed by her own breeder),
could give me a lingering reminder of my experience and a possible
scar I could tell my grandchildren about. But my better sense and
the timely arrival of Mr. Martin shook me out of my momentary
insanity.
The Wienerau Legacy
From the time I was very young I read and heard about the grandeur
of the Wienerau dogs. Much of the breeding in Germany is currently
based on two pillars of the modern lines: Canto and Quanto Wienerau.
These and a long line of other top winners and producers walked the
green grasses and played as puppies among the abundant bushes and
trees which dot the landscape of the legendary kennel. Stepping into
that arena sent chills up my spine, but my rush of emotions was
quickly brought to earth by the calm and unassuming presence of Mr.
Martin, his wife, his son and of course the aforementioned
"welcoming committee," which by now had settled into those
all-important "doggie-duties" of smelling my clothes, laying in the
sun, and picking on each other.
The
calmness and silence of that lazy autumn afternoon in Viernheim
drastically contrasted with the hustle and bustle of four days ago
when the 1992 Sieger Show was getting underway in Dusseldorf.
Eighteen hundred dogs and seventy thousand cheering fans and fervent
owners served as a backdrop for one of the most memorable of events.
Reddened, swollen skin and a patch covering a puncture wound in
Walter Martins arm was testimony of the fierce competition and
"fighting drive" of the owners during the running of the classes.
RC:
"What happened to your arm?"
WM: "During the working females
class in Dusseldorf I climbed up the fence to get Vanta’s attention.
It had these sharp points on top. I had not seen them, and I jumped
on and I yelled ‘Vanta!’ and I accidentally stabbed my arm with
them."
A
Hearty laugh over the incident was a clear indication that the pain
was a small price to pay for someone who describes
himself as a fighter.
RC:"
A couple of years ago you said that would probably be your last
Sieger Show, that it was time for the younger people to do it."
WM: "Yes…I said that because I
like to come from behind. I am a fighter, I never quit. You have to
understand how things are in Germany; it is better if people are not
expecting certain things from you. Then I come out strong with very
good dogs. I like it that way." (Laugh).
And
what a time to be at Wienerau because come out strong they did. No
one in the history of German Shepherds has
received the coveted titles of Sieger and Siegerin in the same year.
If you add to this the titles of V4, V23, SG6, SG7 in males and
youth Siegerin, and V5 in females then you have the ingredients of
greatness that can only be matched by the top recognition given to a
breeder: That of top kennel which, needless to say, also went to
Wienerau. The Wienerau Kennel Group
At
the beginning of the Kennel groups, Wienerau was first in the
original catalog order. After a few times around the stadium Mr.
Ernest Beck sent Wildsteigerland kennels in front.
RC:
"What did you think when Dr. Beck sent Wildsteigerland in front?
WM: "Just for fun."
RC:
"Did you think it was going to end up that way?"
WM: "No, no this was for show,
for the public, so they can get the applause."
RC:
When you came from behind?"
WM: "Yeah, yeah (laughing) it
was not so bad…it worked well."
Two
days before the interview I was sitting in the hotel room going
through the history books on Sieger Shows. Somehow I had just
assumed that such an important contributor to the breed had to have
several Siegers over the years…but in my mind I could not remember
any. The research confirmed my suspicions. This was the first time a
Wienerau dog had received the top honor. Then a thought came to my
mind, something I had heard long ago I don’t know where or from
whom, but which was ingrained in my memory forever: "I am not
impressed" someone said "with the breeder who on the first or second
litter ends up with some champions due to luck or having enough
money to buy some good dogs. I am more impressed with the true
breeder who has goals and works towards them in a systematic fashion
and after 10 years he begins to produce exactly what he wants in a
consistent fashion, and establishes a type that everyone can
recognize."
The
crowning moment for this master breeder did not come after 10 years.
Or, for that matter, after 20, 30, or 40. It took 50 years for
Walter Martin to see a lifetime of devotion be universally rewarded
not with one, but with three Sieger and Siegerin titles in the same
year—an accomplishment worthy of the Guinness Book of World Records.
RC:
"When did you start in the breed?"
WM: "I came to the dogs when I
was ten years old. I bought a puppy in 1942 during World War II,
from a restaurant near our home. I kept this dog until 1950 when I
left home to go away to school. Back then I did obedience only, but
in obedience everything hangs on the points and I got a bit
frustrated. When I came back home three years later I started going
to the shows and handling dogs. I bought a male here and a male
there without very good results until one day my father told me:
‘When you want to have a chance in dogs you must breed, and you must
breed with the right female."
RC: "But your father was not a
breeder."
WM: "No, he was a Soccer player.
He was interested in animals, but every animal was the same for him,
he just loved animals in general. In 1957 I bought a female for
250DM, including Schutzhund 1."
RC:
"Oh Yeah? Not any more huh?" (Laughs)
WM: "I started to train this
female for SchH 2 and SchH 3, and at that time she was the only
female at the shows with a SchH 3. I bred her to a very good dog
name Gero. He was the son of a very famous VA dog Casar vd
Malmannsheid, VA for nine years. Gero was not the same quality as
the father, however." At this point in the conversation Zamb decided
to come up on the bench where I was sitting and drinking a very
thick German cup of good coffee. Walter Martin interrupted his
recollection and commented "This dog just cannot sleep on the
floor."
WM:
"From this breeding we got our first litter, the "A" litter
Wienerau. The bests dog from that litter was named Asso. My brother
(Mr. Herman Martin, current president of the SV) handled him quite
successfully. He came in second in Karlsruhe in 1969." "Sometime
later I went to a symposium with a very famous judge from Germany.
He did a seminar and gave speeches about breeding and so on. At that
event I saw a female. She was large and had extreme movement, but
she was quite immature. At only 19 months she had no underchest, but
she had a SchH3. This famous man critiqued her as being a female not
worthy of breeding because of the lack of substance and so on. But,
I kept going around looking at her, and I bought this female right
then. Her name was Berta (vom Lorscher Sand), a daughter of the 1955
Sieger Alf Nordfelsen. And this female is the mother of all the dogs
which are now coming from the Wienerau line."
RC:
"Which dogs came out of this female?"
WM: "Out of the first litter
with Berta I had two females. One went to Ernie Loeb in the United
States. It was the first dog I sold to the U.S.A. The other female
which I kept, Was the mother of the 1961 SG1 Sieger Elch Wienerau.
(
here i'm finding an error in the story, possibly in the translation
or language barrier by RC, as the mother of Elch is Berta. His Sire
VA Casar vd Malmannsheid)
"In
the litter after that came Dixie Wienerau. dob 9.9.69 Dixie in
combination with Jalk Fohlenbrunnen gave me the "L" litter Wienerau,
and all the dogs that have the colors you see today in my kennel
(deep mahogany red and black) come from Liane. Liane was Canto
Wienerau’s mother. And Canto was the product of an inbreeding 2,2 on
Dixie. At that time this close breeding was allowed." after
reviewing the canto pedigree i don't see a 2,2 on Dixie. perhaps
again a misunderstanding in the translation by RC? see Canto's
Pedigree
RC:
"So although we always speak of the Canto and Quanto ‘lines’ they
were really from the same line."
WM: "Absolutely. They were the
product of close breeding. In those times we had the situation where
two prominent sires were responsible for the betterment of the
breed. One, however, excelled in producing males, and the other
females. Quanto was the smaller dog but with the better head, he
produced the males. Canto was perhaps the nicer dog but did not have
the head, he gave the breed many very nice females."
RC:
"It seems like presently we are facing the same situation."
WM: "Yes we are! You see
everything comes back! Now we have another pair of sires Quando and
Uran. From the combination of Quando and his sister Quana come all
the nice males with the beautiful heads, where Uran (responding more
to the Canto type) is producing the nicer females."
RC:
Every few years you have a sire that makes an outstanding
contribution to the breed. Where do you think the next male will
come from?"
WM: "The next big sire in
Germany with great genetic potential to raise the breed again,
believe me, will come only from Zamb Wienerau or from Jeck Noricum
(both sons of Odin Tannenmeise, who is a son of Quando
Arminius)—only from these two dogs, not from any other. Never.
Never"
Zamb’s Progeny Group
On
Saturday morning large crowds gathered early at the Stadium to watch
the most important part of the Sieger Show: The presentation of the
progeny groups. The fate of the Sieger is greatly decided by this
event. A good sieger is expected to present a very large and
convincing group of sons and daughters. He must prove to the world
that he is capable of contributing excellent quality to the breed
and that his type and genetic power is expressed through its
offspring. Zamb did just that. The group was very uniform in type:
large, powerful males with very expressive, masculine heads. The
females were also very powerful without lacking elegance and
femininity. Above all, they all had the Wienerau trademark: the red
mahogany colors coming through in a great number of Zamb’s progeny.
Walter Martin is very proud of the color on his dogs. He jokingly
comments: "The Italians tell me ‘Walter Martin has una maquina d
pintura (a spray-paint machine)’ and I tell the ‘Yes, but only for
me’" as he laughs out loud.
RC: "When did you realize that
Zamb would be such a good dog?"
Mrs. Martin: "You know, it wasn’t until he was one year old. Walter
sold him as a three month old puppy."
WM: "Yes, I sold him. I said the
dog was too quiet so I sold him to Italy, but I made a contract by
which I would have the right to purchase the dog back at one year.
Exactly at one year they came with the dog at 6:00 A.M. to our
backyard door. I got up and came to see the dog and said "oh my
god." I purchased him for much money…much, much money. And then my
wife took Zamb to the training field and he bit immediately. He was
young and out of coat because he came from Naples in the south of
Italy. Later on we showed him for the first time in Ulm and he came
in second. A man came to me later and told me ‘this dog will be a
great performer at the shows.’ We showed him again under Ernest Beck
and he put a little dog in front of Zamb. No one could understand.
Finally at the Sieger Show he took the Young dog title. From that
moment on he kept going up and up."
RC:
"Do you believe that Zamb will continue the Quando Arminius line?"
WM: "Yes, but I also believe he
responds more to the Ica Wienerau type rather than the Quando type,
although my brother will surely claim differently." (laughs)
RC:
"So what is more important, the bloodline or the type?"
WM: "No, no the bloodline is
most important. Blood is the juice of life."
RC:
"When you are going to combine bloodlines, what do you take into
account?"
WM: "We do not have many lines
in Germany. We have basically two main lines. So when Germans
complain that we must have a new bloodline I tell them ‘Number one,
we must know the name of this new bloodline, and number two, we must
improve the breed by using it.’ If this ‘new line’ has the power of
improving the breed we will see it in its results, right?"
RC:
"Take us through your mental process as you make the decision of
choosing breeding partners."
WM: "I will give you an example.
Vanta (the Siegerin) will come in season in a couple of weeks, so
now I have to make up my mind. I must look for a dog with a similar
type to Vanta’s, with three quarters of the same blood but with one
part being completely different, without Rolf, or in other words,
without Canto or Quanto. This I still have to decide. This decision
is not so easy."
"Also, you cannot always breed very good character together, if you
only breed dogs with nice, easygoing dispositions, after three
generations you get only dogs that are so nice and kind and so quiet
and perfect that they never like to work and never like to run in
the shows."
RC:
"So what do you do to improve character?"
WM: "Every third generation you
must bring in an absolute "idiot." (Laughs.) Yes, one with very
quick blood, a wild one. This is very good for the working aspect of
the Shepherd. In obedience you see dogs placed on a down and when
the handler says "come," it takes them half an hour to stand up."
RC:
"So, are you at the point now when you must look for an "idiot?"
WM: "Yes, but with Vanta I am
fine because she inherited the spirit from Xaver Arminius. He was
the crazy one, always the "gangster", and Vanta is quite this way. I
cannot leave her out of the kennel and have you come in. She will
bite you immediately. She protects the car and the house."
RC:
"So you don’t know yet who you will breed her to?"
WM: " I must look in the Breed
Survey Book for the right dog."
RC:
"But he must be of the same type?"
WM: "I can only create the
Wienerau type, that is my job. I cannot make another type. Mercedes
must build
Mercedes-looking cars, and BMW the BMW type."
RC:
" What do you expect from Zamb now?"
WM: "From Zamb I only want
females. And Tony, I love Tony. He is very special. He would like to
kill everybody. When he was six months old I would take him to walk
on the leash and he would approach me. So I started taking food with
me and when someone would come up I would say ‘come feed my dog
pleas.’ After one week, when he would see someone approaching he
would start looking to see what they had in their pockets to give
him. He never tried to bite anyone anymore."
RC:
"Finally, what would you advise someone who is starting to breed and
wants to do things right?"
WM: "I must tell the people you
must buy from a very, very good leader, from a very, very good
father and a very, very good mother the worst female puppy—the worst
female puppy. And do you know why? Because nobody give you the best,
so you can only have the worst, but this dog has the same blood as
the others. Then breed this female to the best line and the best dog
possible and select the one with the best character and anatomy."
"You must be very careful though that you do not fall into the trap
of selecting dogs on the bases of performance only. You may have two
dogs, one has the best genes for working but has a very bad trainer,
the other one may have very bad genes for working but has a very
excellent trainer. Which one gets the highest points?"
RC:
"The second one."
WM: "Of course. So the second
dog comes into the breed and the better dog is gone. This is a
mistake that we must be aware of. The breed is built from good
genes, not from good training."
At
this point other people arrived for a visit. We walked outside and
were greeted by the newest generation of Wienerau puppies. "This is
my next Sieger," Mr. Martin said jovially, pointing to a large
three-month old male puppy with a very large head and heavy bone,
and of course , the typical Wienerau color.
The
puppy looked at me with a very intense, curious stare. Behind that
typical innocent pair of raised eyebrows I could see that oblivious
attitude of all dogs:
completely unaware of their worth and their importance. A thought
came to mind If these dogs knew the royal position they enjoy as
leaders of the breed worldwide, would they act any differently than
any other dog in the world? The answer came loud and clear and
synthesized probably the bests impression I retain from the entire
experience: Why should they? The Martin family surely doesn’t seem
to be affected by it.
Driving out of the kennel I turned and passed through the front
gate. A very old and very small metal sign about 6" x 12" hung from
the gate. It read: "Zwinger von der Wienerau." Such an
understatement of greatness made me realize what true breeders are
all about: Not ostentatious display, but great love for the breed,
great loyalty to their friends, and great pride in work well done.