LUANDA Rhodesian Ridgebacks
  • Home
  • Our ridgebacks
  • PUPPIES
  • Breeding
    • P-litter 2026P-litter 2026
      • P litter pedigree
    • O litter 2026O litter 2026
      • O -litter pedigree
    • N litter 2025
      • N -litter pedigree
    • M - litter 2024
      • M - litter pedigree 2024
    • L- litter 2023
      • L litter pedigree 2023
    • K - litter 2022
      • K -litter pedigree
  • My articles, seminars, and projects
    • Health & genetics articles
    • Breeders articles
    • Seminars
  • Milada Krchnava - FCI judge
  • Contact
  • Photos
  • P litter pedigree

Latest up-date:

  • P - litter 2026 Daisy x Draco

    DOB 22.04.2026 - 12 puppies - 7boys/ 5girls from which 2girls have liver noses On 22 April at...

  • O - litter 2026 -Rainy x Kita

    03. April 2026 - EASTERN PUPPIES 15 (10/5) Early in the morning, at 3:40 a.m., Rainy delivered her...

  • Top quality kennel: what really defines quality in breeding

    In purebred dog breeding, the term top quality kennel is used often. Much less often, however, is...

  • P litter pedigree

    Pedigree P litter 2026 - Daisy x Draco Ch PLDante Go for Gold Cieply Dom { ChScene Stealer Of...

  • Factors That Influence the Price of a Puppy

    The price of a puppy is one of the questions almost every breeder is asked. At first glance, the...

  • GDPR - personal data protection

    Personal data procesing policyPuppy applicants / waiting list 1. Data Controller The controller...

  • How to recognise a responsible breeder and avoid puppy sellers or backyard breeders

    RESPONSIBLE BREEDER

  • Qestions for a new RR puppy owner

    How to get on a LUANDA puppywaiting list? As a serious breeder I always like to have some more...

Our Ridgebacks

  • Kilimanjaro Rain of Luanda
  • Just Like a Dream of Luanda
  • Hennessey Sunrise by Luanda
  • Maddison Sunlight of Luanda

Select your language

  • Slovenčina

Puppy info

Info for interested parties in puppy

Info for interested parties in puppy

If you are interested in a puppy from our kennel, we would be delighted if you first took the time to…

Qestions for a new RR puppy owner

Qestions for a new RR puppy owner

How to get on a LUANDA puppy waiting list ? As a serious breeder I always like to have some more information…

Factors That Influence the Price of a Puppy

Factors That Influence the Price of a Puppy

The price of a puppy is one of the questions almost every breeder is asked. At first glance, the price…

Top quality kennel: what really defines quality in…

Top quality kennel: what really defines quality in…

In purebred dog breeding, the term top quality kennel is used often. Much less often, however, is it…

GDPR - personal data protection

GDPR - personal data protection

Personal data procesing policyPuppy applicants / waiting list 1. Data Controller The controller of…

How to recognise a responsible breeder and avoid puppy…

How to recognise a responsible breeder and avoid puppy…

RESPONSIBLE BREEDER

PUPPIES

Info for interested parties in puppy

Info for interested parties in puppy

If you are interested in a puppy from our kennel, we would be delighted if you first took the time to read our original articles and information pages, where you can learn more about our breeding philosophy as well as this wonderful breed. If you have a serious interest in one of our puppies, we kindly ask you to complete our questionnaire.

Read more: Info for interested parties in puppy
Qestions for a new RR puppy owner

Qestions for a new RR puppy owner

  • ridgeback puppy

How to get on a LUANDA puppy waiting list ? As a serious breeder I always like to have some more information about the potentional new LUANDA puppy owner.
It is an introduction questionaire of you and your family. Your answers help to understand me what puppy you are looking for.

Read more: Qestions for a new RR puppy owner
GDPR - personal data protection
The protection of your personal data is important to us. In this article, you will find clear information about what personal data we process, why we process it, how we handle it, and what rights you have in relation to its protection.

GDPR - personal data protection

Personal data procesing policy
Puppy applicants / waiting list

1. Data Controller

The controller of your personal data is Milada Krchňavá – LUANDA Rhodesian Ridgebacks
Address: Žlkovce 116, 920 42, Slovakia

Read more: GDPR - personal data protection
Factors That Influence the Price of a Puppy

Factors That Influence the Price of a Puppy

The price of a puppy is one of the questions almost every breeder is asked. At first glance, the price may seem high, because many people only see the last few weeks of the puppy’s life with its mother. They see a small puppy, a bowl, a blanket, the first vaccination, and the moment it leaves for its new home.

Read more: Factors That Influence the Price of a Puppy
How to recognise a responsible breeder and avoid puppy sellers or backyard breeders

How to recognise a responsible breeder and avoid puppy sellers or backyard breeders

RESPONSIBLE BREEDER

Read more: How to recognise a responsible breeder and avoid puppy sellers or backyard breeders
Top quality kennel: what really defines quality in breeding
In purebred dog breeding, the phrase top quality kennel is used often, yet far less often is it properly defined. Real excellence is not measured by a single title, one successful litter, or momentary visibility. It is seen in the consistency of the results, the quality of the decisions behind them, the standard of the dogs produced, and the ability to maintain that level over time. In the end, the true strength of a breeding programme is revealed not by how loudly it presents itself, but by what it consistently produces.

Top quality kennel: what really defines quality in breeding

In purebred dog breeding, the term top quality kennel is used often. Much less often, however, is it clearly explained.

The standard of a breeding programme is not defined by a single title, one successful litter, or short-term popularity. It is not created by presentation alone. Quality is recognised in other ways — through results, continuity, the standard of breeding decisions, and the ability to produce dogs that hold their value not only in the moment, but over time.

Breeding of this standard is never accidental. It is built through long-term selection, informed judgement, discipline, and a willingness to take responsibility for every aspect of the work.

Quality is not measured by the number of litters

One of the most common mistakes in assessing a breeding programme is to judge it by the number of litters produced, the number of puppies bred, or the number of titles won, without looking closely at the actual quality that comes from it.

Numbers alone say very little. A larger number of litters does not automatically mean a higher standard. In the same way, a long list of titles does not necessarily reflect the real strength of a breeding programme.

What matters is not how much has been bred, but the level the offspring consistently achieve over time. The real difference lies in the ability to produce dogs of exceptional type, health, soundness, temperament, and show or breeding potential — not once, but repeatedly.

Peak quality in individual dogs

Every strong breeding programme produces exceptional individuals. Dogs and bitches that represent a high standard and are capable of holding their own in serious competition. They are often the first clear sign that the results are not simply fortunate, but the outcome of a carefully built programme.

Peak quality in an individual dog shows itself on several levels at once — in breed type, conformation, movement, balance, expression, proper sex type, temperament, and in the ability to succeed under different judges and in different countries.

Even the greatest success of a single dog, however, does not by itself define an exceptional breeding programme. It is an important sign, but not the final proof.

A breeding signature is seen in repetition

A high standard becomes meaningful only when quality does not begin and end with one name. The most highly regarded breeding programmes are those that can confirm their level across multiple litters, multiple generations, and multiple dogs.

That is the essential difference between a great result and a great breeding programme.

One star may come from one outstanding mating. Repeated production of quality points to something else entirely — the ability to read pedigrees, understand type, work intelligently with lines, recognise strengths and weaknesses, and build on sound foundations over time.

This is where a breeder’s real signature begins to show.

The ratio of quality to quantity

One of the clearest indicators is the ratio of quality to quantity.

In other words: how many genuinely exceptional individuals have been produced in relation to the number of litters and the number of puppies bred?

This says a great deal about the effectiveness of a breeding programme. One breeder may have a large output, yet only a small proportion of genuinely outstanding individuals. Another may produce fewer litters, yet a remarkably high proportion of puppies carrying quality, breed type, and strong potential.

This is where the difference becomes clear between a programme that is merely active and one that is genuinely selective.

Health is fundamental

No breeding programme can be considered exceptional if its results rest on conformation alone. Show success may be impressive, but without responsibility for health it remains incomplete.

Quality breeding must be built on health, knowledge of hereditary risk, systematic testing, and sensible mate selection. Openness matters as well — the ability to communicate what is important, not only what appears attractive.

Health and genetic transparency remain among the clearest hallmarks of serious breeding. They show that the breeder knows their lines and makes decisions on the basis of facts rather than impressions.

Living conditions and the condition of the dogs

The standard of a breeding programme is revealed not only by pedigrees, titles, and results, but also by the condition the dogs are kept in and the environment in which they live.

A high standard is visible in dogs and bitches that are in excellent physical condition, well-muscled, properly nourished, with good coats, natural vitality, and an overall impression of health, balance, and wellbeing. Good condition is never incidental. It reflects daily care, an appropriate routine, proper exercise, sound nutrition, and an overall responsible approach to the dogs.

Equally important is the environment in which adult dogs live and in which puppies are raised. The quality of a breeding programme is not visible only when a litter is on the ground. It is visible in everyday reality.

For puppies, environment has a major influence on early development, socialisation, and mental stability. For adult dogs, living conditions say a great deal about whether they are maintained to a high standard not only during shows, breeding plans, and public presentation, but throughout their lives.

A well-run breeding programme is therefore recognised not only by the standard of care given to puppies, but by the standard applied to every dog within it.

Type, soundness, and temperament

Quality breeding does not produce merely eye-catching dogs. It produces dogs that are correct.

That means individuals which respect the breed standard, carry the hallmarks of the breed, retain proper sex type, anatomical soundness, harmonious construction, and natural movement. They are not exaggerated, and they are not the product of fashion at any cost.

Temperament is equally important. A quality dog must be mentally stable, readable, and able to function well in everyday life. Beauty without balance is not enough.

High quality must always be complete.

The ability to assess quality honestly

One of the clearest signs of a seriously conducted breeding programme is the ability to assess the quality of one’s own litter accurately and honestly.

Not every puppy has the same potential. Not every puppy is show quality. Not every puppy is a breeding prospect. And not every puppy is standard without reservation.

An experienced breeder is not recognised by describing an entire litter as show quality. They are recognised by the ability to evaluate each puppy objectively, describe its quality without embellishment, and place it responsibly in the right home.

That ability reflects experience, perspective, and integrity.

Continuity, influence, and ethics

One successful season may be exceptional. Lasting quality, however, is recognised only when it endures.

Continuity means that a breeding programme maintains a high standard over the years, even through generational change. Influence on the breed is reflected in the fact that its signature can be seen in later generations, in other breeding programmes, in exports, and in descendants that succeed beyond the home kennel.

Then there is the final essential layer — ethics. How matings are chosen. How puppies are raised. How homes are selected. And how the breeder stands behind their dogs even after they have left for their new homes.

A breeding programme run to this standard does not produce only quality dogs. It builds trust.

What defines a top quality kennel?

A top quality kennel is not defined by a single title, a single year, or one successful dog. It is defined by a combination of qualities that, taken together, create the full picture:

  • peak quality in individual dogs,
  • the ability to repeat quality across multiple generations,
  • a strong ratio of quality to quantity,
  • health and genetic transparency,
  • the quality of living conditions and the physical condition of the dogs,
  • respect for breed type and functional soundness,
  • stable temperament in the offspring,
  • honest assessment of puppy quality,
  • long-term continuity,
  • genuine influence on the breed,
  • ethical and responsible breeding practice.

Conclusion

An exceptional breeding programme is not one that is merely visible. It is one that is evident.

Not one that simply produces many litters, but one that creates value from them.

Not one that succeeds once, but one that can confirm its standard again and again.

Not one that speaks about quality, but one in which quality is reflected in the results, the decisions, the health, the type, the temperament, the daily life of the dogs, and the passing of time.

The real quality of breeding is visible not only in the show ring, but in the way the dogs live.

And that is where the difference lies between good breeding and breeding of exceptional standard.

    • Prihlásiť
  • +421907447787
  • lady@lady-ridgeback.sk
Copyright © 2002-2026 Milada Krchňavá - LUANDA Rhodesian Ridgebacks
LUANDA Rhodesian Ridgebacks
  • Home
  • Our ridgebacks
  • PUPPIES
  • Breeding
  • My articles, seminars, and projects
  • Milada Krchnava - FCI judge
  • Contact
  • Photos
  • P litter pedigree
  • +421907447787
  • lady@lady-ridgeback.sk