INTERVIEW WITH FRAN LASS



Printed with permission of Great Dane Review -- October 2008

MN: Do you feel that the breed today is in better
or worse shape than when you first started?

FL: I believe it's about the same -- there are different
types and styles that come and go each year but overall
in health and conformation I think it's about the same.
We have better ways to treat and diagnose health
problems today -- and are working on genetic markers.
When I first started in Danes, hip dysplasia, and bloat
were the biggest problems and they still are, even with
the advent of OFA screening and all the research into
bloat.

MN: Thank you for your time

FL: Your welcome, it was fun.

FL: I would like to say Thank You to those people
who have bought my puppies, or bred to my stud dogs,
without all of you none of what I have accomplished
would have ever been possible.

I appreciate those who have dogs who were never
shown as well as those who did show their dogs, in the
end it's the care and the home that matters. Also, my
thanks to those stud dog owners who have allowed me
to use their dogs and incorporate their lines into mine ...
and to the people who sold me dogs and trusted me
with their puppies.

We all need to remember those who came before us
and created the background of what we have today --
without them we'd have nothing -- it really does "take a
village".

Many thanks go out to both Fran and Michelle for
taking the time to do this interview for us.
Great Dane Review

Michelle Neff had graciously provided us with an
interview with respected Breeder Fran Lass

Fran with 7 week old Rocket

MN: Where did you grow up? Did you have dogs
as a child?

FL: I was born and raised in Golden, Colorado. Our
only family dog was a boxer named BUMPS …..

MN: Do you have any children?

FL: I have one son who is 44 years old. He has
chocolate labs that he uses for hunting, but they are also
house dogs -- that he learned from mom….

MN: When did you get your first Great Dane?

FL: 1965 … Found an ad in the local paper. $50 sell
or swap. Went to see puppies, and only the fawn father
was on the premises -- they gave us some phony
excuse about where the mother was …. said they
would forward AKC papers ….. Uh huh …… never
saw them -- but for $50 what did I expect???

This dog grew up to be 95 lbs full grown, had a pointy
head, no mask, and about 29 inches tall at the shoulder.
He had a lot of black overlay, and he ended up with an
eye disease called Pannus which a lot of German
Shepherds have I was told, so we suspect his mom was
a shepherd ….....

After attending a local dog show I noticed my dog
didn't look like the dogs in the ring-- hummm says I,
perhaps I should do some research. One day in 1968,
upon arriving home from work, I found a lovely 4 mo
old fawn girl from von Riesenhof breeding laying under
my kitchen table with a big red bow around her neck --
a gift from my now ex-husband. LOL ......... oh what
he started …..!!

Ch. Lagarada's Cover Girl, ROM
MN: Have you always handled your own dogs or did
you start out using a handler?

FL: We in Colorado in the 60's and 70's were all novices
-- we had nobody to teach us so we all showed our own
dogs -- we stumbled through it and got better at it as time
went on.

MN: Over the years, which dogs have been your top
producers and or winners?

FL: My top producers:

Ch. Sunnyside Lagarada Timber -- sire of 8 champions

BISS Ch. Lagarada's Megan, ROM -- dam of 9
champions

Ch. Lagarada's Cover Girl, ROM -- dam of 9 champions

BISS Ch. Lagarada Rocwind XXIV Gold, ROM, HOF
-- dam of 10 champions -- GDCA 2001,2002 Top
Brood Bitch

BIS-BISS AKC / BIS - BISS Can. Ch. Lagarada Reach
For the Starz, CGC, ROM -- 2002 GDCA Top 20
winner -- sire of 33 champions (18 AKC)

Ch. Lagarada's Timberline Gold, ROM -- sire of 34
champions overall, 22 AKC

BISS AKC / UKC / Int'l Ch. Lagarada's Aspen Gold,
ROM, HOF-- sire of 47 champions overall, 30 AKC --
Also GDCA 2005 Top Stud Dog , GDCA 2006 --
winner of Stud Dog Class, and GDCA 2007 -- sire of
Top 20 winner.

My top show dogs: (not necessarily better then the
others, but they liked to show)

Kara, Travis's mom was a group winner and always fun to
show.

Rocket is probably the best known show dog - Cindy
Kelly and Amy Thurow were his handlers. Cindy showed
him for almost 4 years and won the GDCA Top 20 with
him.

AKC BIS - BISS / CAN. BIS - BISS Ch.
Lagarada Reach for the Starz, ROM, CGC
My favorite dogs to live with:

My boys: Mac, Cache, Deke, Timber and Travis.
My girls: Megan, Cege, Phoebe, Cinders, Passion,
Mora

MN: How many champions have you bred /
owned?

FL: To date I have personally bred or co-bred 44
champions, and finished 2 more that I bought.

MN: How many years were you in the breed
before you finished your first champion?

FL: 20! …………. My first champion was a bitch
named Sadie. Ch. Lagarada's Mercedes O'Lorcain (she
was a Von Raseac / Hauerdane combination). She
finished in 1985.


AKC BIS - BISS / CAN. BIS - BISS Ch.
Lagarada Reach for the Starz, ROM, CGC
MN: What dogs are you showing now that you
feel are as good or better as the dogs you
mentioned?

FL: My Mora, BISS AKC / UKC / Int'l Ch. Lagarada's
Forever More and her son, Lagarada Windy Hill's
Mystery Man.

MN: Any other exciting accomplishments ?

FL: I was GDCA Breeder of the year in 2001. In
2002, a dog I bred and sold to Mr. Ozeki in Japan,
became the #1 All Breed Dog, he was Japanese BIS -
BISS Ch. Lagarada's Special Agent Mulder

Ch. Sunnyside Lagarada Timber
I think we know more about heart disease, addisons,
and things like that now because of medical advances,
but I believe many of the previous dogs who died
probably had those things and there was no way to
test for it.

AKC BISS / UKC / Int'l Ch. Lagarada's
Forever More
MN: Over the years you have co-owned and co-
bred with others. What advice could you offer to
someone considering this?

FL: Know your co-owners well, and always use a
contract. Even contracts mean little or nothing in
matters of disputes -- it's a matter of honor.

AKC BISS / UKC / Int'l Ch. Lagarada's Aspen Gold,
ROM, HOF
BISS Ch. Lagarada Rocwind XXIV Karat Gold,
ROM, HOF -- (Travis Mom)

MN: Who were your mentor's in the beginning?

FL: Hazel Gregory and Brucie Mitchell were the
breeders I got to know. Both ladies judged here in
Colorado and sat for hours talking to us after the shows
-- we were all so new and green we listened for hours
and asked so many questions I'm sure both ladies were
pretty sick of us -- but we did learn a lot from both of
them. Hazel told us there would be many 5 year
wonders along the way, and sure enough I've known
many …. and I was bound and determined I wasn't
going to be one ….

MN: What is the best piece of advice you could
give someone just starting out in Danes?

FL: Research pedigrees, look at photos, find the color,
the type of dog you want . Then talk to breeders and
find someone willing to stick with you and help you as
you go along. Always buy the best you can, don't go
with a bargain with poor structure or a poor pedigree
and think you can build on it.

A bitch will be the foundation of a breeding program so
do not cut costs on getting a good one, and don't be in
a hurry … So what if you have to wait a couple of
years to get the breeding combination you want -- in
the end that wait will pay off.

MN: Do you have any plans in the future to apply
for your judge's license?

FL: I have had my paperwork almost ready for some
time (almost is the opportune word).
I would very much like to judge the GDCA Futurity, I
would consider that an honor.

MN: Do you think our current health testing is
benefiting our breed?

FL: I think we need to take advantage of any health
testing that is offered.

I know some think it's only good on the day it is done,
and I have had vets tell me that, but when it's all we
have, then I think we must do it. Then if something
comes up that you tested negative for, at least you tried.

MN: It's a known fact you are against mixed
color breeding. Will you tell us why?

FL: The fawn / brindle breedings that have been done
with blacks have produced some very nice blacks to
continue on with, and actually today some of them are
better than the fawns and brindles, however, now that
there is a good base I do not see the need to continue
on mixing the colors. And: The mixing of fawns /
brindles with blacks means eventually there won't be
any color pure fawns and brindles.
Do we want that to happen?

MN: What do you think is the main conformation
problem with our breed?

FL: I'm concerned about both fronts and rears in our
breed, we see so many in the ring that have no
extension and end up pounding themselves with their up
and down motion. Croups at the wrong angle have
been a problem ever since I can remember, and there
are a lot of under or over angulated rears, some dogs
kick out a back leg to the side when moving, but none
of that is anything new to anybody.
We have a great variation in our breed, everybody
seems to interpret the standard to fit the dogs they have
at home.

MN: Anything non-conformation / standard
related?

FL: I do not like the loss of a black mask on the fawns
and brindles that I am seeing. The classic look of a
fawn and brindle to me is that full black mask extending
almost to or past the eyes.

Another increasing problem is the amount of eye
conditions that exist today, involving cataracts,
eyelashes, eyelids, nictating membranes covering too
much of the eyes, etc. Somehow we have to get a hold
of this not just for show / breeding reasons -- we do
have a pet population out there who would like to have
some healthy dogs that can see properly.

We also seem to be having an epidemic of sterility /
poor semen quality in stud dogs across the country for
some reason, and this could lead to the downfall of our
breed. I've had it happen to my own dogs and I have
no idea why.

And just as a side note: I wish the parent club would
go back to the old drawings of the standard.
Those were ideal.

Lagarada Windy Hill's Mystery Man
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