Gaylan’s is a kennel dedicated to the multi-purpose golden retriever. Since the purchase of our first golden in 1979, our goal has been the pursuit of the ideal golden–beautiful, companion hunters who are able and willing to succeed in all aspects of golden activities. Although we focus on breeding well-structured, handsome goldens who can work in the field, the result are dogs that can also excel in obedience, agility, tracking, therapy, search and rescue, service work, rally and more.
We are a small kennel with a limited but well-planned breeding program, typically having 1 to 3 litters a year. This means that each breeding is of tremendous importance to us and that we concentrate our efforts into caring for and socializing our pups. We were honored by the AKC as a 2016 AKC Sport Breeder of the Year and are AKC Breeders of Merit.
Even with our limited breeding program, our dogs have competed successfully in conformation, field trials, obedience, hunt tests, tracking, agility, rally, nose work, barn hunt, coursing ability tests and more. Most of our competition dogs are titled in more than one venue. Over the years, we have produced and owned:
- Conformation. American and Canadian Champions, including a Canadian Group placer and an American Best in Specialty Sweepstakes winner
- Field Trials and Hunt Tests. Qualified All-Age, Master Amateur Hall of Fame, Master Hunters, Canadian Grand Master Hunters, Master National Qualifiers, numerous Senior and Junior Hunters, WCXs and WCs as well as many hunting companions.
- Obedience. 2020 AKC Breeder of the Year for Obedience, many Obedience Trial Champion and Canadian Grand Master Obedience Trial Champions, GRCA Obedience Dog Hall of Fame, numerous Obedience Masters and Utility Dog Excellent and High in Trial winners
- Tracking. Champion Trackers, Variable Surface Tracking, and Tracking Dog Excellent dogs
- Agility. AKC Breeder of the Year, two-time National Agility Champion, AKC Agility Grand Champions, and many Master Agility Champions and GRCA Agility Hall of Fame dogs
- Rally. AKC Breeder of the Year for Rally, AKC Rally National Champion, 3rd place winner at the AKC Rally National Championship, multiple Rally Champions, over a dozen dogs Rally Advanced Excellent (RAE) titles
- Versatility. Two dozen Gaylan’s dogs have been recognized by the Golden Retriever Club of America with the Versatility Certificate Excellent (VCX), indicating these dogs excel in conformation, field and performance events.
- Outstanding Sires and Dams. Over 15 Gaylan’s dogs have become GRCA Outstanding Dams and Sires.
- National Rankings. Many Gaylan’s dogs have been nationally ranked agility, obedience and rally.
Working dogs. Our dogs have also worked as search and rescue dogs, in the United States and Europe, and therapy dogs. We do not produce dogs for service dog work.
Increasingly, we use the hunting field–primarily through hunt tests but also through actual hunting–to evaluate the success of our breeding program. Unlike breeders who emphasize producing golden retrievers to be pets for the general public, we focus on producing dogs with the working abilities unique to the golden retriever as a hunting dog. We do this because it is these natural abilities that create the breed’s ideal temperament and structure. Remaining true to the breed’s original purpose will help us ensure we are breeding sound, healthy, athletic dogs with correct coat and conformation.
We fully and enthusiastically support our owners who compete in American field trials but we do not focus our breeding program on producing field trial competitors. Like the American conformation ring, we believe that field trial competitions have become quite extreme with excessively long marks and blinds. Since our emphasis is healthy, good-looking MODERATE dogs, we keep our sights on producing a majority of dogs that can attain Senior and Master Hunter titles rather than field trial dogs.
In recent years, we have primarily used the Canadian conformation ring and the GRCA’s Certificate of Conformation Assessment (CCA) to independently assess our dogs’ structure. From our perspective, the intense competition in the American conformation ring is rewarding extremes in type, particularly overdone coat, heavy substance, atypical heads and exaggerated, inefficient movement, rather than the moderation in working type called for by the American breed Standard. Gayle is proud to be one of the original creators of and an evaluator for the GRCA’s CCA program and we encourage our owners to enter their dogs in these unique events. We look forward to returning to the American breed ring in the future if and when it begins rewarding a moderate working retriever.
Because of our dual focus on both natural working ability and the conformation of a correct Golden, our breedings rotate between field and conformation dogs. As such, our breeding decisions may appear random to those viewers more familiar with breeders who specialize in one aspect of goldens. However, our decisions are anything but random as each follows our established criteria and contributes to our goal of producing a line of beautiful working dogs.
Breeding Criteria
Our Primary Goal: Longevity. The foundation of every decision we make is longevity; we simply do not accept that golden retrievers should live only 10 years. We begin by doing outcrosses, with Coefficients of Inbreeding (COIs) below 6.25% based on John Armstrong’s Poodle Longevity Study. We have also added Genetic Diversity Testing and matching through UC Davis’s Veterinary Genetics Lab and BetterBred.com to our selection process.
Although outcrosses increase the variability of structure and type found in our litters, we are willing to tolerate that as we seek long-lived dogs. We also seek out sires who themselves have lived till 8 and/or whose pedigree is filled with dogs who have lived 12, 13 or even 15 years. We might occasionally use a talented, younger sire with a special and long-lived pedigree. In all cases, we look for pedigrees where dogs have died of something other than cancer. These are hard to find in goldens but it remains our goal.
Our Secondary Goals: Temperament, Conformation, Working Ability and General Health. After longevity, we cannot and do not prioritize our remaining goals as each is equally important to us. In every litter, we seek to produce good tempered, nice looking, excellent working goldens with lifetime soundness and health.
Temperament. Second to longevity, we look for a true golden temperament. We take a broad view of golden temperament, looking beyond simply friendliness to dogs and people. We are specifically looking for self-confident dogs. These animals take life in stride, are stable when faced with most circumstances, and are comfortable with their position in the world. However, self-confident dogs are also those that believe in their own opinions and abilities. They are willing and able to make independent decisions so need owners who are able to handle and control these thinking dogs; these are not the dependent goldens who can only function in close proximity to their owners. Thus, self-confident dogs need clear training to ensure that their goals are also those of their owners. Exclusively using positive training methods rarely work optimally with these dogs.
After confidence, we are looking to produce the eager and alert golden retrievers called for in the Breed Standard. We do not seek to produce calm or laid back dogs. Eager goldens are those with “keen interest, intense desire, or impatient expectancy.” Alert dogs are “vigilantly attentive, watchful; mentally responsive and perceptive; and quick, brisk or lively in action.” Although many golden retriever breeders extol how calm and low key their dogs are, we do not believe these characteristics describe a proper golden retriever. Instead, we think goldens should be aware of their surroundings, ready to participate with their owners in a wide array of activities, and intense about their desire to retrieve, hunt and work. This also means that correct goldens are neither hyper nor frenzied. They have good off switches in the house as long as they get regular exercise, both mental and physical. But when it is time to work or play, they are ready, willing and able.
Although not explicitly stated in the Standard, we believe that the work of a hunting retriever requires dogs that are also intelligent, active, biddable and that have a strong desire to work side by side with their human partner.
The final component of temperament we demand is friendliness and reliability. We expect our dogs to accept polite, appropriate dogs of all ages and types and to be comfortable with men and women of all ages. However, we also expect our goldens to display normal dog behaviors of protecting themselves from attack, establishing pack hierarchy and seeking mates. Therefore, we are not concerned by unaggressive dominance displays among our dogs or the occasional growl over a juicy bone. We also expect our dogs to breed naturally and easily. We find all of these behaviors to be most appropriate to a correct golden retriever.
Conformation and Working Ability. After the foundation of longevity and temperament, we then look for sires that complement our dams by building on their strengths and correcting their weaknesses. We use conformation dogs to strengthen or solidify type and we use field dogs to strengthen or solidify working ability. Ideally we find dogs that have both exceptional structure and working ability but these are rare and must meet our criteria for longevity, temperament and health. We look beyond the dog himself, at the strengths and weaknesses of his pedigree. We know that some lines that meld well with our girls while others, despite how much we respect these dogs, simply do not. We make a concerted effort to meet each sire we use in person, ideally seeing them interact with other dogs and, if possible, working in the field.
Health. In addition to producing long-lived dogs, we have long focused on producing those with good health. However, the very nature of purebred dogs makes this a challenging venture. Because we have a limited gene pool and cannot cross into other breeds to move away from deleterious genes, purebred dog breeders have limited options as they seek to remove diseases from their breeding programs. Please read our Diseases page to understand the main health issues present in today’s golden retrievers, as well as our philosophy regarding breeding priorities and risks.
Breeding Goal
We do not breed for:
- 100-lb goldens or for 40-lb agility competitors. Our dogs range from 45 to 80 pounds with the average Gaylan’s dog, and our goal, being in the weights established in the Standard (link to the golden retriever standard page).
- big, blocky heads which look as much like that of a Great Pyrenees as a golden retriever. Check out this photo! It is NOT a golden retriever!! If this is what you are looking for, we’d recommend you look for a different breeder. Our dogs range in head types (example 1, example 2, example 3) but none would be described as blocky headed. So, if you have your heart set on these characteristics–very large or very small in body or head–it’s best to go to another breeder.
- Any specific shade of gold or an overly thick or long coat. We seek to breed dogs that carry a moderate, drip-dry golden coat in one of any of the correct colors for golden retrievers. We do not breed for color, such as English cream or American red goldens. Instead, we accept any color that meets the AKC Standard and our dogs range from very dark gold to very light. We very much feel that matching a puppy’s other characteristics, especially temperament and structure, to her family’s needs is FAR more important than her color so if color is your top priority, we recommend you go to another breeder.
Our ideal golden, the goal of our breeding program, is a dog of moderate size and substance that:
- meets the Standard regarding height and weight (55-65 pounds for bitches, 65-75 for dogs),
- who moves like the athlete that she or he is,
- is immediately identifiable as a golden retriever,
- has a lovely, correct head with a pleasant expression,
- is a moderately high energy dog that has the spunk to hunt wild pheasants, geese or ducks for a full day in the field but settles well in the house afterwards. (If you would describe your ideal golden as calm and low key requiring minimal exercise, it’s best if you look for a different breeder.),
- has the natural hunting abilities, biddability and intelligence to be trained to be a capable hunting dog (marking and handling) or to be shown in a variety of events by her experienced owner,
- loves the family’s children and tolerates dog-appropriate handling by them,
- gets along well with other dogs but who is not a total wimp, incapable of functioning as a normal dog,
- is healthy and sound, with no chronic illnesses of any kind, including allergies, hot spots and orthopedic problems,
- lives a long and healthy life as a beloved member of her family.
All of this means that our dogs fit well into active homes where they will have serious jobs and regular training and exercise. We seek hunting or competition performance homes for the vast majority of our puppies. A few pups each year may go to non-working pet homes but these are not your typical pet homes where the dog gets 15 minutes of walking a few times a day. Rather, they are homes where the dog is a respected working companion rather than a spoiled pet, homes where the dog participates in many if not most of the family’s activities, homes where training and working with the dog is a top priority. Our dogs are not appropriate for parents seeking primarily to teach their children about responsibility or those desiring to quiet their children’s’ pleas for a dog. We sell only to homes where the parents want the dog more than the children.
We seek to follow the GRCA Code of Ethics and the Golden Rule in our dealings with other golden retriever fanciers, our puppy buyers, and the general public. We do all we can to treat our buyers fairly and to use our interactions as a means to educate them and the general public about dog behavior, the responsibilities of dog ownership, and good animal husbandry.
We are very concerned about the problems facing purebred dogs in North America today: poor or aggressive temperaments; genetic diseases; general poor health; limited access to public places; and, increased legislative control, primarily at the local and state levels but more recently through the Federal government. We are saddened by the number of dogs euthanized in animal shelters each year because they are unable to find or keep a loving home so started Avidog International to reduce those numbers. We believe these problems are primarily the result of poor breeding practices and a general lack of understanding of dog behavior and training. Our concerns are reflected in the priority of our goals, requirements for our owners and other ventures: Avidog International and Canine Health Events.(link to both websites). Gayle also serves on the board of the Baker Institute for Animal Health at Cornell University.
Although we have nearly four decades of experience in breeding, training and showing golden retrievers, we are devoted to our own continuing education–as breeders, trainers, exhibitors, and owners. We do this through extensive reading of contemporary and historical literature on genetics, veterinary science, animal behavior, and dog and horse breeding, seminars, and discussions with veterinarians, scientists, professional dog trainers and handlers, and other members of the dog fancy. We also put into practice what we have learned by training and exhibiting our own dogs.
Thank you again for your interest in our breeding program. Since we offer only a limited number of puppies each year, we do recommend reserving a puppy in advance of the actual whelping. If you are still interested in a Gaylan’s puppy, please read carefully through our website and then contact us via e-mail.