Tag: whippet breeding

  • Happy Birthday to My Sister, the Artist Behind the Lens

    Happy Birthday to My Sister, the Artist Behind the Lens

    September 16, 2025

    My sister Lennah turns 61 this year, so you get the gooey happy birthday blog.

    Young Lennah showing one of our first Siberian Huskies in the early 1970s – where it all began

    From Cats to Whippets: A Journey of 45 Years

    Lennah was seven when we started breeding and showing dogs. Our parents made a rule that we could each have a dog of our own at eight. Lennah chose a cat. But at sixteen, she found the most cat-like breed she could, and now everyone has whippets.

    Her first whippet was Seville—small, not the “best” show dog by conventional standards, but she ran like the wind and had beautiful babies and grandbabies who carried on that same spirit. Lennah named her original kennel Seville because, well, that’s what we all did in the 80s. She now has Winquest Whippets (you’ve met two of them: Smudge and Fuega), and while not a pedigree with any Seville dogs in the background, the Winquest whippets are very much based on the same style and the same kennels. The further back you go in the pedigrees, the more alike the breeding becomes.

    She has stayed true to what she believes, and in 2019, she achieved something remarkable: she won Winners Dog over the largest male entry ever at a National Specialty (at that time) with Ryder, Smudge’s dad. As nice as the Winners Dog ribbon was, it was the Best Bred By Exhibitor award that meant the most to her—recognition that she hadn’t just shown a great dog, but had bred one.

    The moment that mattered most: Lennah (in red, circled) watching Ryder win Winners Dog at the 2019 American Whippet Club National Specialty (Most recent picture I actually have of my sister.)

    She has stepped back from breeding whippets recently to concentrate on her business and help our 81-year-old Mom with the heritage breed American Foxhounds. Mom can still plan breedings and work with the dogs, but Lennah does much of the footwork and showing now.

    The Eye Behind the Camera

    What is Lennah’s business, you ask? She captures the moments that matter most in the dog world. She takes win photos at dog shows, in-ring candids, and creates stunning animal portraits when time allows. This isn’t just someone with a camera—this is a woman who brings together 54 years of family experience in breeding and showing dogs, 45 years as a whippet breeder, and at least 35 years behind a camera.

    She has owned her own photography business, either in partnership or as a sole proprietor, for 25-30 years. This is expertise you can’t fake or fast-track. When you’re working with Lennah, you’re working with someone who understands the split-second timing of a perfect stack, who knows which angle captures a dog’s true character, and who can spot the exact moment when everything comes together for that winning shot.

    Visit photosbylennah.com or contact her at photosbylennah@gmail.com to capture your own special moments.

    Professional win photography by Lennah: capturing the achievement and the artistry of the sport. The beautiful wooden trophy and the sign board were crafted by Rex Cowan of Sarkanys Rising.

    Our Partnership: Art Meets Achievement

    Lennah isn’t just my sister—she’s been Sarkanys Rising’s biggest supporter from the beginning. As trophy chairman and show organizer for the Heart of America Cluster and various American Whippet Club events, she commissioned us for trophies that would be worthy of the achievements they celebrated.

    We started with “I Love My Dog” pens for specialty entries, then created custom resin and wood lamps for regionals. Eventually, we were crafting pens for breed trophies across all four days of the Heart of America/Leavenworth Kennel Clubs cluster in Kansas City each March. During our toughest years, Lennah saw our potential and helped make it reality.

    The evolution of our craft: different styles of resin and wood lamps we created for American Whippet Club Regional Specialty Commission

    The Person Behind the Professional

    Here’s something non-dog-related and more personal about my sister: she often forgets how old she is because she starts adding years by October. Since this makes me older too, I usually correct her. She’s only 5 feet tall, and you’ll recognize her by the fact that she makes clothing last forever—getting things tailored to her frame is too much trouble.

    She works incredibly hard, and like many second-generation dog people, it’s in her blood to the point where it becomes her life. She has a BA in history and maintains a clear-eyed view of today’s world. She lives with our Mom and struggles with seasonal affective disorder, but her dedication never wavers.

    We aren’t getting younger, but our shared history makes us exceptionally good at what we do. She has been my best friend and my worst enemy at different points in my lifetime. Most importantly, I love her very much and wish her the happiest of birthdays.


    If you’re looking for someone who truly understands dogs and can capture their beauty, character, and your achievements together, reach out to Photos by Lennah. You’ll find not just a photographer, but an artist who’s spent a lifetime in this world.

    Photos by Lennah, LLC
    📧 photosbylennah@gmail.com
    🌐 photosbylennah.com

  • From Baby to Mama (and Back Again)

    When Our Tiny Whippet Became a Mom: Fuega’s Surprise Litter

    At about 15 months old, Fuega had a surprise for us. Actually, she had several surprises—four of them, to be exact. And if you think a tiny tornado is impressive, wait until you see a tiny tornado who’s also a new mom.

    The Surprise We Didn’t See Coming

    We’ll be honest—we weren’t planning on puppies. Fuega was still so small, still our baby in many ways, and we’d been focused on getting her to a stable weight before considering spaying. At barely 17.5 inches tall and fluctuating in that 17-20 pound range, the idea of her becoming a mama seemed like something for the distant future, if at all.

    Smudge, our other whippet, had different ideas entirely.

    The pregnancy itself was as dramatic as everything else Fuega does. Remember how she approaches life with maximum enthusiasm and minimum planning? Motherhood was no exception. One day she was our tiny tornado, the next day she was our tiny tornado who was clearly expecting and had very definite opinions about how this whole thing should go.

    The Smallest Mama with the Biggest Heart

    Watching Fuega navigate pregnancy was like watching someone try to carry six suitcases while riding a unicycle. Physically, it should have been impossible. This little girl who struggled to maintain 20 pounds was suddenly responsible for growing four puppies while still being, essentially, a puppy herself.

    But if there’s one thing we’ve learned about Fuega, it’s that she doesn’t let physics or logic interfere with her plans. She approached pregnancy the same way she approached everything else—with complete confidence and the assumption that she could figure it out as she went along.

    Her appetite finally stabilized (pregnancy will do that), and for the first time since we’d brought her home, we stopped worrying about her weight dropping below 17 pounds. She had work to do, and Fuega has always been excellent at focusing on the task at hand.

    Four Little Tornadoes

    When the puppies arrived, it was like watching magic happen. Here was our tiny girl, who just months before had been the baby of the family, suddenly transformed into the most attentive, protective mama you could imagine. The strategic limping disappeared entirely—she had real responsibilities now.

    Six perfect little whippet puppies, each one a tiny miracle and each one clearly inheriting their mama’s (and daddy’s) personality from day one. They were active from the start, already showing signs of the “run first, think later” approach to life that makes Fuega who she is.

    For several months, our workshop took on a whole different energy. Instead of one tiny tornado, we had five. Instead of Rex having one devoted shadow, he had a whole parade following him around. The puppies learned the sounds of the shop, the rhythm of the workday, and the art of strategic positioning for maximum treat potential.

    March Departures and Mixed Emotions

    From mid-February through March the puppies left for their forever homes. Each one had found their perfect family, just like Fuega had found us that day in Missouri. It was bittersweet in the way these things always are—pride in knowing they were ready for their own adventures, sadness in seeing our extended pack get smaller.

    Fuega handled the transition with typical grace, which is to say she threw herself back into being our devoted shop dog with renewed energy. If she missed her babies, she channeled that into being even more attentive to Rex, even more present in the workshop, even more committed to her role as the heart of Sarkanys Rising.

    Back to Being Our Tiny Tornado

    Today, as I write this, Fuega is getting ready to turn two on September 24th. She’s back to her familiar weight fluctuations (17 to 20 pounds, depending on whether running or eating won the day), back to her strategic limping when treats are involved, and back to sleeping on Rex’s side of the bed with her blanket arranged just so.

    Motherhood changed her in subtle ways. She’s a little more confident, a little more settled in her role as shop dog extraordinaire. But she’s still the same girl who chose Rex that day in Missouri, still the same tiny tornado who approaches life with maximum enthusiasm and minimum caution.

    The one thing that hasn’t changed? Her intelligence. That strategic limp is back in full force, deployed with even more precision than before. We’re onto her game, though. In fact, we’re hoping that if she ever decides to give up the act entirely, we might just take her coursing—let her use those sighthound instincts for what they were bred to do.

    Imagine Fuega, all 17.5 inches of her, chasing a lure across an open field at full speed. No doggie doors to navigate, no furniture to avoid, just pure whippet joy in motion. Of course, first we’d need her to admit that both legs work perfectly fine, which might be the biggest challenge yet.

    Still Choosing Us Every Day

    Looking at Fuega now—seasoned shop dog, former mama, eternal tiny tornado—it’s clear that some things never change. She still chooses Rex every morning when she wakes up. She still treats the workshop as her kingdom. She still believes that enthusiasm can overcome physics, and honestly, she’s usually right.

    She’ll always be the little girl who walked straight to Rex and decided he belonged to her. Motherhood was just one more adventure in a life that’s been full of them from the very beginning. And knowing Fuega, there are plenty more adventures ahead.

    That’s our Fuega—tiny in stature, enormous in personality, and proof that sometimes the smallest tornadoes leave the biggest impact on your heart. Thanks for following her story with us.


    Whether you found us through the woodworking or stayed for the whippet tales, we’re grateful you’re part of the Sarkanys Rising family. Every piece we create and every story we share is better because you’re here to experience it with us.