If someone called your house over this thread, that's super creepy. Although, if you do post your number publicly then you do open yourself up.
I'd like to comment since Fran says it's ok and its her thread:
First off, when you play god with the genetics of another species, then it's your responsibility to do things to the absolute best of your ability and it is MY opinion that you are not doing that.
In my opinion, every decision to put two animals together to breed should be carefully researched on every level: structurally, genetically, and regarding also temperment/working ability of the parents.
For example, if you put two dogs together who have the same physical flaw, you cannot improve on type. If you are not well schooled in structure, you cannot make that type of decision.
The only way to be well schooled in structure is to compare your dog to other dogs by showing or some other type of venue.
Do you see what I am saying or am I wasting my breath? If YOU are playing GOD with the genetics of another species it is YOUR JOB to make sure that you are making the best decision possible.
Being willfully ignorant of these things is no excuse.
AND, as to your hypoallergenic idea, if you breed a breed that sheds (spaniels) to a breed that doesn't (poodle) you have great chance that the puppies will shed because they are not pure bred, so that shoots down your premise for breeding totally.
You don't have to have a doctorate in animal genetics to figure that out, and as long as you've been breeding, surely you've at least seen with your own eyes that many of your puppies shed.
According to that logic, you argued yourself out of a reason to breed mutts.
Also, maybe you don't know this, but the health of a litter depends on the individual genetics of the parents being thrown together. So, if you have a cockapoo with a heart defect that you don't know about, and you breed her to a dog that has a genetic carrier for the same defect, your puppies though they are "hybrids" could be born with holes in their hearts.
Good breeders have cardiograms done on the dogs they are breeding. They have their hips and their knees xrayed. They are tested for genetic markers which would indicate that they are carriers for diseases such as Addisons, PHPT, and Von Willebrands.
If you do not do these things, then you are not giving your litters a fighting chance. Just to be clear, I do not know the diseases that plague both spaniels and poodles. BUT, if I was going to combine them, I would know that like the back of my hand.
Do you see how that works? Say you have a poodle with bad knees or hips and you breed it to a spaniel with bad hips or knees, regardless of whether the puppies are mutts or not they will be born with bad hips or knees.
It seems to me that you have not given your breeding program very much thought from the arguments which you have presented.
Just to reiterate, you could be the nicest person in the world. I do not know you personally, and the only thing I can base this post from is your previous post.
However, just because you are nice does not mean that you know how to breed dogs. Even these family "hybrids" that you are bringing into the world deserve as much of a shot as any purebred litter.
You may not agree with me, and that's ok. But I hope that when you read this that it stays with you every time that you bring another litter into the world.