Suzanne,
I can image what a day you've had. It's really hard to convince the uninformed and ill-advised that what they have may be questionable. It all goes back to framing what a wolfdog really is and sticking to that. This is what has not been done as far as I can tell so even long pedigrees can produce the less than ideal image of a wolfdog. I can tell you about breeder 'Y' out of North Carolina. This breeder will breed two wolfdogs and out of the litter will have some that are sold as 50%, some that are sold as 90%. Is this a lie? On paper it is a lie but genetically, it is very feasible to get a pup out of moderate percent animals that just happened to pick up a majority of the wolf genes from its parents. Then you have breeder 'Z' that produces the paperwork 75% that have a neglible amount of wolf, genetically. Its a catch-22. You can go by pedigree and risk the really 'doggy' animals being defined as wolfdogs because they have the paperwork. I'm not saying that pedigree and content don't go hand in hand but I am still a firm believer that until the 'wolfdog' is clearly defined and the genetic base that will be used for the wolfdog is clearly defined, you'll continue to have this same problem no matter what registry it is.