Comparison
of Ethical Breeders and Back Yard Breeders
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A
COMPARISON OF:
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Traits
of Responsible Breeders
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Traits
of Backyard Breeders
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| "Into"
Dogs (shows, training, clubs, etc.) |
Not
"into" dogs (has "pets"
around the house) |
| Belongs
to dog clubs and organizations |
Is
not involved in the "dog world" |
| Proves
quality of dogs and suitability for breeding by
competing for titles and certificates in
conformation, obedience, agility, field trialing,
Schutzhund, herding, tracking, earthdog trials,
etc. |
Quality
of dogs is almost always substandard, however,
he does not test his dogs in shows or trials
(Dogs are just pets or "breeding
machines") |
| Pups'
pedigrees are filled with dogs who have obtained
show titles/working certificates; never breeds
dogs without "papers" |
Pedigrees
mostly a list of pets bred by backyard breeders;
pups may not even have "papers"; may
be mongrels (Cockapoos, etc.) |
| Supports
rescue groups; knows his actions inevitably play
some part in pet overpopulation and euthanasia
(one of every four dogs in shelters is
purebred). Even with all his efforts to stem
over- population, he knows "cracks"
will lead to canine deaths |
Honestly
believes that because he places/sells all his
pups, he does not contribute in any way to the
needless slaughter of millions of dogs per year
in shelters (Does not see his role in his pups
making pups and them making more pups and so on) |
| Knowledgeable
in every facet of breed, including that of
health issues/defects; researches genetics when
choosing mates |
Not
particularly educated about breed, often not
aware of his own breed's genetic defects; does
not consider mate's genetics |
| Knowledgeable
about house breaking, training, socializing,
breeding, health; constantly reads dog-related
materials |
Has
own ideas which may not coincide with
professionals' opinions; won't bother to read
any of the hundreds of dog books available |
| Can
and will help and educate puppy buyers re these
issues |
Says
"Goodbye" and "Good luck" |
| Willing
to give you his references |
Has
no references |
| Knows
his puppies' ancestry |
Knows
nothing about the other dogs on puppies'
pedigrees |
| Follows
up on puppies' well-being; collects health
information affecting his dogs |
Does
not concern himself with the puppies' well-being
or how puppies' health affects his breeding
"plan" |
| Breeds
to improve his own dogs, his bloodlines and the
breed |
Breeds
just to breed or make money or see his
"great dog" procreate |
| Rarely
breeds as he does not use dog breeding as a
business and strives for quality, not quantity |
Breeds
regularly if for money or if puppy mill; if for
ego, breeds once in awhile, or "just
once" before neutering or spaying |
| Rarely
repeats a breeding |
Often
repeats breedings, mainly those that are cheap
and convenient. |
| Breeds
only dogs which meet breed standard |
Dogs
used for breeding rarely meet breed standard |
| Breeds
only dogs with stable temperaments |
Breeds
shy/aggressive dogs with poor temperaments |
| Breeds
only dogs over 2 years old, and a limited number
of times |
Breeds
dogs at almost any age, and any number of times |
| Mate
choice could be anywhere in the country (almost
never breeds his own males to his own females) |
Mate
choice is that which is convenient, cheap, local
(very often owns both sire and dam) |
| Does
all genetic testing and will provide proof; does
not breed animals with genetic defects or which
are carriers of defects |
Does
no genetic testing; ignorantly breeds defective
animals or those which are carriers, thus,
perpetuating disease in breed |
| Puppies
are sold from waiting list created before
breeding even takes place |
Puppies
are sold after birth in the local newspaper,
first-come, first-served |
| Pet-quality
pups generally cost $500-600+ (show-quality
costs more) |
All
pups are pet-quality and are relatively cheap,
usually $200-$400 |
| Puppies
are sold with health guarantees |
Puppies
are sold with no guarantee |
| Puppies
are sold with contracts |
No
contracts; does not care what you do with
puppies |
| Requires
pups back if new homes don't work out |
Says
"Find them good homes" |
| Dogs
on property are friendly, socialized, trained |
Dogs
on property may be aggressive or shy, and
untrained |
| Does
not own more dogs than he has room, time or
money for; Dogs are groomed, exercised, healthy,
happy |
Puppy
mills are overloaded, "warehoused"
dogs are not groomed or exercised, don't look
healthy or happy |
| Will
show you pups' parents if available, or if not,
will have pictures |
Might
have to "lock up" pups' aggressive or
shy parents (dogs that should never have been
bred) |
| Raises
puppies indoors |
Raises
puppies outdoors |
| Stays
home to care for puppies |
Dam
and pups are alone for long hours |
| Feeds
only premium dog food |
Feeds
cheap, grocery store dog food (containing 4D
meat/chemicals) |
| Visitors
remove shoes and wash hands to prevent spread of
parvo virus |
Has
no understanding and takes no precautions to
prevent puppy-killer disease |
| Keeps
pups with mom and litter a minimum of 49 days to
ensure sibling socialization and important
lessons from pups' mother |
Doesn't
know leaving litter earlier can cause lifelong
temperament problems or staying too long can
hurt bonding with humans |
| Socializes
pups by systematically handling them and
exposing them to various noises, children and
other animals before sending them to new homes |
Does
not understand or want to be troubled with any
kind of training; just tries to keep puppies
quiet and contained until sold |
| Tests
pups to match their temperaments and drives with
buyers' personalities and lifestyles |
Knows
nothing about puppy-testing or matching puppies
with buyers; allows buyers to pick the
"cutest" one |
| Can
honestly evaluate pups' quality |
Says
all pups are high quality |
| Never
sells to "impulse" buyers |
Is
not concerned about buyers being prepared for
pups |
| Never
sells two pups at the same time to a novice |
Would
consider this killing two birds with one sale |
| Interviews
prospective buyers, checks home and references,
refuses to sell to substandard homes |
Sells
first-come, first-served to whomever has the
cash; does not find out which homes are
substandard |
| Wants
to meet whole family; won't sell if children are
abusive |
Does
not consider anything past obtaining the funds |
| Sells
only to buyers with disposable income (AKC
reports it costs $1327 per year to properly care
for a dog) |
Is
not concerned whether or not buyers can afford
to properly care for pups |
| Waits
for buyers who offer lifelong homes (Knows that
only 30 percent of all dogs stay in one home
throughout their lives) |
Does
not reject high-risk buyers: (renters, young
people, those with poor track records, low
income, other pets, dogs kept outdoors) |
| Understands
dogs are "pack" animals; sells pets
only to buyers wanting to make pup an indoor dog
and part of the family |
Doesn't
care if pups live as outdoor dogs or chained
dogs, being unhappy or anxious being isolated
and separated from "packs" |
| Sells
only to buyers who make pup's safety a priority |
Does
not consider pups' best interests |
| Encourages
or requires buyers to spay/neuter pet-quality
pups |
Encourages
buyers to breed, regardless of quality |
| Encourages
buyers to train pups; refers to good trainer |
Shows
no concern for pups after sale; knows no
trainers |
| Makes
sure buyers understand pup's considerable need
for time, attention, exercise and training |
Does
not provide even his own dogs with enough time,
attention, exercise or training |
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Responsible
Breeders Improve the Breed
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Backyard
Breeders Damage the Breed
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USE
THIS GUIDE TO OBTAIN A QUALITY PUPPY FROM A RESPONSIBLE
BREEDER
And
be aware that dogs are not "things." They are
living creatures who, by no choice of their own, are
totally dependent upon us - and are at our mercy - for
their very survival, not to mention quality of life. As
pack animals, their mental health is dependent upon
being with their pack. That may be other animals, or it
may be us. It is very cruel to leave a dog alone all
day. Dogs need a lot of attention. They need regular,
systematic aerobic exercise for at least 20-30 minutes,
at least 3-4 times a week, just to be healthy. Few dogs
get the exercise they need for good physical and mental
health. Lack of exercise is the number one reason, (then
lack of training), that dogs become mischievous and
burdensome, and are then blamed, then dumped, and too
often, killed. ("A tired dog is a good dog.")
Having a yard is not sufficient. Dogs do not exercise
themselves unless chasing something along the fence
line, and that, in and of itself, is a problem. To make
good pets, they need training. And most importantly, to
be safe pets, they need early socialization. Lack of
socialization the first 4-6 months of a dog's life
creates shy dogs, which too-often become fear-biters,
which, along with those who were simply born with poor
temperaments, are responsible for the majority of the
4.7 million dog bites annually. (Sixty percent of
victims are children; Half of all kids 12 and under have
been bitten by a dog; Every day more than 900 people are
hospitalized with dog bites; Every year 25 people are
killed by dogs.)
If
you can not be a responsible dog owner, please wait
until you can be.
And
please don't breed out of greed or ego or for any reason
other than to improve the breed (i.e., to make the
puppies better than their parents). Most purebred dogs,
and of course, all mixed-breed dogs, should not be bred.
The majority of dogs have some defect (in structure,
temperament, health) that should not be perpetuated.
Dogs used for breeding should be free of all defects -
that's the definition of quality. ("Papers"
mean nothing; They are simply, and nothing more than,
birth certificates. Plenty of dogs have
"papers," but are so poorly bred they actually
look like mutts.) And no human should ever breed any dog
without veterinary/laboratory testing and pedigree
research to be sure that dog is free of (and not a
carrier of) genetic defects. FAILURE TO TEST/SEARCH FOR
INHERITABLE HEALTH PROBLEMS IS THE NUMBER ONE MARK OF A
BACKYARD BREEDER. IT IS ALSO THE MOST DAMAGING TO
CANINES, AND THE MOST HEARTBREAKING TO PUPPY-BUYERS, WHO
END UP WITH YET ANOTHER GENERATION OF POOR-QUALITY DOGS
WHO TOO OFTEN DEVELOP EXPENSIVE, EARLY HEALTH PROBLEMS
AND OFTEN DIE PREMATURELY.
We
have a severe pet-overpopulation crisis in the US; We
slaughter thousands of beautiful, vital, healthy dogs
every single day. (Twenty-five percent of shelter dogs
are purebred.) Every puppy produced by a backyard
breeder and placed in a home takes the place of one
killed in a shelter because no one adopted it. And every
puppy produced by a backyard breeder can make more
puppies, and those puppies can make more puppies and so
on. (And of course, backyard breeders, through their
encouragement and the dispersal of misinformation, have
a knack for turning uneducated buyers into yet more
backyard breeders.) There just are not enough homes (not
to mention "good" homes) available for all
these puppies. No matter how hard one tries, only 30
percent of all dogs (and their pups and their pups and
so on) live their entire lives in the home to which they
went after weaning. Seventy percent will be given away
or abandoned or dumped along the way for one reason or
another. (Common excuses are, "We didn't have time
for him," "He was too much trouble,"
"He kept jumping on us," "He bit my
child," "We couldn't afford him,"
"We had to move." None of these were good
homes to begin with. The buyers failed to socialize or
train, or they lacked time, money or commitment. Again,
there just are not enough "good" homes for all
the puppies born.) Why not leave breeding dogs to those
with the ability and desire and quality animals to do so
at a "professional" level?
If
everyone bred only dogs with excellent conformation, and
stable, correct temperaments, working titles and clean
health, we would have top-quality dogs in this country.
Get your dog evaluated by judges and trainers. If he
meets breed standard, and is healthy, and has the
correct temperament and drives, show him, work him, and
get him titled. If you feel you have what it takes to be
a "professional" breeder, educate yourself,
and with enough experience in dogs, maybe you, too,
could make a positive contribution to your breed. But if
your dog's only credentials are that it is a great pet,
then love it, socialize it, train it, exercise it, give
it the best in feed, comfort and veterinary care, but
for it's own good (including better health - ask your
vet!), and for the sake of puppy-buyers, society, and
all canines, get it spayed or neutered.
Resist
the Greed; Don't Support Backyard Breeders, and
Certainly Don't Become One.
Copyright
© 1999 Victoria Rose, PO Box 4816, Auburn, CA 95604; ifind@foothill.net
Proud mom of the beautiful Dobermann Calidancer V
Teraden, CD, OA, AD, OAC, OGC, NJC, RS-N, GS-N, JS-N,
CGC (As a pup she cost $900. She is trained in
obedience, agility, personal protection, wheelchair
assistance and tricks...And she is spayed.) |
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