How to Kill a Shelter Dog
It’s really simple: Buying from an irresponsible breeder. I need you to hear this: If you buy from an irresponsible breeder, you are killing shelter dogs. Yes YOU.
What’s an irresponsible breeder? Any breeder that does not breed as a caretaker and devotee of her particular breed, as shown by showing, performance events, health testing, and being involved in a community of her peers.
Where do you find irresponsible breeders? Flea markets, swap meets, newspaper ads, your own neighborhood and generic sites on the Web that list a bunch of breeders on the same page. They’re the person at your office that let his girl dog get pregnant. with out knowing the health of the dogs. They’re the friend of a friend who bred their dogs “just once.” They’re your cousin who thinks she can make some money by breeding their dog to another registered dog. They’re the people with the plastic sign at the end of their driveway: “Reg Dog For Sale $250.” Some of them even have gorgeous websites and professionally produced graphics; many of them are wonderful people, members of churches, clean housekeepers. They don’t look like puppy mills or evil people. But hear this: I don’t care if the breeder is your best friend and you think her dog is just awesome and your kids love the puppies when you came over to see the litter.
If their are not a responsible breeder, walk away! Go visit any vet’s office and ask to see the big bottle of Euthanol and take a good hard look at it, then go to your shelter and pick out the six dogs that are going to get that needle because your friend bred their dog.
Learn to recognize the birdcall of the irresponsible breeder: “We focus on breeding happy, healthy pets.” “You don’t need a show breeder; you just want a pet.” “We don’t want our dogs ruined by the stresses of the show ring.” “I am going to breed her once and only once, just so I can keep a puppy.” “This mix offers the best of both worlds-the nonshedding poodle and the easy-going Lab” (or insert the two or three breeds of your choice). “Our pets are our babies-we breed only for temperament.” “Mom and dad vet-checked.” “Champion lines.”"Family-raised adorable pets.”
Learn to recognize the website of the irresponsible breeder: Dogs pictured lying down or playing. Males and females are called “mommies” and “daddies.” Puppies are often shown with props, or with hats on, or on a satin background. A special place in hell is waiting for those websites that show all the breeding females obviously pregnant or lactating (because, presumably, they are never NOT pregnant or lactating). There are no show pictures (where the dogs are “stacked” foursquare) or groomed pictures. The dogs have no achievements aside from looking cute. There’s usually a focus on external qualities: the biggest puppy, the smallest puppy, particular (often “rare”) colors, desirable hair textures or lengths.
So how does your purchase kill a shelter dog? Buying from an irresponsible breeder does several things: one, you’re buying a dog that you could have adopted instead. Irresponsible breeders don’t offer you anything that you can’t find at a shelter;
they do not breed only the best to the best; they don’t warranty health or temperament; they don’t test and prove their dogs to demonstrate that their breeding stock looks, acts, or performs the way that breed should. So they are competing
directly with the shelters in terms of putting dogs into people’s arms, and when people can buy a puppy instead of adopting an older dog, they virtually always do so.
Second, irresponsible breeders don’t just produce the puppy you brought home. That was one of a litter of perhaps six or eight. You gave them a pretty BIG CHECK for almost no work on their part, so they’ll do it again. Maybe they’ll get a couple more bitches and make it a part-time job. So yeah, you may take this dog home and love it and never give it up, but your purchase encouraged the breeder to make thirty or forty or fifty more dogs. Can you guarantee that they all ended up in good homes? Can you be sure that they didn’t end up in shelters? The purebred dogs in shelters are the result of irresponsible breeders-yup, the same one you just handed a check to. It’s as simple as that.
Irresponsible breeders are going to keep on breeding until they cannot sell puppies. The market must end. That’s why it’s YOUR responsibility, not just theirs. The first time they have a litter of seven dogs who are all still chewing on kitchen cabinets at age one, having consumed several thousand dollars worth of food; the first time they have to raise an entire litter of dogs until the patellas start to fail on all the dogs; the first time they get some of the pain and none of the dollars, they’ll reconsider doing this again. Until then, they will keep making puppies.
So what now?
There are exactly two main ways to obtain a puppy or dog: adopt from a rescue, shelter, or pound; and buy from a responsible breeder who SHOWS (or perforance events) their dogs, who HEALTH TESTS (not just a “vet checks”), who INTERVIEWS YOU and who has standards for where they places their puppies-which means they may tell you no-who REQUIRES A WRITTEN CONTRACT including a puppy-BACK CLAUSE so your dog (pet) never ends up in a shelter or
rescue, and who is open to PEER REVIEW and a member in good standing in her community (as shown by participation in a club or recommendations from other good breeders in the area). These are the qualities that set her apart as a responsible breeder, and they’re what keep your purchased puppy from adding to the statistics of homeless dogs.
Help save a dog today by adopting or recuing one from a kill shelter.
This was writen by a friend of Compact Staffords and we share some of the same view on this topic.
Thank you and God Bless
February 2nd, 2009 at 2:26 pm
The one thing I really admire about you, is you don’t mince words or sugar coat.
I’m still appalled in our 3rd year of the Ontario Pit bull Ban when people approach me and giving me the thumbs up of Shasta (my APBT) wearing her service vest and muzzle which I applied a service dog patch to. Probably to my knowledge, the only certified service dog in Ontario.
They start conversations with me telling me they have 3 males and ask me if she’s fixed.
I can feel the hair at the back of my head rise and the anger in me fill up. In every thing that I do, my main concern is Shasta and no mistakes being taken. We know that a slight mistake could mean her life and I live in fear every time a new neighbour moves in next door on either side.
Back to these people that are still backyard breeding dispite the ban, though I don’t believe in backyard breeders in any case.
I ask these people why would they be taking such a risk with their dogs? How if they don’t get caught, anyone that buys one of their pups are at risk of having those pups murdered because the Pit bull breeds must be grandfathered and you can’t grandfather an illegal pup. What chance does that pup have as sooner or later the pup will be found out and killed.
The shelter, rescues and fosters are already full and costly trying to care for all the dogs they already have.
Who in their right mind would deliberately still breed with such a price hanging over the dogs head, meaning it’s life, not money.
Greed is the key and love is missing. The guy says, ‘Pit bulls are cool dogs man!’ They look at me as being a freak for following laws. They don’t even muzzle their dogs as they say, ‘No way man! My dogs hate those things!
Surprise! Surprise, but so does Shasta and I, but Shasta is resigned knowing it’s part of going outside in public and I’m fighting to change the law, but until then, the muzzle stays on.
I’m not a breeder and the reason I would want any dog is to be a part of my family. Both my rescued cat and Shasta and all previous fur-kids I’ve had have all been fixed around 6 months of age. Not because of law, but because I don’t want to add more population to the animal world nor take the risk of health problems arising for my pets. That’s my responsibility as a responsible owner.
August 6th, 2009 at 8:28 am
This is my first time on your blog.
i visited your blog because it came to me from a friend of mine.
The qaulity of the some of posts on this site is simply amazing.
I’ll be waiting and looking for furture great posts and more.
June 29th, 2010 at 5:56 pm
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