I can not take credit for the
following. It came through on an email list that I am on and I thought it
raised some very valid points. I, personally, have not experienced very many of
the things mentioned but know of people who have.
I also can not give credit to the
author as I do not know who they are.
But PLEASE, before you
decide to breed your bitch, do read this.
SO YOU WANT TO BE A
BREEDER?
So you
want to breed your female. You know what to expect if everything goes
right. your little girl will present you with tiny bundles of joy. She will
lovingly nurse them and care for them until they are old enough to be weaned.
You and your family will find
great joy in watching and playing with these little dolls, and then when the
time is right they will all (or maybe you keep just one) go off to special homes
to live out their lives as cherished companions. But have you given
consideration to what if something goes wrong? I have listed here a few of the
problems that I myself have personal knowledge of.
Everything listed
has happened either to me or someone I know. These are not isolated incidents.
I'm sure other breeders could add miles to my list. Learn by others mistakes!
Let the breeding up to those who know what they are doing, have the experience
and know what to expect.
What
if during the breeding............
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You pay the $1,000 stud
fee up front figuring you will make that and more back when the pups sell. The
breeder guarantees the stud service to work or you can come back again. After
2 months you discover it didn't work and now must wait another 4 months to try
again. Of course it doesn't work again, so in another 4 months you take your
bitch to another male and risk losing another stud fee.
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What if
during the birth..............
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The first puppy is large and
breech. When it starts coming your female starts screaming, and before you can
stop her she reaches around, grabs the puppy in her teeth and yanks it out
killing it instantly.
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A puppy is coming out breech
and dry (the water sack that protects them has burst). It gets stuck. Mom
tries to help it out by clamping her teeth over one of the back legs. The head
and shoulders are firmly caught. Mom pulls on the leg, hard, peeling the
flesh from the leg and leaving a wiggling stump of bone.
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What is
directly after birth.........
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Or, she pulls on the cords so
hard she disembowels the puppies as they are born and you have a box full of
tiny, kicking babies with a tangle of guts the size of a walnut hanging from
their stomachs. Of course all the babies must be put to sleep.
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What if
when you think you are in the clear..................
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Your female develops a
uterine infection from a retained placenta. Her temperature soars to 105. You
race her to the vet, he determines she must be spayed. He does the spay in an
attempt to save her life, you pay the hundreds of dollars bill. The infection
has gone into her blood stream. The infected milk kills all the puppies and
the bitch succumbs a day later.
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What if she constantly growls, for no apparent
reason, and this necessitates taking 4 - 5 weeks off work, without pay, to be
with her, just in case, until the pups are weaned.
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Mom and pups seem fine, the
puppies are four weeks old and are at their cutest. However, one day one of
the puppies disappears. You search everywhere but you can't find it. A few
days later another puppy is gone. And another. You can't figure how on earth
the puppies are getting out of their safe 4' x 4' puppy pen. Finally there is
only one puppy left. The next morning you find the mother chomping contentedly
on what is left of the last murdered puppy.
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What if
the new homes are not so happy?............
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You sell a puppy to a friend
(you give them a good price and payments). They make a couple of tiny
payments. Six months later they move to an apartment. They ask you to take it
back. You take it back and of course the payments stop. The dog they returned
is so shy, and ill mannered from lack of socialization and training it takes
you a year of work providing socializing and training to be able to give it
away.
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You sell a puppy to a
wonderful home. They love her like one of the family. At a vet check done by
their vet it is determined that the puppy has a heart murmur. (Your vet found
nothing when he checked the puppy before it was sold.) They love their puppy
and want the best for her. They have an expensive surgery done. The puppy is
fine. They sue you for the medical costs. They win, because you did not have a
contract stipulating conditions of guarantee and so as breeder you are
responsible for the puppy's genetic health.
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The
Sale:...................
So you
gotta ask yourself:
Do I
feel lucky?
Well,
do ya, "breeder" ?
Author Unknown
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