What is a breeder?
Dixie and Rocket our golden.
How do you define a
‘Breeder’? A Breeder is a person for whom it is more important to perform a
specific breeding of one special ‘right’ dog to a bitch, rather than a person
who will breed any male of the same breed to their bitch in order to produce
puppies. A Breeder doesn't breed at a specific time of year for better puppy
sales. A Breeder breeds for him or her self, because they are breeding to an
ideal. A Breeder may hold onto the puppies for longer than 8 weeks so that they
are certain they have made the right ‘pick’ of which puppy to keep or to sell as
a show dog, and by definition as a breeding animal. A Breeder makes you
justify just why you think you deserve a puppy. A non-breeder, in the case of
the worst puppy mills, breeds any
dog which looks like it may belong to a certain breed to whatever specimen of
the same breed they can pick up. A non-breeder doesn't choose the ‘best’ male
for a given female.
A non-breeder ‘let’s nature take its course’ rather than doing everything within their power to ensure that the mother and father, and eventually the puppies, are healthy, so the breeding will be successful, that it won't seriously affect the health of the mother, and that the puppies will be robust and healthy. A Breeder will perform all necessary tests to ensure that the mother and father of a litter are genetically healthy, and free of inheritable diseases to the best of their ability to check. A breeder will only register puppies with the correct pedigree. A puppy mill will use any set of ‘papers’ they can get their hands on, and which may not actually be the true pedigrees of the sire and dam.
A Breeder will stay awake and with the litter for as many 24-hour days as are
necessary to insure that no puppy
is lost to ‘fading puppy syndrome’, or is squashed or misplaced by the new
mother. A non-breeder will ‘let nature take its course’ - again. A Breeder
will handle every puppy several times every day, and help supplement the puppies
feeding if necessary to save excessive drain on the dam. A Breeder will chart
daily weights on the puppies, and identify each puppy, in some way, so that they
can keep track of each puppy’s rate of gain, so a puppy which is falling behind
the others can be supplemented. A Breeder will give the expectant mother
Breyers or Blue Bell Ice Cream, or pickles and peanut butter, if they are
requested, and will sleep with her on their pillow, to reassure her she is
special. A Breeder will stay home from work for as many days as necessary, in
order to whelp the litter with the bitch and get the puppies off to a good
start. A Breeder will supply the mother with a whelping box which keeps the
mother and the puppies comfortable, and gives them a feeling of protection and
safety. If the bitch chooses, however, she is allowed to begin the whelping
process on the Breeder’s own bed, and to move to the whelping box once anxiety
cools and the bitch is ready to keep at her job in another location. A puppy
mill simply ‘harvests’ the puppies from the wire bottomed cages like rabbit
hutches when they appear to be about the age of consent for the airlines.
A Breeder will skillfully interview all applicants for adoption, and will provide the new puppy owners with a healthy, well adjusted, well vaccinated and wormed puppy. Breeding a litter and whelping and raising and placing puppies entails tremendous sustained effort, education, money and a good knowledge of applied genetics. It is anything but a casual undertaking. A breeding undertaken without this kind of effort may produce healthy, sound puppies, or it may not. One has no way of predicting, since the deck wasn't ‘loaded’ as good Breeders try to arrange it.
After selling the puppy, a good Breeder will follow up with all needed
assistance to the new owner. A Breeder will be prepared to take a puppy or
adult back into their own home if needed - for whatever reason. This means that
a good Breeder must be able to provide for an extra dog or two at a moments
notice, and inconvenience isn't an admissible complaint. A good Breeder
considers him or herself the "parent" of a puppy from birth to
grave. The responsibility for
bringing new puppies into the world includes making certain, to the extent
possible, that these puppies will go on to have happy lives, and never become
homeless. All contracts for puppy sales must include that any transfer should
occur through the breeder, or be approved by the breeder.
While ‘back yard breeders’ may not be guilty of the sins of puppy mills, neither are they, by definition, cognizant of the procedures and efforts necessary to earn the title ‘Breeder".