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Old 05-19-2008, 03:19 PM   #25
Marc
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: canada
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ellie May View Post
I am not a breeder but I am a Yorkie owner.

There are certain things I look for in a "breeder".
The way I look at it is this.
There are good breeders and there are not good breeders (mills, backyard...).
"Breeders" are the ones who will do health screening on their dogs, sell them at the right time, not breed more than two or three kinds of dogs, have sanitary living conditions for the animals (and I prefer this is in the breeder's house, not a kennel), provide at least a one year health guarantee, reserve the right of first refusal if the pup needs to be rehomed... The part that does get fuzzy with even good breeders is how much testing should be done. I prefer that the pup is more expensive and more tests are run on the parents then selling a cheap Yorkie who has a bigger chance of being diseased.

As long as you are doing your research and planning to health screen and put the money into it AND your dogs are standard with healthy lines, I don't think there is any reason someone should tell you not to breed. After all, if you reserve the right of first refusal your pups will never contribute to the number of homeless pets. They will always have a home with you if they need one.

Puppy mills and backyard breeders are the opposite of what I'd call a breeder.
The dogs live in unsanitary conditions.
They aren't health screened.
The pups are sold way too young.
You can take the pup to the pound if you get tired of it.
They don't care about bettering the breed.

That is my two cents.
Very good post.

And yet when I was looking for a Yorkie...I drove down to the only breeder in my province that I could find. I was very dissapointed because there was just too many there and I couldn't see how someone could love and care properly for them all. Turned me off and made me think this particular breeder was only in it for the cash. So, I looked elsewhere. Ended up MORE happy with the lady who breed her pet that she loves dearly and the pups were well taken care of and so was mom.

Saying the "backyard breeder" doesn't care about better breeding is, in my opinion, a very unfair thing to say. I love my one yorkie just as much as a breeder loves her 10 yorkies and care greatly about who she would be bred with and the health of each one of them.
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