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Originally Posted by Borinal We had NO intention of breeding her. It has nothing to do with a perfect breeding dog. If you are selling it as breeding stock I would expect it to be a good representation of the breed. We stated in the ad that she needed to be spayed as a requirement. Did any of you even read that ad? The honesty is more than likely the reason that we have had ZERO interest in her so far.
Everyone here seriously needs to quit twisting things around.
We were not even shipped the dog that we adopted. Nothing else here is at question or matters. It's a general agreement that is NOT the dog in the pictures and the disposition is FAR from what was discussed. How hard is this to wrap your heads around? It would not be in any other situation. This was a business transaction we beat around the bush and make every life out to be so precious and etc but the bottom line is that if we can't accept the reality of things none of you would have a dog to begin with unless it was given to you. But this is all beside the point, we were scammed, emma's life is not in danger with us or the breeder so get over it. We are doing everything that we can to find her a good placement. Handing her over to rescue is not going to happen. I highly doubt that given the circumstance any of you would actually do it and you can't expect us to. |
This may be part of the problem; you believe that because someone is selling a dog as breeding stock, you expect it to be a good representation of the breed. Nothing could be further from the truth. Dogs sold with breeding rights are usually the poorest representations! I always suggest that buyer only buy from breeders who offer limited registration, and that means no breeding rights. You are much more likely to get an excellent example of the breed.