Quote:
Originally Posted by onelovelylynn WOW,
dId you not see pics of her before you bought her??? I thought breeders and show people were very carefull in the pickings of there stock!!
Poor little thing having to travel all that distance twice, whats the poor dog to think???
Maybe next time you will "look" before you buy and this wont happen again...
Sorry for being so "ruff" on you, but come on people these are living, breathing, warm hearted, loving animals that you are just tossing around.
Gets my FUR to flying!!!!!!!! |
I understand your concern and it took me a while to decide, so she was not just tossed around.

I thought she was right for my breeding program but it turned out that there was a big misunderstanding. I did see pictures of her. What I was told did not match what I had gotten. Her face is pretty straight but from mid-abdomen her hair was kinky, like a poodles. When you brush it out, it looked like a crimpy puff. I really liked her personality and even took her to the groomers to see what could be done because the previous owners told me that she just didn't let them brush her out

. As soon as I picked her up I knew I could not breed her with the AKC standard specifically saying "not wavy". I thought about it for a few days and had to do what was right for the both of us. Someone out there would fall in love with her but she is a pet quality Yorkie. It would have been very wrong for me to breed her and I bought her as a female to have as a loving pet and to breed. I love all my doggies very much! I feel bad she had to go back but your concern in my situation is in vein.
A bad person would have bred her out of standard,

and used her AKC Papers and would have added another bad line of Yorkies to the breed, not me. I explained to the previous owner that she should be let go as a pet only and she should not go with breeding rights. I really believe she had a poodle mix in her somewhere in her lines.
Sugar's Mom knows my situation as I was discussing my plans and excitment with her...
I am still in the process of purchasing a new grown female (and not that I didn't before) but have done much more research and checked for more pictures, plus have a copy of her pedigree already. So, I learned my own lesson in this situation.