Looking For A Stud In Florida I'm Looking For A Stud For My Female Dog ,she's 5 Pounds ,i'm Looking For A Stud In The 4 Pound Or Less ,i Only Gonna Due This Only Once And Then I Gonna Spay Her . |
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A small male will also not assure small puppies and will not assure small adult Yorkies. The smaller the adult Yorkie 4 lbs and under the greater the risk that he has health problems that could be passed on to progeny. I have seen a 4 1/2lb male bred to a 6 lb female produce 7 and 8 lbs full size puppies. The best service you could do to the breed and your nice little pet is to spay her . |
I Know LORRAINE you are right ,i been struggling w/ this since i got her . I totally adore my dog ,she is my baby ,i don't want to make any money on this i just want her to have a baby and i will keep the baby or babies .I LOVE The breed i would love to have a house full of babies ,i know that's crazy. I will love to have babies in my house ,see then born ,but at the same time i think what would happend if something go wrong ,what i would do and then i change my mind . Is been 3 years and i'm still undecided . If i will breed her i will find someone that have the experience that i don't have but at the same time i don't want her to stay in the stud house. You see i'm very confuse ,but thank's for reply |
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Have you considered artificial insemenation? Becuase most stud dogs will not mate outside their environment and the bitch can become aggressive on her turf~ I have a stud and he absolutely will not "do the deed" in her domain. He gets too distracted and just wants to pee on everything. If you did not want to board her with the male at his home, then artificial may suit you. But I would suggest that if your only breeding to have more dogs in the house, then you should have her spayed and purchase another. There are many babies in search of homes out there and I am sure they would love it~:) |
I have a 4.5 pound male AKC registered and current on all shots. I'm looking to stud him out. Kiley |
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Actually Liver shunt gene can be carried but not exhibited in a parent. When bred to another carrier, you can get liver shunt in a puppy or more of them in a litter. You won't know if you dog is a carrier unless they produce an LS puppy. So what a reputable breeder does is make sure they know all the dogs/bitches and the kennels they are from for many generations back in the pedigree and then it is far less likely their dog they are wanting to breed won't produce it. Even then it is not idiot proof but the breeder will be responsible for that puppy should it survive. Legge-Perthes either is exhibited or isn't there is no test for it. If your dog you want to breed doesn't have it again, they can be a carrier and when bred to another carrier, they have the potential to produce a puppy with it. I know of a breeder who had two Legge Perthes pups in a litter. That's a lot of bucks required for surgery on both those pups. The disease does not show up usually until 5 -7 months of age. Eye diseases can be tested for however, usually it cannot be confirmed until 4 years of age. Again, you have to know the pedigree your dog came from and if there were any back in the pedigree that had any of the genetic eye diseases. It is, in my opinion I huge responsibility to breed whether it is for show rings or just to keep some pups yourself. The heartbreak of losing your girl, losing a puppy, dealing with liver shunt, Legge-Perthes, early blindness in a puppy is not worth the risk especially when you can buy a healthy puppy from a reputable breeder that knows what they are doing knows their lines and will stand behind their guarantees. |
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