Copyright
© 1999 Victoria Rose, PO Box 4816, Auburn, CA 95604; [email protected]Proud
mom of the beautiful Doberman Calidancer V Teraden, CD, OA, AD, OAC, OGC,
NJC, RS-N, GS-N, JS-N, CGC (As a pup she cost $900. She is trained in obedience,
agility, personal protection, wheelchair assistance and tricks...And she
is spayed.) Document may be reproduced in its entirety (not in sections),
as long as the author is credited.
And be aware that dogs are not "things." They
are living creatures who, by no choice of their own, are totally dependent
upon us - and are at our mercy - for their very survival, not to mention
quality of life. As pack animals, their mental health is dependent upon
being with their pack. That may be other animals, or it may be us. It is
very cruel to leave a dog alone all day. Dogs need a lot of attention.
They need regular, systematic aerobic exercise for at least 20-30 minutes,
at least 3-4 times a week, just to be healthy. Few dogs get the exercise
they need for good physical and mental health.
Lack of exercise is the number one reason, (then
lack of training), that dogs become mischievous and burdensome, and are
then blamed, then dumped, and too often, killed. ("A tired dog is a good
dog.") Having a yard is not sufficient. Dogs do not exercise themselves
unless chasing something along the fence line, and that, in and of itself,
is a problem. To make good pets, they need training. And most importantly,
to be safe pets, they need early socialization. Lack of socialization the
first 4-6 months of a dog's life creates shy dogs, which too-often become
fear-biters, which, along with those who were simply born with poor temperaments,
are responsible for the majority of the 4.7 million dog bites annually.
(Sixty percent of victims are children; Half of all kids 12 and under have
been bitten by a dog; Every day more than 900 people are hospitalized with
dog bites; Every year 25 people are killed by dogs.)
If
you can not be a responsible dog owner, please wait until you can be.
And please don't breed out of greed or ego or
for any reason other than to improve the breed (i.e., to make the puppies
better than their parents). Most purebred dogs, and of course, all mixed-breed
dogs, should not be bred. The majority of dogs have some defect (in structure,
temperament, health) that should not be perpetuated. Dogs used for breeding
should be free of all defects - that's the definition of quality. ("Papers"
mean nothing; They are simply, and nothing more than, birth certificates.
Plenty of dogs have "papers," but are so poorly bred they actually look
like mutts.) And no human should ever breed any dog without veterinary/laboratory
testing and pedigree research to be sure that dog is free of (and not a
carrier of) genetic defects.
FAILURE TO TEST/SEARCH FOR INHERITABLE HEALTH
PROBLEMS IS THE NUMBER ONE MARK OF A BACKYARD BREEDER. IT IS ALSO THE MOST
DAMAGING TO CANINES, AND THE MOST HEARTBREAKING TO PUPPY-BUYERS, WHO END
UP WITH YET ANOTHER GENERATION OF POOR-QUALITY DOGS WHO TOO OFTEN DEVELOP
EXPENSIVE, EARLY HEALTH PROBLEMS AND OFTEN DIE PREMATURELY.
We have a severe pet-overpopulation crisis in
the US; We slaughter thousands of beautiful, vital, healthy dogs every
single day. (Twenty-five percent of shelter dogs are purebred.) Every puppy
produced by a backyard breeder and placed in a home takes the place of
one killed in a shelter because no one adopted it. And every puppy produced
by a backyard breeder can make more puppies, and those puppies can make
more puppies and so on. (And of course, backyard breeders, through their
encouragement and the dispersal of misinformation, have a knack for turning
uneducated buyers into yet more backyard breeders.) There just are not
enough homes (not to mention "good" homes) available for all these puppies.
No matter how hard one tries, only 30 percent of all dogs (and their pups
and their pups and so on) live their entire lives in the home to which
they went after weaning. Seventy percent will be given away or abandoned
or dumped along the way for one reason or another. (Common excuses are,
"We didn't have time for him," "He was too much trouble," "He kept jumping
on us," "He bit my child," "We couldn't afford him," "We had to move."
None of these were good homes to begin with. The buyers failed to socialize
or train, or they lacked time, money or commitment. Again, there just are
not enough "good" homes for all the puppies born.) Why not leave breeding
dogs to those with the ability and desire and qualityanimals to do so at
a "professional" level?
If everyone bred only dogs with excellent conformation,
and stable, correct temperaments, working titles and clean health, we would
have top-quality dogs in this country. Get your dog evaluated by judges
and trainers. If he meets breed standard, and is healthy, and has the correct
temperament and drives, show him, work him, and get him titled. If you
feel you have what it takes to be a "professional" breeder, educate yourself,
and with enough experience in dogs, maybe you, too, could make a positive
contribution to your breed. But if your dog's only credentials are that
it is a great pet, then love it, socialize it, train it, exercise it, give
it the best in feed, comfort and veterinary care, but for it's own good
(including better health - ask your vet!), and for the sake of puppy-buyers,
society, and all canines, get it spayed or neutered.