

I have had
a lot of people ask me what they should look for when buying a puppy, apart
from the puppy itself. I advise that they take their time first and
foremost, and thoroughly research their intended breed. The
next step should be to get to know the breeders.
The Internet is a wonderful invention and it should be used to your
advantage. Yes, by all means, call breeders and have a chat to them about
the breed, about what they have to offer, and the availability of puppies, but
please keep in mind, in the main breeders are very busy people and time is
precious. Not all breeders are willing to give up their time by being
tied to the phone answering a lot of questions. They do not intend to be
rude or off-putting, they genuinely do not have enough hours in a day to do all
that is expected of them. Hence, why the Internet is such a wonderful
invention because it allows you to communicate via email.
Emails are good, they give you the time to think about your questions and they
give the breeder the opportunity to answer your questions with just as much
thought and at a time suitable to them. Through emails, you can tell a
lot about how educated, informed, and knowledgeable a breeder is…just as the
breeder can tell so much about the buyer also.
In this day and age, there is seldom a business or hobby without a website and
dog breeders are no different. A website speaks volumes about the
breeder you may be choosing. Take
your time and take a look around, read all the breeder is offering in terms of
puppy sales. Remember, a genuinely good breeder will also want to get to
know you just as much as you want to get to know him/her, prior to the sale of
the puppy. It is a two way thing, you want to be sure you are buying from
a reputable breeder, and in turn, that breeder wants to know they are selling
to the right person too!
If breeders is selling puppies/dogs with a sales contract, read the contract
thoroughly and know, this is the first sign of the breeder being a caring
person also interested in ensuring not only what is best for the puppy, but
also the best for the buyer and breeder. All terms and conditions should
be clearly outlined. By signing this contract and having your signature
witnessed, you are entering into a legally binding contract.
A reputable breeder will offer a Health Policy with the sale of the
puppy. This is as much for your own peace of mind, as well as that of the
breeder. Once again, take your time to read through the Health Policy
thoroughly and familiarise yourself with what is covered and what is not
covered. Caring breeders will always give buyers the option to return the
dog to them, should at any given time the need arises and the buyer can no
longer keep the dog. Under those given circumstances, in the case of an
older dog, there will not be any monetary sum reimbursed to the buyer, and the
breeder will cover the costs of re-homing the dog.
In the case of a younger dog, providing none of the terms of sale or Health
Policy have been breached, the breeder may offer help to re-sell the dog on
behalf of the owner, minus any expenses incurred by the breeder per the
sale. What any reputable breeder clearly DOES NOT want, is one of their
dogs being abandoned, or given to an animal shelter, on any account and under
NO circumstances. If you find you can't keep the dog, then
please….PLEASE…consider allowing the breeder to help you re-home the dog FIRST,
not last. Of course, it is your right to sell the dog if you so choose to
someone else, as long as you do it in exactly the same manner and with the same
consideration the breeder gave you when you purchased the dog. After all,
the dog's welfare is the most important thing above all else.
These days, for security reasons, a lot of breeders will not allow potential
buyers to come into their home to view puppies. Please take this into
consideration and do not misinterpret this as the breeder having something to
hide. The breeder has something to protect and amongst the most treasured
of all possessions, are his/her dogs. Long gone are the days of trust and
opening ones private residence to complete strangers for them to view the
puppies, parents, and environment where they were bought up. Way too many
breeders, worldwide, have suffered dramatic consequences and loss due to their
trust being abused.
Some have had dogs stolen never to be found, others have had their homes
robbed, and the worse of all…lost their lives! Sounds too dramatic?
Who can forget the case of the pregnant breeder in the U.S. whom
opened her home to a potential puppy buyer, even after taking the time to get
to know this person via email for the longest time, only to be murdered in cold
blood and having her unborn child ripped from within her? The
killer obviously used the proposed sale of a puppy to gain access into the
victim's home under false pretences. Don't take my word for it, do a
Google search and I am sure you will find the case history there with all the
details. Remember, breeder's homes are their private place of
residence…everyone is entitled to privacy and to feel secure in their own
homes, after all, don't you too?
If you wish to see the parents of the puppies, tell the breeder to bring them
along at the place of meeting to buy the puppy. In most cases, and in my
experiences, reasonable people see the parents on the web site, see the puppy
pictures sent to them via email, and do trust in the breeder's integrity and honesty.
Think about this for a moment, if you bought your new pup from a pet shop, you
would not see the parents, meet the breeder, and certainly not see the place
where the puppies were bred. And the majority of pet shop puppies come
from puppy farms! In my experience, Puppy Farmers do not have web site
sales, contrary to popular belief! They are not interested in what
becomes of the puppy, they are just interested in how much money they can make
in as quick a time as possible!
Breeding dogs properly with right conditions etc. is costly and a lot of hard
work. Puppy Farmers sell cheap, because they sell lots, and do not give
the parents or puppies the proper care and attention they deserve, so there is
little or any monetary outlay on their part. They are NOT dedicated,
caring, breeders!
At the meeting, hold the puppy, go over the puppy if you wish, a reputable
breeder will not have any objections to you doing this. Check that the
puppy is firm and round, well fed and solid. A puppy should be clean and free
of parasites such as fleas. A thin bony body with a pot belly distended
abdomen could be indicative of a worm infestation. In any case, if you
are buying a contracted puppy with a Health Policy, I very much doubt a genuine
breeder will sell a puppy to anyone which is not healthy and in optimum
condition.
If you are to have your puppy freighted to you, once again, look around the
breeder's web site and get the feel if the breeder is professional and has
shipped puppies before. If so, then rest assured every careful
arrangement will be made to ensure your puppy arrives safe and well. It
is just as important to the caring breeder as it is to the buyer.
A reputable breeder puts a lot of time, effort, and work into raising a litter
correctly. The average person doesn't realise just how much is involved
with the rearing of a litter. There is financial outlay as well as a lot
of hard work. REPUTABLE breeders, do not just churn out puppies, litter
after litter, they are not PUPPY FARMERS! Each litter is vigilantly
planned, raised with the utmost care, generally the breeder will keep a puppy
from the resulting litter for herself/himself, and they are particular about
who buys their other puppies. This is the sort of breeder you want to be
buying your next puppy from. Don't settle for anything but the best to
get the best.
Written By
Anne Roditis/Muscat
© copyright 2008