I Was a Dog Breeder for 15 Years. Why Does That Make Me a Monster? – Dogster (2024)

I raisedpuppies for 15 years with my family. Corgis were ourfirst love, but then half of usdeveloped an allergy to theirhair. We eventually switchedto French Bulldogsand breathed much easier.

At the height of our breeding program, there wereas many as eight adult dogs, but I preferred to keep the number closer to four orfivefor sanity’s sake. If we could get two to threelitters of puppies per year, I was very happy. We could have had twice that many, as there was alwaysa waiting list of potential owners, but I wasselective in our breeding and chose to keep our girls healthy rather than tax them with too many litters in a lifetime. At this time, sadly, we’re done raising puppiesunless our only male, Louie, figures out how to become a dad.

The fact that I wasa dog breeder is not something I readily share. I try to learn where a personstands inthe adoption vs. buying-from-a-breeder debatebefore deciding whether to divulge this information. What started as a deep love of dogs and wanting to experience puppies had growninto a business for us. Along with that growth came the awareness that this was something I shouldn’t tell the general public.

I Was a Dog Breeder for 15 Years. Why Does That Make Me a Monster? – Dogster (1)

I learned early on that many in the adopt-onlycamp have negative feelings toward breeders, ranging from mild irritation to outright hatred. Manythink breeders are responsible for populating the world with unwanted dogs, and should be stopped. This didn’t make me feel comfortable sharingwhat I did. In fact, I envisioned people grabbing pitchforks and torches ifI toldthem I raised puppies.

Before I go on, I want to be clear that I am pro-adoption. In fact, we recently adopted a dog. I think all dogs deserve to have happy and loving homes. As a breeder, I interviewed all potential owners and madeit my personal goal to get each puppy their forever home. We never sold to pet shops, nor did we sell through brokers.

I not only struggled with divulging to others what we did, but struggled to justify my job. It’s a difficult thing to defend yourself to someone who has pre-judged you and is not willing to listen with an open mind. Being a monster in the minds of others is something Ijust learned to live with.

I also struggled to understand why dog breeding is thought to be such a horrible thing. Loving dogs enough to make your living with them should be commended by animal welfareactivists, right? Yet, I was a bad person for removing dogs from my breeding program if they showed temperament flaws or genetic defects that could (and would) be passed onto puppies. Somehow, it’s considered a bad thing to make a better breed of dog with fewerhealth problems and betterpersonalities.

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The dogs we retiredwerespayed and placed in personally selected homes suited toeach dog’s temperament and personality. I didn’teuthanizedogs when they were no longer able to have puppies, as many assume all breeders do.I once spent nearly a thousand dollars for a C-section on a dog who managed to birth half her litter naturally but needed help with the secondhalf. Her milk never came in, so I bottle fed the puppies for weeks while caring for the mama in her recovery.

My vet and I decided that a spay was that mama’s best option, but we waited until she hadrecovered to do the second surgery. Upon hearing thatthe dog would no longer breed, an acquaintance was horrified, thinking I would just heartlessly euthanize the dog. She had heard that’s what breeders do, and even knowing that we loved and cared for our dogs, she simply believed it to be true.

Our dogs are part of our familyand have alwayslived in our home, even when we were raising puppies. Despite knowing that the dogs werealso a business, I gotattached anyway. It was a painful thing to keep a dog for a few years only to discover that she had difficulties getting pregnant or birthing puppies, or he didn’t pass a genetic health screening. (Dogs can’t be tested for hereditary genetic flaws until they’re 2 years old.) Finding these dogs new homes was heart wrenching, and the ache felt sometimes far outweighed the money invested in the dogs up to thatpoint.

Responsible breedingis, sadly, not a profitable business. It sounds so good in theory, being able to charge good money for purebred puppies, multiplied by a large number of puppies in a litter. It was the extras and hidden costs that nobody informed usabout, and they oftendrained the bank account. I’ve joked that the vet’s office should have a wing named after me. I wason a first-name basis with the entire vet staff. I hadthe clinic on my online bill-pay roster. (I’m not kidding.) The vet’s number wasn’ton speed dial; it was memorized so well that I couldunconsciously dial it after a week’s worth of sleep deprivation, at 3a.m., when a puppy was struggling to hold onto life.

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The money I spent on dog food nearly rivaled our grocery bill in the months I had a nursing mama and her litter began to eat. (We are a family of seven humans. Our grocery bill isn’t small.) Registration fees, yearly genetic screenings, advertising, Internet and phone bills, vet bills, supplies, vaccines and dewormers, training equipment, licenses, stud fees, and grooming all added up. Having a dog is expensive. Having a kennel full of dogs was even more so. I kept thinking, “this will be the year that I make money with the dogs.” I never made much of a profit.

There wereother downfalls to raising dogs. When I waslooking to add another puppyto the breeding program, I wasn’tat liberty to choose the cutest in the litter, with the floppy ear or the wobbly gait. My heart always gravitated toward those quirky traits, but I had toremember that I strove for perfection, and that meant choosingthe best puppy in the litter. Often times, the dog was a color that wouldn’t be my first choice if I were gettinga pet.

I also had to researchbloodlines for generations back, looking for things like genetic health issues, temperament flaws, and whether or not the line of females had been able to give birth naturally or had C-sections. Buying a puppy for a breeding program is more of a science than a fun adventure. It was time consuming, exhausting, and often not fun for me. In addition, the best puppies wereusually far more expensive than the pet-quality puppies.

Often, the puppies needed to be bottle fed. While this sounds adorably cute, it’s a stressful and life-altering endeavor. I lost more sleep bottle feeding puppies than I ever did with my own children. Puppies need to eat every two to threehours or their blood sugar levels will drop low enough to cause hypoglcemic shock. Setting alarms every 90 minutes, night and day for two weeks, took a toll. Extreme exhaustion taxed my body, and often I ended up on antibiotics because I didn’t have the strength to fight off an illness. I once told the ER doctor that he had to prescribe me differentmeds for bronchitis because I couldn’t be drowsy. Puppies were depending on me to keep them alive.

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Bottle-fed puppies don’t thrive as well as nursed puppies, and the stress of losing one wasreal. My vet cried with me on severaloccasions over puppies I’d brought to the clinic. He was keenly aware of the struggle to keep the puppies alive; sometimes I would visit the clinic daily for two weeks, only to lose apuppy in the end. The constant stress of keeping puppies alive, especially if the litter was bottle fed or there were health complications, was exhausting for me — physically, mentally, and emotionally.

Puppies also aren’t housebroken, neither are they aware of social manners, such as not barking in the house. Our kids wereoftenembarrassed to have friends over, and they hadbecome immune to the charms of puppies, knowing that with the cute wrinkles and sweet breath came midnight howling and a house that smelled like a barnyard.

In other words, the sheer amount of time and energy involved in raising puppies was a full-time job for me. Itwas far more than just having babies in the house for eight weeks. It started with intensive research to find quality dogs to breed with, and it includedlifelong follow-up for every puppy I sold. Which means that my job is still not done, even though I’ve stopped breeding.

Ioffersupport to their owners in diet, house training, and any other questions they have. I also made it clear to every buyerthat if adogdoesn’t work out in their home, for whatever reason, I am always willing to take them back. Support is an ongoing, lifelong friendship with and responsibility toward the owners of my puppies.

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Also, all the paperwork required by the American Kennel Club, the state of Pennsylvania, my veterinarian, and for my own records was staggering. I sometimes joked that I needed a secretary when I had a litter of puppies, so that I could free up time to snuggle those babies. It was my responsibility to evaluate each puppy to determine if they should be sold with a spay-neuter contract or if they could be bred or shown.

Despite all this, I loved having puppies. It was a passion of mine to nurture those newborns into healthy babies who foundamazing forever homes. The happiest days werewhen families adopted my puppies. The joy I was able to give others wasinfectious. It kept me going. I still struggle to understand what is so wrong with what I did, and why I was a bad person for raising purebred puppies. If all breeders were stopped, as some extreme activists wish, there would be no more purebred dogs left in 20 years’ time. That would be a sad, sad world indeed.

Read related stories on Dogster:

  • Commentary: I Will Judge You for Buying a Dog
  • Please Don’t Judge Me: I Got My Dog from a Breeder
  • Let’s Talk About Dogster Values: Yours and Ours

Featured Image Credit: MirasWonderland | Getty Images

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I Was a Dog Breeder for 15 Years. Why Does That Make Me a Monster? – Dogster (2024)
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