Cruel commercial
breeders want to maximize profit by producing the highest number of puppies at the lowest possible cost.
One of the main reasons is because responsible
breeders want to make sure each baby ends up in the right home.
Both good rescues and good
breeders want to make placements that are as permanent as possible, because it is in everyone's best interests for the placement to be successful.
There is so much animal abuse and so many unwanted animals that responsible
breeders want to make sure they do not contribute to the problem.
Breeders want no regulations, no inspections and no business licenses — or business as usual!
Breeders want their cats to have good «forever homes» and will do everything they can to ensure a good match.
Conscientious
breeders want the best available home for their puppies.
These animals suffer through hell, simply because immoral
breeders want to turn an easy profit, and because potential dog owners remain ignorant of the horrors of puppy mills.
Any breeder who sells to pet stores is not an ethical breeder, since good
breeders want to personally interview and educate prospective owners of their carefully bred puppies.
Many
breeders want to blame an overbite on the tight lip problem discussed later.
Some breeders want to keep their puppies up to 12 weeks.
If commercial
breeders want to sell dogs to the public, they should be inspected.
Reputable
breeders want to check you out and protect their puppies, they would never ship one on a potentially traumatic flight to a stranger.
Some breeders want their dogs to come back to them if, at any stage during their life with their new owner, the owner needs to get rid of the dog.
Breeders want to breed the best to the best to create a more driven, healthier, and faster Greyhound with each generation.
Many dog
breeders want to have a puppy that has the traits in conformity with the breed standards.
Breeders want to produce that perfect dog.
Most experienced professional dog
breeders want to pinpoint the time of ovulation with more exactitude.
Most
breeders want to reclaim puppies from their breeding line rather than risk having them sent to shelters or euthanized.
When
breeders want to produce such small dogs, they choose for mating dam and sire, which are both undersized.
Sometimes
breeders want to add risk factors for each parent of proven carriers.
Most
breeders want to know.
The best
breeders want puppies to go to a forever home that provides proper care and training.
All reputable
breeders want to be informed when a dog they have placed will not be staying in its original home.
Cruel commercial
breeders want to maximize profit by producing a high number of puppies at the lowest possible cost.
Responsible
breeders want to know as much about you as you do about them.
Good
breeders want to build a relationship with people who buy their puppies, and they want to stay in contact in order to be a resource for them because they care deeply about their dogs and the health of the breed.
The best
breeders want valid answers even if they are disappointing.
Responsible
breeders want to stop the cruelty of puppy mills.
You can ask your breeder but
some breeders want early spays because they are afraid of unwanted pregnancies.
As hobby or show
breeders we want the best conditions for our dogs.
Breeders want you to own a carefully bred purebred that fits your lifestyle and enriches your life.
Good
breeders want to be that resource, 2, 5, 7, even 12 or 15 years down the road.
And at the end of the day, owners and
breeders all want the same thing, a healthy, temperamentally sound companion that brings their owners years and years of joy and companionship.
Great
breeders want to make sure that the dogs they breed are positioned in the right type of situation.
those are not
breeders I want to support.
All dog
breeders want our animals to be strong, healthy and fit.
Inbreeding Coefficient Increased When dog
breeders want to exaggerate a trait, they use what is called inbreeding or linebreeding.
Good dog
breeders want to make sure their puppies are placed in loving homes with responsible owners.
The breeders want to recover their champion stock to train and fight him.
If
the breeder wants competition and show dogs or has a particular purpose in mind, like breeding working dogs, they've probably planned this litter thoroughly and taken the necessary steps to ensure the puppies are healthy and well socialized.
The breeder wants your relationship with your puppy to be successful and can offer many tips based on years of experience.
History and Facts: This breed originated when
breeders wanted a «smaller» Grand Bleu de Gascogne that would be better suited to hunt small quarry.
Utility has largely taken a back seat today but where certain job functions are the breeders» primary concerns, physical characteristics such as docked tails or cropped ears are often a result of
breeders wanting the extreme rather than overall balance.
Well
the breeder wants to control what you can and can not do with you pup.
Yes
the breeder wants that right;
the breeder wants to breed your bitch for their own gains.
THAT IS NOT HOW IT WORKS!!!!! A reputable
breeder wants to build a relationship with you and hand you over your puppy PERSONALLY... not take care of it like it's some package, not GET BACK TO YOU with a FLIGHT NUMBER like it's a FED EX box or something....
No breeder wants to have Animal Control come knocking on the door... but if they do, it will help if you know what your options are.
Every breeder wants to be sure a dog is free of hereditary joint, eye, and heart problems before breeding the dog.
Once you have decided what kind of
breeder you want, you need to find one that is not a million miles away from your home.