There are many myths on breeding
your pet.
Let's say you or your spouse
bought the dog as a family pet and now are thinking about breeding.
Please read this.
1) Every female should have one litter before being spayed.
FALSE
There
is no reason, physically or temperamentally to breed any female except improvement of the breed. If spayed, she is less
likely to develop mammary cancer, surely won’t develop uterine cancer, and won’t suffer whelping risks.
2) I want the kids to see the miracle of birth. WRONG
It teaches
kids that life is unimportant. Every puppy born is the ultimate responsibility of the breeder as long as that dog is
alive. That means if the puppies aren’t all placed by the time they are 8-10 weeks old, you deal with it.
You don’t take them to the shelter for someone else to have to place or destroy. You don’t give them away
in front of the supermarket – you don’t let them loose in the country and hope they find homes before they starve,
get hit on the road, or die of disease. You feed, vaccinate, clean up after, socialize and love them until good, permanent
homes are found. If they need to be relocated a year later – you deal with it. Every litter born means a
10+year commitment. Let the kids watch a video on whelping while you have your nice pet female spayed.
3) I want my male to be a daddy, it will settle him down. FALSE
A neutered (castrated) male is happy. He is not at the mercy of raging hormones. He is not at risk of escaping
when tempted by neighborhood females. He will never get testicular cancer. He will be less likely to indulge in
marking pattern wetting. Unless he is such an outstanding example of his breed that, after proving his excellence in
the show or performance arenas, it would be necessary to use him, he is much better off neutered. A pet dog should be
just that, a pet. He or she does not require reproductive organs to be a pet.
4) My dog was expensive. I want to earn back his/her
cost. WRONG
It cost
money to properly raise a litter. Vet fees, breeding fees, food, testings – all cost money. If
you are lucky, you may just break even. Time and money is spent on making sure each pup is well
socialized and healthy. Not to mention that mom also needs pre-natal care and a special diet.
5) My aunt (uncle, best friend) wants one of Fluffy’s
pups. WRONG
Very
seldom will Fluffy have only one puppy, and that of the desired color and sex. Refer to #2 for questions about the rest
of Fluffy’s litter! There are also sexually transmitted diseases between dogs. Hip X-rays, eye checks, blood
checks.
Breeding dogs
in today’s world is best left to the professionals. Genetics is essential when breeding if you are to have healthy and
sound puppies with great temperaments. Ethically and financially it is better to spay or neuter your pet.
Valley Pet
News Sacramento
CA @ 1991