Puppy
buyers... ... ... .. Beware of ... ... ... ... ... ..
Everyone has heard of people, be these friends or acquaintances, who
bought a puppy somewhere and within a short time after the arrival of
their new pet, had to pay lots of $$ in vet bills and/or medication
for their new pet dog. In some cases even had to eventually put the
dog to sleep, thus loosing a loved pet and companion, which should have
been with them for years to come, as well as loosing their purchase
price.
Very few people realize that depending on where you purchase your new
puppy from, determines in a lot of cases, how long this puppy will live
a healthy life; it also determines if the puppy is of good conformation
to breed standard, has a nice and even temperament and acts and behaves
like it should.
Reputable breeders go through great length to insure that the puppies,
for whose lives they are ultimately responsible, conform to the breed
standard, both in appearance and temperament, and are bred from healthy,
and, in most cases, are only bred from health tested parents. These
breeders will replace a puppy with another one, if - despite their efforts
- a puppy they bred and sold, is found to have a health issue which
will cause the puppy to not live its life to the fullest, thus causing
pain and suffering not only to the puppy but also to its new owners.
Of course, the general public is more often than not unable to determine,
if the breeder they found through various sources (newspapers, specialty
publications, Internet) is an ethical, trustworthy and reputable person.
In a lot of cases this would be accurate, and usually can be verified
by contacting a parent club of the breed, to cross-reference. But there
are people, who represent themselves as above board 'breeders' and who
advertise themselves as such in various media, but who are far removed
from an ethical and reputable breeder. These people are brokers, dealers,
importers and puppy mills. Their main interest in the breed(s) they
are dealing in, is not the dog, not the quality of the dog, not the
health issues involved, not the new owner, but ONLY their pocket
books!And they go through every length to make sure that their interest
is looked after properly.
They have learned to answer the most often naïve questions of
prospective new buyers as if they themselves were breeders, as if they were
reputable and as if they had the best interest of the dog at heart. In a lot
of cases, these people have talked in great length to reputable breeders,
asked lots of questions, picked the brains of the reputable breeders ONLY
to be able to represent themselves later on to unsuspecting buyers as the
'real thing' - as a person you can confidently purchase a puppy from. They
even venture into giving the buyer a 'health guarantee' on the puppy, for
example for a year (most genuine and reputable breeders will give a two year
health guarantee).
If the prospective new owner asks for information on the parents
of the puppy he is thinking of purchasing, he is usually informed that the
puppy 'has been checked by our vet and is found to be fit and healthy', that
the registration papers 'will arrive with the puppy' and that the full purchase
price, and any expenses are due BEFORE the puppy is sent en route to its final
destination.
The problems start pretty soon after the arrival of the new
puppy. There were no registration papers with the puppy, when it arrived,
neither was there an official pedigree. The health certificate could fit any
puppy, is not specific for the puppy you picked up from the airport. A vaccination
record is hand written and could have been wrtten for any puppy of the same
breed. The new buyer then gets back in touch with the vendor, to enquire about
the missing items, and the answers are usually the same: the registration
papers are not back from the registry, in a lot of cases FIC or some other
registering body, occasionally the AKC (American Kennel Club); the vaccination
record is the only one the vendor has, and the pedigree will be mailed tomorrow.
In the purchase contract it stated that the buyer has 3 - 5
days time to take the puppy to a veterinary surgeon of his choice. Normally
puppies arrive on or close to the weekend, so at least one day, if not more,
are missed because the vets are closed on weekends. The following Monday the
vet of the new owner determines that the puppy has worms, is too thin, has
an ear infection in one or both ears, which is severe; in case of a male,
has only one testicle, or has any other defects/illnesses, which it should
not have had - after all, didn't the 'health certificate' from the vendor
state that the puppy was in excellent health??
Now is the time to really get worried, because the buyer is
unable to contact the vendor again, to tell the vendor about the illnesses
and shortcomings, and the buyer has only 3 - 5 days in which to inform the
vendor about this and in which to demand either his money back and to be able
to send the puppy back, or in which to ask for reimbursement of the vet costs
and treatment costs.
Usually it takes the buyer about 2 - 4 weeks after the arrival
of the puppy, in which the buyer in vain tries to contact the vendor. By the
time, they finally manage to hook up, the warranty to return the puppy, is
expired, and the vendor informs the buyer accordingly and 'after all, the
puppy was in perfect health when it left the vendor, so any illness must have
been as a result of the carelessness of the new owner, and the vendor is not
responsible for this".
In most cases, the new owner gets bullied into keeping the puppy,
into not seeking the advise of a lawyer, into not informing the registering
bodies, like AKC, and of course, into keeping the puppy. And that is the worst
of all, because ALL of these vendors KNOW that once the new owner has had
that puppy in his possession for a few days, there is no way that new owner
wants to send the puppy back to a place, which by now the new owner deems
totally undesirable for 'his' puppy.
And that is the way, most brokers, dealers, importers and puppy
mills make their money!
So, what's the advise for the general public?? Be careful,
ask lots of questions and VISIT if at all possible, the breeder you are thinking
of buying a puppy from. If this breeder lives too far away, ask for references
of more than two people who have bought puppies from that breeder, also you
can ask someone in their area to see their dogs, or get in touch with a dog
club in that area to see, if they have any adverse information on the breeder
you want to buy a puppy from!! And there are people who keep information of
'undesirables' and who are willing to share that information (confidentially)
with you!!
So, please be careful and be aware of the above when looking
for a puppy!