My DH and I have decided we want a puppy. We have an almost 12 year old Yorkie that we got from a "breeder". Since we have decided on doing this I am kind of wanting him "yesterday". So I got to wondering what people think of pet store puppies? Is it really as bad an idea as I feel I have heard?
I do think some rescues go overboard with their rules. I've seen a rescue that required a fenced backyard, someone home most of the day, etc. I find it frustating that so many dogs are being euthanized in shelters, and you'd think they'd want to get as many dogs in homes as possible. Obviously nobody wants a dog to end up in a neglectful or abusive situation, but some of the background checking is excessive.
So cute, can I ask if your vet had any idea as to the type of dog the one on the right is (shorter hair)? She/he looks a lot like our dog (although smaller) that we also got from a shelter...as far as we know she's a lab/harrier mix.
Yes people can't say mutt any more. They have to attach some silly hyphenated name to the dog.Do they even sell purebreds in pet stores anymore? Everytime I see puppies, they're always mixes:
_____poo
_____bull (I saw something like a Beagle Bull or some ridiculousness)
A puppy in a pet store deserves a nice home as much as any other puppy.
Maybe, but tell that to the puppy in the window. He/she just wants and deserves a nice home like the rest.But buying that puppy supports and perpetuates the puppy mill industry. Some earlier posts eloquently explain the heartbreaking dilemma here.
A puppy in a pet store deserves a nice home as much as any other puppy.
Maybe, but tell that to the puppy in the window. He/she just wants and deserves a nice home like the rest.
Maybe, but tell that to the puppy in the window. He/she just wants and deserves a nice home like the rest.
Just for the record my one dog that stays in Fla due to his age and medical condition I picked up on the side of the road after seeing him thrown from a car. He was malnourished and it took a lot of time and expense to get him well again. He's been a good pet and it feels good to have given him a good life. Our other dog is a very tiny chihuahua that we got from a breeder in Ontario. We take her back and forth we us and she too is a very nice companion and a well traveled dog. I understand the puppy mill thing. But again that doesn't mean you punish the puppy.And then you can tell that to the puppy's mother, who is living a miserable life in a cage, being bred nonstop to churn out this puppy and all his many, many for-profit siblings.
Thanks to people's, "aw... lookit the widdle puppy in the window" sentimentality, that puppy's mum will likely continue to suffer. Along with a whole lot of other dogs. Exactly how much cruelty are we willing to ignore, just so we can feel good about making an impulse purchase?
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Rescue a dog from the pound, instead. If you're dead set on having a puppy-mill puppy, most pounds will be happy to provide you with one. They're not exactly in short supply!
(Full disclosure - my dog came to me as a gift from a friend who was irresponsible about getting her dog neutered in a timely manner, and who ended up having to look for homes for all the "oops" puppies that resulted.)
It's just a catch 22. Yes it's very...VERY sad for the pups in the stores. But eventually, if people stop buying them, the mills will stop cranking them out for retail.Just for the record my one dog that stays in Fla due to his age and medical condition I picked up on the side of the road after seeing him thrown from a car. He was malnourished and it took a lot of time and expense to get him well again. He's been a good pet and it feels good to have given him a good life. Our other dog is a very tiny chihuahua that we got from a breeder in Ontario. We take her back and forth we us and she too is a very nice companion and a well traveled dog. I understand the puppy mill thing. But again that doesn't mean you punish the puppy.
It's just a catch 22. Yes it's very...VERY sad for the pups in the stores. But eventually, if people stop buying them, the mills will stop cranking them out for retail.
My family owns a small chain of pet stores. I know those types all too well...Exactly! Not to mention the puppies that are an impulse buy because they're just too cute up in that cage.. just for them to realize that the puppy grows into a dog, they don't have the money for its care, the breed doesn't suit them, etc.. and they end up in a shelter anyway, possibly to be euthanized.
I was at a county fair recently and there was a stand for sugar gliders... multiple people bought them just as we were standing at the booth. I couldn't believe that people were handing over $300 for an exotic pet I doubted they knew was going to be for sale there. I can only imagine how many people impulsively buy the cute pups in a store window.
Of course they do. But so do the dogs trapped in cages in their own filth at the mill that puppy came from. Paying for a puppy only helps keep the mill profitable and in business. That unsold puppy will either be price marked way down or will just be given to shelters/given back to the mill/given away for free. Maybe some are killed but that is obviously a brutal and illegal method. If enough people stop paying for puppies the mills will stop.
I do think some rescues go overboard with their rules. I've seen a rescue that required a fenced backyard, someone home most of the day, etc. I find it frustating that so many dogs are being euthanized in shelters, and you'd think they'd want to get as many dogs in homes as possible. Obviously nobody wants a dog to end up in a neglectful or abusive situation, but some of the background checking is excessive.