Anonymous wrote:^^ I would beg those people to just TRY. Just check petfinder and see if an adoptable dog near you could be "good enough" instead of feeding into the dog breeding industry. There are too many dogs in this world and not enough love and care to go around. Please be part of the solution instead of part of the problem.
But back to the topic of this thread, I feel that groups like National Mill Dog Rescue are part of the solution, and she gets many of her used (and badly neglected) dogs from what you would call "reputable breeders".
http://milldogrescue.org/
Anonymous wrote:PP here, I also volunteer to do the bookkeeping for a local area rescue group. It is entirely volunteer run. Volunteers go to shelters down south, pull dogs that they think can be rescued - meaning they aren't aggressive, and if they have medical issues, they are medical issues that we can address - and we get them into vets and fosters down south. Every few weeks, we pay someone a small fee to transport a van full of these dogs to the DMV. Fosters here in the DMV then take the dogs home and we keep them until someone applies to adopt the dog. We charge about $300 in adoption fees which helps cover the costs of vetting, transport, supplies. NO ONE in the rescue group is making any money.
The dogs we pull aren't puppy mill dogs that's true; But when I hear people talking about buying dogs from "reputable breeders", it just makes me want to cry. There are so many abandoned dogs that need homes.
I have fostered a dog through them who had a seizure disorder; someone adopted her and she's happy now.
I have fostered a dog through them who had a blown out ACL that the org paid to fix. Happily adopted now.
I have fostered a small dog whose pelvis had to be completely rebuilt because someone had kicked it and broken all the bones.
I fostered a dog that was left tied to someone's front porch for weeks and weeks and not fed. It was a bag of bones.
Last weekend I saw a dog at the foster rendevouz that had had acid thrown on it. The dog was still sweet and nice to people.
It never fails to astonish me how resilient and loving these dogs still are.
The problem is not the rescue groups buying the used breeding dogs. The problem is the demand for the puppies of the used breeding dogs. Now I do agree there are some shady rescues out there. Do your research and go with a reputable rescue group or shelter. For heaven's sake, please, please don't contribute to the problem by encouraging breeding of any dogs anywhere by buying from breeders.
A good test is if the group you are getting a dog from insists on spay/neuter before giving you the dog.
Anonymous wrote:So you think it's cool to have puppy making as a hobby? having two or three dams times two or three times a year times 5 puppies per litter? So estimate 45 puppies per year?
Here's a pricing sheet on boxer puppies. It says $800 - $2000 PER PUPPY: http://www.newcastleboxers.com/pricing.shtml
So that's a hobby that grosses between $40k and $90k per year? Not a business indeed.
Anonymous wrote:PP here, I also volunteer to do the bookkeeping for a local area rescue group. It is entirely volunteer run. Volunteers go to shelters down south, pull dogs that they think can be rescued - meaning they aren't aggressive, and if they have medical issues, they are medical issues that we can address - and we get them into vets and fosters down south. Every few weeks, we pay someone a small fee to transport a van full of these dogs to the DMV. Fosters here in the DMV then take the dogs home and we keep them until someone applies to adopt the dog. We charge about $300 in adoption fees which helps cover the costs of vetting, transport, supplies. NO ONE in the rescue group is making any money.
The dogs we pull aren't puppy mill dogs that's true; But when I hear people talking about buying dogs from "reputable breeders", it just makes me want to cry. There are so many abandoned dogs that need homes.
I have fostered a dog through them who had a seizure disorder; someone adopted her and she's happy now.
I have fostered a dog through them who had a blown out ACL that the org paid to fix. Happily adopted now.
I have fostered a small dog whose pelvis had to be completely rebuilt because someone had kicked it and broken all the bones.
I fostered a dog that was left tied to someone's front porch for weeks and weeks and not fed. It was a bag of bones.
Last weekend I saw a dog at the foster rendevouz that had had acid thrown on it. The dog was still sweet and nice to people.
It never fails to astonish me how resilient and loving these dogs still are.
The problem is not the rescue groups buying the used breeding dogs. The problem is the demand for the puppies of the used breeding dogs. Now I do agree there are some shady rescues out there. Do your research and go with a reputable rescue group or shelter. For heaven's sake, please, please don't contribute to the problem by encouraging breeding of any dogs anywhere by buying from breeders.
A good test is if the group you are getting a dog from insists on spay/neuter before giving you the dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I knew the rescue thing was a sham, think about it - how many cute fluffy dogs are there just sitting around to be rescued? If all the rescues were pitty mixes I could see that, but nowadays having a "rescue" dog is some kind of statement especially in progressive neighborhoods now that says you are PC, and just like most of that kind of thing my BS meter went off full blast.
+1
Basically I believe you have a legit rescue dog if you have a pit mix or Chihuahua.
Anonymous wrote:PP here, I also volunteer to do the bookkeeping for a local area rescue group. It is entirely volunteer run. Volunteers go to shelters down south, pull dogs that they think can be rescued - meaning they aren't aggressive, and if they have medical issues, they are medical issues that we can address - and we get them into vets and fosters down south. Every few weeks, we pay someone a small fee to transport a van full of these dogs to the DMV. Fosters here in the DMV then take the dogs home and we keep them until someone applies to adopt the dog. We charge about $300 in adoption fees which helps cover the costs of vetting, transport, supplies. NO ONE in the rescue group is making any money.
The dogs we pull aren't puppy mill dogs that's true; But when I hear people talking about buying dogs from "reputable breeders", it just makes me want to cry. There are so many abandoned dogs that need homes.
I have fostered a dog through them who had a seizure disorder; someone adopted her and she's happy now.
I have fostered a dog through them who had a blown out ACL that the org paid to fix. Happily adopted now.
I have fostered a small dog whose pelvis had to be completely rebuilt because someone had kicked it and broken all the bones.
I fostered a dog that was left tied to someone's front porch for weeks and weeks and not fed. It was a bag of bones.
Last weekend I saw a dog at the foster rendevouz that had had acid thrown on it. The dog was still sweet and nice to people.
It never fails to astonish me how resilient and loving these dogs still are.
The problem is not the rescue groups buying the used breeding dogs. The problem is the demand for the puppies of the used breeding dogs. Now I do agree there are some shady rescues out there. Do your research and go with a reputable rescue group or shelter. For heaven's sake, please, please don't contribute to the problem by encouraging breeding of any dogs anywhere by buying from breeders.
A good test is if the group you are getting a dog from insists on spay/neuter before giving you the dog.
Anonymous wrote:I think one of our "rescue" dogs is from one of these shady operations. Designer mix puppy, only 10 weeks old, "rescued" from an Amish breeder. The issue wasn't on my radar at the time, but in hindsight it seems obvious. Our second rescue is from City Dogs and came with a good amount of information about her history.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this make the rescue "shady"?
Simultaneously decrying puppy mills while purchasing from them and creating a market for puppy mills is absolutely shady.
Anonymous wrote:Most racehorses end up at auction. If they haven't placed as three year olds they aren't worth the feed and stabling costs. Think about this the next time you are tempted to place a bet on a horse race. Thoroughbreds have been ruined by the very specific need for speed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one of our "rescue" dogs is from one of these shady operations. Designer mix puppy, only 10 weeks old, "rescued" from an Amish breeder. The issue wasn't on my radar at the time, but in hindsight it seems obvious. Our second rescue is from City Dogs and came with a good amount of information about her history.
Same here. I've kept an eye on the rescue I got my dog from and it's become clear that they are one of these rescues. And my dog is the poster child for a poorly bred, messed up, puppy mill product. I love him but oooooooooh boy is he a health disaster both mentally and physically.
Anonymous wrote:Rescue operations in my county get first choice on puppies and small breeds from the local animal shelter (which means there are NONE available to the public). They then charge rehoming fees of several hundred dollars, clearly a way for certain individuals to make $. Burns me up.
Anonymous wrote:I also kind of question the incentives involved with the rescues that brings stray dogs from the south up north for adoption. I know people who have great dogs great homes that way, but doesn’t it just encourage irresponsible pet ownership in certain areas of the country? I donate thousands every year to dog rescue groups - but maybe instead we should fund a “neuter your dog get $50” program in the Deep South.