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Showing posts with label Puppy Mills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Puppy Mills. Show all posts

Friday 19 September 2014

Puppy Farm Awareness Day.

THE BATTERY FARMING OF DOGS MUST BE STOPPED.
I never like doing these posts because it breaks my heart but I suppose that's the difference between me and a puppy farmer I've got a heart.

I think the best way to describe puppy farms is that they are just factories except instead of mass producing household items they are mass producing puppies. I'm sure everyone's heard of battery hens used for egg laying well It's the same life for the dogs on puppy farms kept in barns, cages, caravans, outbuildings and any other unsuitable building kept with only one purpose in mind to produce as many litters as possible.

The people who farm these dogs know absolutely nothing about dogs, there not fed a proper diet, have fresh water available, receive proper veterinary treatment, kept in dark buildings with no daylight and not socialised and lots of them are probably inbred and suffering from incurable diseases there sole purpose is just to make money. Puppies are torn away from their mothers at a young age, often as young as 4 weeks old. This early separation makes the puppies prone to both behavioural and physical problems and sometimes the consequences are fatal.


The trade in pedigree puppies is booming: thousands of them are being offered for sale under false pretences via the Internet, in pet shops and in public spaces. Bred in poor conditions in so-called ‘puppy mills’ found across Eastern Europe Ireland and Wales, the puppies suffer from severe distress. They are often separated from their mothers at the young age of 3 to 4 weeks, to be transported for sale across Europe with fake documents. When they arrive at their destinations, many puppies are already afflicted by fatal diseases. Many of them may not survive the first weeks of their life. This loss is budgeted by the ruthless traders in advance. In contrast, the new, unsuspecting owners face high veterinary costs and despite intensive care, many animals die or have to be put down.

 Avoid buying a puppy from anywhere or anyone without being able to see at least one or preferably both the parents.

Avoid buying a puppy from a pet shop or any other similar outlet, Internet, newspaper advertisement or car boot sale.

Avoid buying a puppy on impulse or because you feel sorry for a frightened and timid one.

Avoid buying a puppy from someone who cannot answer ALL your questions about the health and welfare of an animal. Ideally take a local vet with you to check an animal’s health and behaviour before deciding.

Avoid buying a puppy from anywhere or anyone without being able to see at least one or preferably both of the parents.

 Avoid buying from a breeder that has several breeds, they may be a dealer supplied by a puppy farm.

Check that the puppy looks healthy and does not have runny eyes, ears and nose.

 Check the age and all the puppy’s documentation i.e. Kennel Club documents, vaccination cards, micro chip documents.

If you are suspicious contact either your local authority who license breeders or RSPCA.

Most puppy farmers deliver there puppies to pet shops, motorway service stations, pub car parks, waste land or anywhere apart from there own premises so you can't see the conditions the dogs are kept in and no one knows where they are located.

Overcoming the problem isn't as easy as just closing them down because as soon as you shut one another one opens, the main thing is to educate the public and raise awareness of them, puppy farms operate on supply and demand so by raising awareness and cutting off the demand they will soon shut themselves down hopefully if there's no money coming in.






To help the overcrowding of animal shelters and to put puppy farms out of business Adopt don't buy.

Friday 11 October 2013

Puppy Farms.

I've been reading a lot lately about puppy farms and watched a programme the other night on tv about a raid on a puppy farm which was sickening to watch but prompted me to do this post.

To most people, dogs are  man's best friend and a life long companion, but to puppy farms they're just cash making machines.

Lots of people see a cute pedigree puppy on the internet going cheap and think they're getting a bargain and who isn't taken in by those cute puppy dog eyes, but as in all walks of life if a deal seems to good to be true it probably is, and in a lot of cases puppy farm dogs don't work out cheap they won't of been socialised been fed on the cheapest crappy food around so the pups are going to be malnourished, under weight, have behavioural problems through lack of socialisation and being taken from there to soon and generally un healthy and often with life threatening illnesses, it is not just monetary cost of vet bills but also emotional cost too especially if children are involved and have built up a bond with the puppy. 

Most puppy farmed dogs will probably come with pedigree certificates and vaccination certificates in reality though they will more than likely be fakes and not worth the paper they're written on, puppy farms are all about making money not spending it so I think it's safe to say they have probably never seen a vet never mind had any health checks done. 

The puppies are kept in tiny cages or concrete cells with no natural light often lying in there own feces and urine I've never been to a puppy farm but from what I can gather the smell of urine is over whelming. It is hard to overestimate the health impact on puppies starting life in such conditions. Common problems include canine parvovirus, worms, hip dysplasia, dislocated kneecaps, and congenital heart problems.

So what can be done about the trade? While experts are divided on whether the current animal welfare legislation (see below) is adequate, all agree that a more pressing problem is enforcement. Local authority inspectors lack specialist knowledge; they are understaffed and don't have the resources for spot checks; and it is too easy for breeders to use loopholes in the law or falsify papers.
Various initiatives are under way. The Bateson report into dog breeding, published in 2010, recommends establishing a statutory code of practice under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. Bateson also recommends compulsory microchipping before the point of sale, so dogs can always be traced to their breeders. The British Veterinary Association (BVA) is in the process of drawing up a 'puppy contract', designed to protect both vendor and purchaser. The Pet Advertising Advisory Group (PAAG) investigates cases of problem dogs that are bought from classified or online ads.

But ultimately, all those attempting to stamp out the trade believe that educating consumers is the only way to succeed. "The law is an important part of it, but the consumer makes or breaks these puppy farms," says Baldwin. Harvey Locke, president-elect of the BVA, agrees. "Legislation has to be regarded as a backstop", he said. "The BVA feels the most important thing is education."
The market in dogs, like any other, obeys the law of supply and demand. "While there's a demand for cheap puppies - like cheap eggs - there will be people willing to meet that demand," says Gillie. She believes that if consumers knew their dog and its mother had been raised in good conditions, they would be prepared to pay more - just as they pay more for free-range eggs. In reality puppy farmed dogs are no more than battery farmed dogs in the same way we had battery farmed chickens.






Puppy farms are most common in Wales and Ireland; the puppies they produce are sold in pet shops all over the UK and through newspaper ads and the internet. It is estimated that 50,000 trafficked puppies are believed to be imported from Ireland each year, most destined for pet shops in Southern England. The county of Carmarthenshire in Wales alone is thought to produce 28,000 puppies a year also destined for the pet trade in England. 




A bitch used for breeding who will probably be killed when she can no longer produce puppies and make money.














Puppies kept in a cage.























The dos and don'ts of buying a dog

Do get advice from your local vet before buying. Vets are more than happy to recommend breeders and would much prefer to help you at this stage than when you have a sick puppy.

Don't ever buy from a pet shop. The vast majority are supplied by puppy farms.

Don't buy a pedigree dog at a bargain price after seeing it advertised in a newspaper or online. It is not genuine. Accept that a dog is expensive to buy and to care for (at least £10,000 over its lifetime); if you can't afford it, don't buy it. Buy from Kennel Club Accredited Breeders or breed rescue organisations.

Do consider classified ads if you are happy with a mixed breed dog, but agree you are buying it on condition that it passes a medical - and get this in writing. Take it to the vets within 48 hours. Or, even better, buy from an animal rescue centre.

Do go to the breeder's premises to view the puppy, so you can see the conditions first-hand. Breeders may offer to meet you at a convenient halfway point - never accept.

Don't ever buy a puppy if you can't see it interacting normally with its mother. Farmed dogs are taken away from their mothers early on, but a replacement dog may be placed in the room while you are viewing it.

Do check the paperwork. All breeders should be able to provide you with medical records. Pedigree breeders should have Kennel Club registration papers, and certain breeds should have parents' hereditary disease screening certificates.


Don't buy a dog on a whim, or as a gift. Research the breeds that will suit your lifestyle. Bear in mind that a dog needs one to two hours of exercise a day and can live for up to 15 years.

It's alright local authorities saying they haven't got the specialist knowledge,  are under staffed and haven't got the resources to carry out spot checks, it sounds like a poor excuse to me, how much knowledge do you need to know the living conditions aren't suitable and as for being under staffed and lack of funds I know plenty of people me included who would offer our services free of charge to see the end of the suffering and closure of puppy farms.

If I had my way I would rescue all the animals torch the puppy farms to the ground and instead of imprisoning  the owners force them to live in a cage on a diet of bread and water and sleep in there own feces and urine with no doctor or natural light and see how they like it.

Some usefull links.






One thing that did surprise was that the Amish and Mennonite communities  of Lancaster PA, Holmes County, Ohio and Shipshewana, Indiana, Are the biggest puppy farmers. Puppy Mills a side of the Amish that you never knew .