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I’ll be
candid with you up front. In general, I’d like to discourage you and other
pet seekers from acquiring an animal that was bred expressly to be sold.
Most particularly, I hope to dissuade you from buying a new puppy or
kitten directly from a breeder or kennel or retail shop. Let’s touch briefly on the reasons why people do seek purebred dogs. (The situation of purebred cats is somewhat different.) Snob
appeal seems harmless enough. But it can turn tragic when a fashionable
breed falls out of favor or the dogs themselves prove too challenging for
the faddists to handle. Then, their trophy pets are dumped en masse into
the shelters. Such was the fate of the Chow Chow and, more recently, the
Dalmatian (from thousands of disillusioned owners who had been enticed by
the Disney movie “101 Dalmatians”). Some observers think it may now be the
turn of the Rottweiler and the cocker spaniel, both of which still rank
among the top ten breeds registered by the American Kennel Club
(AKC). |
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What some pet owners do seek
out, though, are performance dogs: those which will take part in
championship shows and other events. The dog fancy – the rarefied milieu
of people who breed, exhibit and compete with their purebreds –
enthusiastically promotes such activities. The AKC, in one of its policy
statements, “encourages and strongly supports the interaction and mutual
enjoyment of owners and dogs in sporting activities such as hunting and
field trials, in working circumstances such as herding, tracking, and
pulling, and in competitive events such as dog shows, obedience trials,
and other performance tests.” But in actual practice only a small minority of owners of AKC-registered dogs – at most 20 percent, one AKC official estimated to me – avail themselves of these costly and time-consuming options. Others may be tempted by the idea when they purchase their purebreds, but then fail to follow through. One dog lover I know made a hundred-mile trip to a breeder in another state for an English Springer spaniel puppy, with visions of one day entering it in field trials. Five years later, the spaniel not only had never competed but hadn’t proved too manageable a house pet either. My friend remained devoted to her upmarket dog. But I expect she would have become just as attached to a nice mutt from the local shelter (which is where she obtains her pet cats). |
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If at
least four out of five purebred dogs are indeed destined to be “solely and
entirely family pets,” as the AKC official told me, how do they really
differ from mutts in the hearts and minds of their owners? Put another
way: Why would someone who is not a status snob, who does not need the
skilled services of a working dog, and who is not likely ever to
participate in dog shows or other competitions bother to buy an expensive
purebred in the first place?
Next,
where do all these purebreds come from? There are four principal sources.
Large-scale commercial breeding operations – the notorious “puppy mills” –
are located predominantly but not exclusively in Midwestern farm states.
These puppies are distributed through wholesale brokers to retail pet
shops around the country. (However, the 1998 APPMA survey showed that only
8 percent of all the dog owners’ pets had been acquired from stores –
contrasted with the 29 percent obtained from breeders. This suggests, but
of course doesn’t conclusively prove, that the impact of the puppy-mill
producers may be somewhat exaggerated in the propaganda of humane
organizations.) In addition to retail shops, there are also some large
commercial kennels which sell their puppies directly to the
public. The
fourth source of purebred dogs – the only one recommended by the AKC, the
dog fancy in general, most veterinarians and other experts – is what is
often called a “responsible” breeder. Other approving adjectives for the
same activity include “professional,” “conscientious,” “reputable,”
“private” or “hobby” breeder. Some advertise in the classified columns of
local newspapers and magazines like Dog World and Dog Fancy; others rely
on word of mouth for their customers. Some are manifestly more
responsible, professional, etc. than others. |