
Recently I was drawn into a situation that affected me intensely through an email sent "accidentally". One evening my inbox contained a message sent to Tucker's breeder (we call her "Grams") and cc'd to a large number of her email contacts. I literally tossed all night thinking about the situation because I know how sweet Tucker's breeder is, how much she loves her dogs and how great all of her dogs are. (That's Jane in the picture, getting a puppy ready for her first time in the show ring.)
Here is just a portion of the poorly spelled and punctuated vileness the message spewed "How can you live with yourself, for that matter how can anyone that breeds and sale dogs for a financial gain sleep at all. All of you should be put to sleep or at the least tarred and feathered. Have you any idea of the pain and suffering that you have caused us, all for a financial profit, shame on you. We have fallen in love with our dogs Roxie and Rusty and the very thought of having to give them up, we can not bare. Actually we do not know what to do, but need to do something or they will kill one another or one of our cats or perhaps injure my 88 year old mother. You knew all of this, prior to us purchasing them."
I know many people are opposed to purebred dogs on the principle that the inbreeding used to keep the breed standards can result in unhealthy animals. However, Tucker's breeder works very hard to breed for health and temperament and her kennel is a homelike doggie heaven and she loves every one of her pups and probably wishes she could keep them all! The bill of sale for her puppies stipulates that if the owner is unhappy or unable to keep the dog at ANY time, she will take it back. And I doubt she makes a profit on her puppies.
The breeder was devastated by the attack and immediately made arrangements to go across the state to take the dogs back. She had plane tickets to fly across country to deliver a puppy in Florida the evening the email bomb dropped, so she was terribly upset and stressed, but a friend and partner, Susan, drove to get the pups. The owner only relinquished one of the pups, the female, and kept the male. I emailed the man begging him to be sure he gave the remaining pup the chance to be a good pet by going to obedience classes (which are really mostly about training the OWNER, not the dog). I never heard from him, but have heard that they are managing better with only the one dog.
Take away message from all of this? All dogs are hard work. It is not enough to just love them. If you're getting a pet, research the breed. Certain breeds, and that includes cute little terriers with strong wills and masses of energy, are harder to raise than others. Ownership of a dog is a commitment and a privilege due only to those who honor it. If your dog is poorly behaved, look in the mirror. It isn't the dog's fault and it is unlikely that it is the breeder's fault unless you went to a puppy mill, and that's a whole other category of bad.
Tucker says...
Poor Grams. And poor Roxie and Rusty.
