Yeah…I actually got Dolly at Petland.  She already had her umbilical hernia 
repaired, she was already microchipped, and although she had a severe 
respiratory infection that took three weeks to clear, she is very near perfect. 
 I am glad that she was only with the breeder until she was seven weeks old, 
and I got her when she was eight weeks old.  I was very upset when I heard that 
Petland gets their puppies from puppy mills, and therefore I searched out a 
local breeder for a sibling for her.  All in all, I think that Dolly probably 
came from a more conscientious breeder than Desi did.  Dolly was AKC 
registered, and Desi has some NAPDR (??) North American Purebred Dog 
Registry…and I could send in paperwork for a dalmation and say that it is a 
Chihuahua.  The breeder said that there was a mistake made by the NAPDR on his 
certificate showing a different sire’s name.  She told me that she called them 
and they fixed it. I called the registery about two or three months afterwards 
maybe trying to get an answer if his father was actually registered (the 
breeder said that she got his father at a pet store so she assumed that he was 
purebred…how funny is that?) After I found out about Desi and the only way that 
he had the testicle undescended and not attached to anything inside was if the 
sire had the same condition or if he was the puppy of parents that were too 
closely bred.  His father was supposedly 4 ½ lbs and his mother 5 ½ lbs…Desi 
Lou is 9.3 lbs without any fat right now.  I actually wonder if his actual 
father was another dog that she had that may not have been registered.  I will 
never know, so I will continue to take care of Desi and whatever else may show 
up in him in the future.  My vet says that he believes that he is purebred 
Chihuahua but he has a total different look to him.  He has a HUGE head…at 3 
months old, his head was bigger than Dolly’s.  His head faces down a bit 
whereas Dolly and all other Chihuahuas that I have see actually look straight 
ahead.

I love them both…I will do whatever needs to be done to keep them happy and 
healthy.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Peggy & The Girls
Sent: Sunday, February 06, 2011 7:45 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Chihuahuas] Madison and Myrtle got new sweaters today!!!

 

  


Breeders will post what they want on their website's, and post pictures of 
puppies that probably were from 27 litters ago.  I have had Desi for a year and 
a half and the breeder still has the same pictures for available dogs on her 
website.  Just because someone purports to be a breeder, does not mean that 
they are a reputable breeder.

Well said Joan. We have to be very, very, careful. A person can always check 
with D&B 

for their website and any consumer complaints.

 

 

    Peggy & The Girls

 

Don't Buy, Adopt & Save A Life!

                  

                  

"Until there are none...Rescue One"

 

 

 

-------Original Message-------

 

From: Joan Croft <mailto:[email protected]> 

Date: 2/6/2011 8:53:39 PM

To: [email protected]

Subject: RE: [Chihuahuas] Madison and Myrtle got new sweaters today!!!

 

  

I got Desi from a local breeder who was breeding for over 20 years.  Her house 
was neat and the puppies were in different gated areas.  But…she did not remove 
dewclaws when it would not have hurt them at all before the blood flow develops 
to them; she let the puppies free feed and I think Desi ate almost everything 
that was in the bowls and was on a diet from the time that I got him until he 
was 10 months old…so much fat on him that our vet said to take him off of puppy 
food at 4 months because he had way too much fat to continue with higher 
calorie puppy food.  She was using a male that had a medical problem that would 
prohibit a reputable breeder from using him as a breeding male because the 
problem is passed on to every male puppy.  I do love Desi dearly, but he has 
had to endure additional pain because of the things that she did wrong.  Desi 
was neutered before he was 4 months old…he did not lift his leg to potty before 
that and didn’t start until a couple months later.  Dolly is a little 
sweetheart and wants to be Mommy’s girl.  Desi is a little entertainer and he, 
too, wants to be Mommy’s boy.  I don’t think that the characteristics are true 
and that every puppy is an individual with traits that run in both sexes.

Breeders will post what they want on their websites, and post pictures of 
puppies that probably were from 27 litters ago.  I have had Desi for a year and 
a half and the breeder still has the same pictures for available dogs on her 
website.  Just because someone purports to be a breeder, does not mean that 
they are a reputable breeder. 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, February 06, 2011 5:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Madison and Myrtle got new sweaters today!!!

 

  

Thanks Deanna, so much for what makes sense and seems like really sound advice. 
You are the voice of experience, that's for certain, and I do really appreciate 
it.  I probably would be getting a puppy. I have located a 9 week-old puppy, 
"Cortney" at a place in Louisiana (Little Paws Kennel) that sounds like a 
reputable breeder.  She has been operating for 14 years and had lots of 
pictures posted of her facility and sounds as though anyone is welcome to tour 
her kennel.  I will talk to her tomorrow, probably inundate her with way too 
many questions .I see on her page where she recommends male puppies as being 
more happy to please their owners (for lack of a better word) because everyone 
is afraid of a male puppy being territorial and more readily given to leg 
lifting on furniture and said everyone seems to want a female puppy because of 
that misconception; if males are neutered before 6 months age that is not a 
problem that develops. She feels girls are more stubborn and headstrong and not 
as easy to handle.  I had another breeder tell me the same thing, that girls 
are more independent and not as affectionate as males. I'm sure it depends on 
the individual puppy also. I really had my heart set on a little girl, but will 
think it over, weighing all the different options.

Again, THANK YOU!

 

LYNN        

 

  In a message dated 2/6/2011 11:50:23 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, 
[email protected] writes:

  

If during the initial introduction you have a cat that is calm and does not 
"react" negatively to the dogs hyper bounces and wiggles...then all goes well. 
Give the cat a way out and a position so that he can view the dog from afar. 
That may take some weeks before the cat feels safe enough to engage in a 
positive way. With a puppy, the cat sets the stage and determines how things 
will go. Do not make the mistake of keeping them separated. The only way this 
works is when one is a baby or you have a cat that is already use to dogs....or 
an adult dog with little to no prey drive. They have to have time and the right 
environment to meet in and then to get to know each other. Keeping them 
separated only heightens prey drive in the dog. I had two cats with my present 
pack and everything was great with everyone...except my son's pit who came here 
as an adult and saw cats as prey. With Miles (our big orange neutered 
male)...because of Mile's calm demeanor and intelligence there was no 
issue...but with Brewster...our very moody...not so smart Hymmie, things were 
not good. That pit, Max and Brewster where the only two issues I have ever had 
my whole life with one of my dogs and my cats. I didn't raise Maxine...she 
spent her first 2 years with my son in a very angry environment...she really 
was not a part of our pack and had little to no manners and a VERY high prey 
drive...she was prey aggressive big time. Brewster lives with my friend now 
because I just wouldn't take any chances...but after a good solid 18 months, 
Maxine is now totally 100% bomb proof around cats...it took a lot of work and 
my son still keeps up the socialization and work. She is NOT bomb proof with 
other outside animals like squirrels or birds...she wants to get them and 
play!!! Just like a squeaky toy.  Realize too that a dog with squeaky toys that 
shakes them and plays really rough with them is attacking prey...that squeak 
spurs them on to attack...we are simulating prey when we give our dogs squeaky 
toys....which isn't a bad thing UNLESS you have a dog with a high prey 
drive...then you are just feeding the unwanted behavior. So...my advice is 
start with a puppy and all should go well...or a cat who is already confident 
around dogs...or an adult dog that has little to no prey drive...maybe one that 
has a positive history with cats. Just my 2 cents from the dog park!
 

  Waggin' Tails in The Dog Park,

     Deanna

 

 [Unable to display image]DeannasPack2Ani-CaNb-1v9-1" 
src="http://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/247842/sn/1754783897/name/DeannasPack2Ani-CaNb-1v9-1.jpg";>
                               
     and

 The Dog Park Pack: 
Nugget, Shuai-Li, Mouse, Myrtle, Mable, Madison and Caleb

  and honorary non-dog members of The Dog Park: 

Stella-Macaw, Stanley-Amazon, Miles the cat

www.joys4toys.com <http://www.joys4toys.com/> 

 

 

 

 

  _____  

From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sun, February 6, 2011 6:59:56 AM
Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Madison and Myrtle got new sweaters today!!!

  

Some Chis get along with cats, some don't.  There are people on this list who 
could probably give you advise on how to encourage it to happen.

 

Gloria

 

 



                        



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