In 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 June 2009 issue, I included my dog Danger, who is a pure-bred chocolate Lab, in a round-up of cool summer gear. We received several letters in response, taking us to task. A typical letter included this: “There are millions of healthy dogs awaiting adoption right now in animal shelters. And they are priced far less than Schaffer鈥檚 vanity animal.”
The Ultimate 国产吃瓜黑料 Companion
All you need to know about going wild with man’s best friend.What stands out about this letter, and several others we received, isn鈥檛 its well-justified promotion of shelter animals but its personal jab. When exactly did the adoption movement go from promoting shelter animals to scolding anyone who would get a dog from a breeder? It鈥檚 time to give the shame-mongering a rest. The six鈥揺ight million animals that show up in shelters each year are overwhelmingly the result of backyard accidents and mass breeding鈥攐f human negligence and greed鈥攏ot the product of responsible breeders. Adopting a dog is a worthy act and maybe even one of mercy, but blaming dog buyers for the聽 deaths of pound puppies is some seriously specious logic. Your goal when choosing a dog should be simple: Find a companion you get along with. You鈥檙e going to be spending the next 13 years together.
Shelter dogs certainly have their advantages. Mutts are likely to have a healthy mixed gene pool; you can find good pets of just about any demeanor; they鈥檙e cheaper at the outset; and you鈥檒l be supporting a community organization that stands up for animal welfare. The Humane Society also makes note of the fact that 25 percent of all shelter animals are pure bred鈥攎ore on that in a minute.
But shelter dogs have their drawbacks, too. You generally can鈥檛 meet a shelter puppy鈥檚 parents鈥攖he biggest determinant of a dog鈥檚 grown-up personality. You don鈥檛 know an adult dog鈥檚 history or whether there are latent behavioral problems that could crop up. There鈥檚 also the matter of spaying and neutering. Some shelters won鈥檛 allow an animal to go home before the operation. This has led to spaying and neutering as young as eight weeks, which can cause (PDF) related to hormone deficiencies. Nearly all shelters require their dogs to be fixed by six months. The research is mixed for operations at that age but either way, you don鈥檛 get to choose.
Then there are those pure-bred shelter animals. They tend to get adopted first, yet they almost certainly represent the worst of both worlds: The genetic disorders (hip dysplasia, cataracts, and such) of irresponsible breeding with the uncertainty over why they ended up in the shelter. True, most animals end up in shelters for human reasons like bankruptcy, marriages, and divorces that are unrelated to a specific animal behavior or health problem. But I鈥檒l also say this: Mike Stewart, Danger and Cooper鈥檚 breeder, has placed thousands of dogs with families over the last three decades. None of those dogs has ever ended up in a shelter. He and his wife, Cathy, keep track of every dog they place and have a long waiting list of people for any dog that needs to be surrendered. Keeping up with clients is one of the requirements for responsible breeders.
And I guess that鈥檚 the issue. The well-intentioned push to stop mass breeding has cast too wide a net. There are still plenty of (PDF) masquerading as responsible breeders but if you鈥檙e buying a dog for the right reasons, you shouldn鈥檛 have any problem avoiding them. The Humane Society publishes an (PDF) on how to tell if your breeder is responsible. Good reasons to buy a dog? Everybody has their own, but generally they should start with wanting a dog with a specific temperament and work ethic. For me, I happen to like fishing, hunting, skiing, and, well, dog training. And starting with good working stock increases the likelihood that I鈥檒l end up with a buddy that can come along and stay out of trouble.
The trainers of service dogs, cattle dogs, hunting dogs, avalanche dogs, search dogs, and drug dogs all rely on careful breeding to produce consistent results. Yes, mixed-breeds can make fine working dogs, but trainers who are about to invest thousands of dollars and hours generally don鈥檛 go looking for puppies at random. If you鈥檙e the sort of person who鈥檚 willing to make a serious time commitment in training a companion animal, a well-bred dog from a working line will almost certainly make the process easier. Readers email us their canine behavior problems every week. A surprising number of these problems arise from the dog exhibiting the instinctual tendencies of its dominant breeds.
Danger鈥檚 not without his foibles. He鈥檚 a humper, a skirt-lifter, and he often prefers the neighbors鈥 trash cans to coming when called. But he鈥檚 also predictable and intelligent as all hell. Could I have ended up with a similarly great dog from a shelter? Maybe. And maybe next time I will.
This article originally appeared on 国产吃瓜黑料 K9, the former dog blog of 国产吃瓜黑料 magazine, on July 31, 2009.