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Dear Backyard Breeder --
I am writing this in a state of anger,
frustration, and sadness. I think you will understand why as you read this letter.
About two years ago, you decided to breed a litter. Your bitch wasn't really
breeding quality, and you certainly didn't know enough about the breed, so perhaps it was
greed, ignorance, or the desire to show the kids the highly overrated miracle of birth.
You managed to find a male of equally undistinguished parentage, and the deal was
consummated. Your bitch, who had previously been confined to the backyard because she was
not housebroken and had absolutely no manners, must have felt like royalty when you
allowed her to stay in the garage while she tended her puppies. The puppies received very
little handling and only absolutely minimal vet care. After all, you had to make money on
the litter. You started to panic when the pups were 6 weeks old, and prospective buyers
were not exactly beating a path to your door. The price dropped, and the interview
for prospective buyers consisted pretty much of "Did you bring cash?"
One lively, playful male was sold to a young couple with a toddler and another child on
the way. Any responsible breeder would have known this was a bad placement and would have
counseled the couple to wait until the kids were 4 or 5. Maybe you didn't know any better,
or maybe you just didn't care, so you sold them the puppy. Things were okay for a very
short time, but then the puppy, in his youthful exuberance, was knocking the toddler down,
and the kid was becoming afraid of him. The parents, novice dog owners without a clue
about training, banished the pup to the backyard. Unfortunately he was lonely and started
barking and digging and showing aggressive tendancies. They called you and offered to return him, but you said you didn't
want him back and that you were getting out of dogs. (Thank goodness!) They ran an ad in
the paper...free to good home, but they were pretty lenient on the interpretation of good
home.
A young man took the puppy. He saw this free, AKC registered dog as a way to make extra
money standing the dog at stud. I guess the income wasn't that great, or the guy spent it
too quickly. The dog was hit by a car. The owner neglected to get veterinary care until 5
days later and only did so because the leg was all swollen, and the dog was in severe
pain. When the vet told him how much the treatment would cost, the owner said to euthanize
the dog. The vet thought the dog was too sweet to kill, so she called someone in rescue.
This person paid for the treatment and took the dog home to heal. When the dog was healed
and no adopters were forthcoming, she called me and I took the dog to foster.
He really liked living here. I taught him some basic manners, and he got to watch TV in
the evenings. He liked playing with my dogs. When a good possibility of a home came along,
I adopted him out. Things were fine for the first 2 days, but then he started to show
unpredictable aggression, not to the adopters, but to guests or people they encountered
when walking him. They reluctantly returned him to me. I did more socialization and then
got another rescue person to take him for a week and see what kind of results he got. Same
story. The dog was fine for a very short time and then began displaying unpredictable
aggression. I took him back knowing that the only alternative now was to put him
down. A dog with unpredictable aggression is just not a candidate for placement. We
have so many more dogs looking for homes than there are homes available that resources
cannot be spent on a dog with unsatisfactory temperament.
So, Back Yard Breeder, you produced this dog and then abandoned all responsibility for
him. I took him to the vet yesterday. He knew something was wrong...probably because I was
crying and my hands were shaking. I knew I had to do this, but I really liked this dog and
hated that this was the way it would end. I held him in my arms as he drifted off. There
is no more confusion and instability in his young life, and now he has playmates at the
Rainbow Bridge. I know that for at least the time he lived here he was happy and
well-cared for. I can't help thinking that if you had been more selective of buyers and if
his owners had been more responsible and provided him with care and training, he wouldn't
have had to die. Maybe it was genetic. Perhaps his parents had aggression problems, and
you never considered that when you bred the litter. I don't know. I just know that I wish
you could feel as bad as I do over this.
I suppose the irresponsible people who owned him along the way have to share the blame
too. The young couple bought on impulse without doing any research into the breed. They
didn't train him and then just gave him away when he became inconvenient. The young man
who let him suffer before seeking vet care should never own another pet. But by and large,
Back Yard Breeder, I blame you because you made a conscious decision to create life
and then refused to take responsibility for what you had created.
Angrily yours,
A Rescue Worker
[Author Unknown]
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