Ever wonder why so many
pet store
puppies are sick or become
sick within weeks
of bringing them home?
The truth
about pet store puppies
is disturbing. If you're an
animal lover,
the following paragraphs
will be difficult
to read, but simply doing just
that could
potentially spare
a life.
It's hard
to imagine that
in this country
where dogs are considered valuable
members of the family, have their very own telelvision
and radio shows
and people
dress them
in designer clothes
and treat them
like children, that a
grave place called a
puppy mill could still exist.
A
puppy mill or puppy farm is a breeding operation with the sole purpose of making
money. The animals are not screened
for potential genetic health defects or
even given basic medical
care. There is definitely no
attention paid
to producing dogs that comform to breed standard
for size or temperament.
A puppy mill
can be a
sign along the road advertising puppies, an ad in your local newspaper or
they can even have a nice website, but they are almost always behind those cute puppies you've seen in pet shop windows.
You'd never
know by looking at those puppies the deplorable conditions from which they
came. You'll see how
excited they get when you approach their cage. You might even slip your hand through the bars despite the
posted warning not to and entertain the thought of bringing home the one who seemed most
eager, but it's
what you won't see that
would leave you gasping.
For that
puppy's mother,
life (if you can call it
that) is a desperate struggle. Her body is used
up from years of
overbreeding and because of this, she will
probably never see
her sixth birthday. She
has never been shown
love or compassion and probably has no idea what it would feel like to
run in the grass.
Her life is not like that of a normal
dog at
all. She only exists for the purpose of breeding and has lived her entire life in the same small cage where she eats and sleeps and where she's probably given birth to several litters.
But that doesn't matter to the owner of the puppy mill.
He only
sees dollar signs when he looks
into her dark,
sad eyes. In another
six months
he'll breed her once again for the sake of filling
his wallet and the puppies will be shipped around the country to various pet stores and puppy
brokers and the
morbid cycle will continue.
When she's no longer able to breed,
she'll finally be put her out of her misery- if she's lucky
enough. The sad truth is that she will probably still be worth a few dollars to a testing
facility: A laboratory that uses dogs for the sake of testing
new products. There is no hope of ever stopping this
morbid cycle of abuse as
long as
we keep buying puppies from pet stores.
Don't be fooled by AKC papers. Although the AKC doesn't condone puppy mills, almost anyone can register a new litter providing both parents are registered purebreds.
Please help put an
end to this torture. Join the fight to eliminate puppy
mills by refusing to purchase a puppy from anyone other than a reputable breeder. There are
also millions of animals around the world in need of adoption. You might be
surprised to know that one in four dogs rescued by the ASPCA, Humane
Society and similar
shelters is a purebred.
Please refer this article to a fellow animal
lover or anyone who might someday be in the market for a
purebred puppy.
My name is Brooke Faulder. I've made it my business, my passion and my mission in life to put an end to the exploitation of
animals. Learn more about the plight of small breed dogs by reading through the
pages of
http://www.small-breed-dogs.com.