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Ten Reasons Why You Should Not Buy a Puppy from a Pet Shop

Don't Buy that Puppy in the Window

By April Roberts, published Aug 31, 2006
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1. Health That adorable puppy in the window of the pet store is hard to resist, but you may be paying a lot of money for a dog that you know very little about. Pet stores generally rely on impulse buys to sell their "product". There is a good chance that the pet store puppy will develop a health problem sometime in its life that may cost you a lot of money to remedy. When you buy a pet store puppy it is very unlikely that the puppy's parents were screened for genetic diseases that can be passed to their offspring. Every breed of dog has genetic problems that are passed from generation to generation by breeding dogs that carry the flawed gene. Many of these genetic problems can be detected with today's technology, but these tests are expensive. People who are concerned about the welfare and future of their breed will have these tests conducted to preserve and improve in the future quality of their breed. Most good breeders are more concerned about the health of the puppies that they are producing than the money that they will or won't make on the production of a litter. 

2. The myth about AKC papers Most pet shops would like you to believe that if a puppy is registered by the American Kennel Club, this guarantees the puppy will be healthy and a good example of the breed. This is not so. The only thing that AKC papers certify is that the puppy is a purebred and produced out of AKC registered parents. Even this can be fiction, as some producers register more puppies than are actually born in each litter to receive extra registration slips to pass out with unregisterable puppies. The parents of your puppy may be unhealthy or carriers of crippling or deadly health defects which they may have passed to their offspring- your puppy. They may also be horrible representations of the breed that you are buying. Often times the parentage of pet store puppies is also questionable due to poor record keeping. In other words, your puppy may not even be a purebred, even though it has AKC papers. Responsible breeders do register their puppies with the AKC, but that is only the beginning. 

Takeaways
  • Most good breeders are more concerned about the health of the puppies that they are producing than t
  • You may have seen specimens of the breed that you are buying, but this does not guarantee that this
  • When you buy a puppy from a reputable breeder you are getting more than a piece of paper, you are ge
Did You Know?
Did you know? Dogs "slobber" is known to be more pure than human saliva!
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Comments
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Hello, I own a pet store and this has been very offensive to me. I care about each and every pet that comes into my store. I do research the breed and check out the parents of the puppies that we take in. So, I would not say that ALL pet stores sell poor quality over priced puppies. Thank you

Posted on 06/17/2008 at 9:06:19 PM

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