August 28, 2009

Where can I find a local store in maryland that sells puppies?

my family is thinking about buying 2 puppies. though theres 3 to choose from. a westie, maltese, and a bichon frise. (i dont like the grooming they do on the maltese and bichon. they don't trim the puppies hair. not once. also i asked a question before saying where to get a newborn (it was a mistake and u dont need to be telling me anymore!). anyways, if you could help me i would really aprreciate it!!

READ ALL OF THIS!!! PLEASE!!!

OK I read all of your question and I think that if you want 2 puppies you have a great opportunity to save 2 lives. Puppies from pet stores are from PUPPY MILLS!!! NOOOO EXCEPTIONS!!! Sorry to burst that one out but I really want to get the point across that if you buy a puppy from a store, it is from a mill! Got it? It's from a mill. A mill. Google puppy mills please.

Here are some westies avail for adoption:
http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.cgi?breed=west&tmpl=&preview=&animal=Dog&age=baby&preview=&zip=MD

Here are some maltese's avail for adoption:
http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.cgi?pet.Animal=Dog&pet.Breed=maltese&pet.Age=baby&pet.Size=&pet.Sex=&location=MD

And lastly, some bichons avail for adoption:
http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.cgi?pet.Animal=Dog&pet.Breed=bichon&pet.Age=baby&pet.Size=&pet.Sex=&location=MD

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Comments on Where can I find a local store in maryland that sells puppies? »

August 6, 2009

KKingS @ 6:58 am

They have this site called "Google" that's really great at finding what you want.

However, you might want to rethink buying from a pet store. Supporting one would be supporting puppymills and brokers. You can use the awesome power of google to research what puppymills are. After that, you'll see why supporting such inhumane treatment of animals is not the best option. Find a puppy through a responsible breeder or check your local shelters. http://www.petfinder.com
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moondog @ 6:59 am

Pet stores get their dogs from puppy mills so if you buy from a pet store you are supporting puppy mills.

Two puppies together will be almost impossible to house train. Get one pup, train it and then get another later on.

Pet store puppies are difficult to house train in any case because they are used to peeing and pooping where they sleep and live…both in the pet store and in the puppy mill they came from.

Get your pup from a reputable breeder.
References :

C. Jean @ 7:02 am

OK I read all of your question and I think that if you want 2 puppies you have a great opportunity to save 2 lives. Puppies from pet stores are from PUPPY MILLS!!! NOOOO EXCEPTIONS!!! Sorry to burst that one out but I really want to get the point across that if you buy a puppy from a store, it is from a mill! Got it? It's from a mill. A mill. Google puppy mills please.

Here are some westies avail for adoption:
http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.cgi?breed=west&tmpl=&preview=&animal=Dog&age=baby&preview=&zip=MD

Here are some maltese's avail for adoption:
http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.cgi?pet.Animal=Dog&pet.Breed=maltese&pet.Age=baby&pet.Size=&pet.Sex=&location=MD

And lastly, some bichons avail for adoption:
http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.cgi?pet.Animal=Dog&pet.Breed=bichon&pet.Age=baby&pet.Size=&pet.Sex=&location=MD
References :

Tulip @ 7:06 am

Number 1; You realised your 1st mistake Good
Number 2 mistake buying from petstore
Number 3; MISTAKE Buying two puppies at once.
Reason why its a bad idea!
http://ascpbr.blogspot.com/2009/02/two-puppies-at-once.html
http://leerburg.com/2dogs.htm
http://carpek9.com/siblings.htm
http://www.cleardogtraining.com/index.php?view=article&catid=5%3Atraining-articles&id=66%3Atwo-pups-or-one&option=com_content&Itemid=12
http://www.k9events.com/pups4.html

Here are GOOD places to go
Good place 1; Animals Shelter-Yes as long as the pup 8week old, any age pup will bond
http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.cgi?pet.Animal=Dog&pet.Breed=Bichon+Frise&pet.Age=baby&pet.Size=S&pet.Sex=&location=Md

Good place number 2
Or the bichon frise club of America-Look for show breeder
http://www.bichon.org/InfoDirectory.htm

Every pet shop that sells puppies will assure you, solemnly, that their puppies are different. Their puppies don't come from puppy mills, but from fine local breeders. Pillars of the community, in fact.

The reality is that responsible breeders will never place one of their puppies in a pet shop or anywhere else for resale or consignment. Never, ever, ever. Any breeder who has placed their puppy in a pet shop to be sold has immediately disqualified himself as a responsible breeder.

WHY?
Because, as commercial establishments, pet shops are required to sell a puppy to anyone who can pay. Legally, they are not allowed to "screen" buyers for suitability. Responsible breeders wouldn't be able to sleep at night wondering which of their puppies might have gone to an unsuitable home and was not being properly cared for.

But my pet shop says…
The pet shop industry has manuals and trade journals that teach pet shop owners and employees exactly what to say to persuade you to buy. Their marketing ploys include:

"We buy only from local breeders."
What difference does this make? Whether a breeder is local or lives in Timbuktu, whether he has produced only one litter or many — if he has placed his puppies in a pet shop, his breeding practices are irresponsible. Geographical location makes no difference at all.

"We buy only from USDA-licensed breeders."
USDA stands for the United States Department of Agriculture. Their business is supposed to be livestock. They know little or nothing about dogs. As long as a breeder's paperwork is in order, the facilities are disinfected, cages are a minimum size, and no infectious diseases such as distemper are immediately obvious, the kennel passes.

The USDA has not the slightest interest in…
whether the breeder knows anything about his breed
whether the dogs used for breeding look like their breed
whether the dogs used for breeding act like their breed
whether the dogs used for breeding are free of genetic health problems such as hip dysplasia, eye diseases, or heart defects.

USDA Breeder is a label to stay away from. The only reason someone would apply for this license is to crank out lots of puppies.

"Health guaranteed!"
This "reassuring" platitude is how pet shops and irresponsible breeders seek to get around the expenses of genetic testing.

They offer to replace defective puppies rather than avoiding them in the first place by requiring their "wonderful" breeders to do genetic health tests on any parent dog used for breeding.

Let's look at it from the PUPPY'S point of view. Guarantees don't help a puppy at all. You get your money back, while the puppy still has to live with the genetic health problem that could have been avoided — if his breeder had been seeking to produce healthy lives rather than seeking to keep his expenses down by avoiding genetic health testing.

We're talking about quality of life here. Don't support any breeder or pet shop who cares so little about the future life of their puppies that they do not require genetic health testing of the parents, in breeds where such health problems are virtually an epidemic.

Pet shops aren't too worried about their "guarantees", by the way. They don't have to honor many of them because most genetic health problems don't show up for six months or a year or two years. Either the guarantee has expired by then, or most people won't return a dog they've had for that long.

Not just HEALTH problems
Obedience instructors and canine behavioral consultants will be happy to tell you about the temperament and behavior problems that develop in many pet shop puppies as they grow up.

Most pet shop puppies start out playful and friendly, but as they mature, their genes begin to assert themselves. If their parents or grandparents had shy or aggressive or hyperactive temperaments, those genes will show up during adolescence and adulthood.

Many pet shop puppies are nippy. Some were removed from their mother before 7 weeks of age, a critical period of time where she teaches them "bite inhibition." Some have learned to nip from interacting with so many potential owners wandering through the pet shop, including kids who tug and play roughly. Most of these potential owners thought the nipping was cute, didn't correct the puppy for it, and so the habit becomes entrenched.

Finally, raised in a small cage in which they're encouraged to eliminate freely, pet shop puppies are notoriously difficult to housebreak.

Watch these videos-This are the conditions petstore mother and there pup have to put up with! They are called puppy mills. By buying from a store you are contributing and helping puppy mills, NOT ending animal cruelity. We want to stop these horrible cruel places.

I believe Maryland is one of the BIG puppy mills. Place you should never buy from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itOtk47QnS4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HM8UmHM8Uo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OdcNl5FqcKY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HF9OpEThM7E

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HF9OpEThM7E

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4JaIMBtPB8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDGlWTWrWBw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejuGz1DCFj4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtYaXgc9aK8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLZTjNVpH1s

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLccL9Yi3J4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYoTZMHSbYk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLccL9Yi3J4
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The major reason not to buy — supporting the industry
You may wish to "rescue" a pet shop puppy. That's completely understandable. We all feel sorry for them.

But your good intentions will backfire, because you are feeding the industry by rewarding it with money.

You've emptied one cage, yes — which creates demand for yet another litter to be produced to fill that cage. Even if you're very, very lucky, and your one individual puppy turns out okay, a large percentage of the others will not — and YOU provided the incentive for them to be born by buying the one who came before them.

So what seems like a simple, isolated purchase actually contributes to:

The misery of adult females who spend their lives in a cage, being bred again and again to provide puppies that you and others can buy

The misery of these future puppies born with health and temperament problems

The misery of future families who buy these puppies and then try to cope with the health and temperament problems

The misery of animal rescue groups trying to deal with the flood of pet shop puppies dumped on their doorstep because families gave up on the health and temperament problems

I hope it's clear that when you buy one of those cute puppies in the pet shop window, you buy more than the puppy. You buy the budding physical and behavioral problems created by the bad genes passed on by untested parents whom you never get to see and evaluate.
Worse than that, you buy into a profit-hungry industry that is hurting innocent animals. Simply out of good conscience, a pet shop should not be anyone's choice as a source for a puppy.
http://www.yourpurebredpuppy.com/buying/articles/petshops-and-pet-stores.html

Read Petstore Cruelty
http://www.petstorecruelty.org/

brenda @ 7:10 am

Don't buy! Adopt!
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BYBS sell deformed puppies @ 7:27 am

petshops are TERRIBLE places to buy puppies from

Petshops are supplied by puppy mills.. ALL petshops are supplied by puppy mills! Good breeders DO NOT sell to petshops!

The BREED CLUBS can refer you to reputable breeders

http://www.westieclubamerica.com/
http://www.americanmaltese.org/
http://www.bichon.org/

As for the haircuts.. if its just a pet, it doesnt matter how the hair is cut.. you can do it any way you like.. actually the maltese DO get trimmed for shows so the hair is neat and even and bichons coats are scissored and shaped. But many people keep them in a shorter "pet" cut when they are not being shown.
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August 12, 2009

Carlotta U @ 7:49 pm

Alyssa G, I like the look of a bichon frise. They are so cute.
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