Sunday, January 29, 2012

What should I know about toy poodle breeders (or in general) in order to buy a puppy?

What should I know before buying a toy poodle from a breeder?

How much should the puppy cost?

What is the best color to get?

Any advice is greatly appreciated! :)What should I know about toy poodle breeders (or in general) in order to buy a puppy?
Make sure to contact a lot of toy poodle breeders and ask them a lot of questions about their breeding program. Get references from others that have bought dogs from them in the past. Then contact those people to find out how well their experience went.



There are many toy poodle breeders on this web page: http://www.pets4you.com/toypoodle.html
Please adopt. I have found that most poodles obtained from breeders are not reputable. They come from bybs. However, if you are dead set on buying one, the AKC website can point you in the direction of reputable breeders.

You want to make sure both parents are champion or show quality, and they need to have pedigree papers and health certificate. Be careful.What should I know about toy poodle breeders (or in general) in order to buy a puppy?
make sure they don't breed by kennel club breed standards...

from your local paper around $200 to $400...

i like the apricot poodles best..
http://www.poodleclubofamerica.org/



Everything you could want to know is thoroughly answered there.



For instance, check out http://www.brittonfarmsdobermans.com/pup鈥?/a>



Notice how they have vet certificates and health guarantees. Any reputable breeder will have this done. The more transparent, the more trustworthy.



Seeing a back yard bred dog out the paper recommended for health reasons is a first for me. Never heard that angle. Of course this is yahoo, lol. Top contributor, too. ROFL.



You deliberately breed against the breed standard, of course people will call you an idiot. I'd rather have some inbred show dog, than some backyard poorly bred dog by some hick that has a bone to pick with breed standards.



When you spend some real money on a dog, you usually search their pedigree and progeny. http://www.dobermann-review.com/males/Fa鈥?/a>



If you don't, hey it's not my dog. I don't give a crap. Flush money down the toilet. But, a spade's a spade. Poorly bred dogs by some online malcontent are not.What should I know about toy poodle breeders (or in general) in order to buy a puppy?
Please check out what does poodle have as medical defects. Then find someone that raises in home and not a kennel.
www.petfinder.com

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