The Following was written by DHMooring with permission to post on this web page. Dee is owned by her dogs and birds.
Why do puppies from a responsible breeder cost so much? As a longtime owner of many dogs ( of shelter, poor breeding, quality breeding), I can truly say the initial high cost of a puppy is in the details- big details like
1. Health testing of the parents, grandparents , aunts and uncles
2. Careful and objective evaluation of each litter and spaying of a bitch when there are a few problems in a litter.
3.Excellent diet for all dogs which mean well -nourished puppies-no bargain dog food
4.Time indoors with the family and other animals for all of the dogs which mean alternating males and females throughout the day-sort of like being the ringmaster in a circus.
5.Time spent holding, loving the puppies from birth on and exposing them to a variety of people which actually increases the size of their brains and the quality of synapses for a smarter more resilient puppy.
6. Excellent and consistent veterinary care for the parents of the puppies and at least one vet visit for each puppy so that the vet can sign off on the health of each puppy sold.
And then there are the other critical details:
If we, as the lucky recipients of these well-bred puppies, actually saw the critical process and delving deeply into pedigrees that goes into deciding which dogs should be bred to which bitches to produce beautiful, long term healthy puppies that move well, have strong knees, hearts , eyes etc. and a typical happy Havanese attitude, it would boggle our minds. Here , especially , we see how generations of details are so very important.
Experience with the animals in a line enables a breeder to fairly safely predict the outcome of breedings within a line. After all, he/she has spent much money taking dogs into the show ring where judges decide how the dogs compare to others. A designation of CH. before the dog's name means many trips into the ring. The costly details : traveling to shows, entries, hotels, constant grooming and quality products involved, perhaps a professional handler are all necessary.
And, even then, quality breedings take courage because to maintain the strength of a line and avoid creating puppies that are too much of a type, breeders bring in a new line and outcross. The same ( or even greater) work goes into planning a breeding but sometimes it's as if the genes are randomly tossed into a basket because the outcome is not as predictable. If a breeding produces a litter with problems or pups that don't meet the quality breeder's standards, then a bitch may be spayed or a dog neuterd but the quality breeder will never use that combination again and many dollars spent on show careers for those animals will have been for naught.
We pour our love and training into puppies we bring home to be part of our families and they become just that- beloved family members. A quality breeder does his/her best to provide us with a pup that will live a healthy, happy, long life in our families. Even though we might have to plan for awhile to add a puppy from a good breeder, its worth the planning because that pup will be the result of integrity, careful planning, and love. And that breeder will be available to us for advise, and friendship for the rest of our dog's long life. The details do make all the difference.