Saturday, June 26, 2010

You have to check out Petshoppuppies.org......


The one thing pet store customers want to know more than anything is "Did my puppy come from a puppy mill?" Unfortunately, this is a question that only you can answer. What is a puppy mill? Is it illegal; is it filthy; is it hidden in the backwoods of country; are dogs starved and abused? For a moment, let us assume that the answer to all of these questions is "yes," but let's also look at the commercial dog industry and its practices, and then you can be the judge as to whether your puppy has originated at a puppy mill.

In 1966 Congress passed the federal Animal Welfare Act. The Act, as we will refer to it, was passed after public outrage at a growing business of stealing dogs and selling them for research. The original Act only regulated animals being sold to research, but four years later in 1970, the increasing wholesale business of selling puppies to pet stores left a gaping hole in the oversight of these wholesale kennels that were hidden from the public eye.

Normally, dog breeders were self-regulated -- if a breeder had sick puppies and filthy living conditions for the breeding dogs, the consumer would take one look at the kennel and head the other way. But by the early 70's times had changed and puppies were being shipped in vegetable crates -- packed full of puppies with the hope that some survived the trip, via airlines and even cargo trains. As the media began to focus on the way dogs were treated in wholesale kennels and the way puppies were shipped from coast to coast, the public again asked Congress to address the situation. The 1970 amendments to the Act began the licensing and inspection process of anyone wholesaling puppies. The "wholesale" term is applied to anyone breeding puppies that is not selling to the final consumer -- the family that will make that puppy a part of their family.

USDA licensed breeders mass-produce puppies, often by the hundreds or even thousands, and then wholesale them to brokers (middle-man) or pet stores. Most of us know that USDA is responsible for making sure the food we place on our tables is safe and wholesome, but few people know that they are also responsible for ensuring that the puppies we bring into our home from pet stores are coming from a healthy environment where the adult dogs are housed and cared for in a kennel that meets "minimum standards."

Minimum Standards. What are minimum standards? PetShopPuppies has obtained several undercover videos that show you exactly what it is like for a dog living under "minimum standards." We could take the time to explain many of the regulations and standards that make up a USDA licensed kennel, but as the saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words -- and a video is worth a million words. To see for yourself the standards that the mothers and fathers of pet shop puppies live in, view their VIDEOS at their site. They have a fabulous website.

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