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Name: Jessie | Date: Oct 11th, 2007 10:09 PM
HiHi. im new to this what is this for 

Name: lindalu | Date: Oct 11th, 2007 10:52 PM
Jessie ~ How are you? Its nice to meet you. Do you have pets? Being your on a pet forum, I can only assume you do. 

Name: Meigel | Date: Oct 14th, 2007 8:23 PM
I would love to have the dog I see the dog being a great asset to my family. It would be a new addition to the family.Please email :[email protected] or call me at 404-290-4065 Thanks looking forward to talking to you. 

Name: Chalina | Date: Oct 17th, 2007 4:47 PM
Hi my name is Chalina Fields my number is 1-216-624-6974 I have 2 daughters their names are Chavonne she is 13 and a daughter name Victoria she is 6 years old about to be 7...I would like to have a newborn dog in other wordds i want dog that i can house train and etc. I want the dog to be a pitbull and a boxer mixed together or breeded thank you 

Name: Tony | Date: Oct 19th, 2007 2:21 PM
i have a brown boxer and a black one to they like to play jump around and eat alot i realy injoy them alot but my dogs need girl friends and i do too 

Name: Crystal | Date: Oct 20th, 2007 10:54 PM
i have a white pitbull with black spots and a black nose does anyone know what breed it is 


Name: crazy | Date: Oct 22nd, 2007 3:36 PM
waz good 

Name: gabe | Date: Oct 24th, 2007 10:41 PM
I love puppy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!
 

Name: Dawna Gonzales | Date: Oct 26th, 2007 5:51 PM
I have a pit bull boxer mix as well as a pure bred. Do you have a picure of yours..... maybe we can compare. I rescued a dog and she did say it was mixed... I cant be sure without comparing photos... My email address is [email protected]. I also have a picture of mine and he is 6 months old..... 

Name: ISIS | Date: Oct 27th, 2007 2:16 AM
I THINK A PIT BULL IS THE PRETIEST DOGS EVER THERE REALLY PERTECTIVE I LOVE THEM THAT IS WHY I GOT TWO OF THEM THERE BOTH VERY UNIQUIE DONT GET ME WRONG OTHER KINDS OF DOGS ARE BUTIFUL TOO BUT I LOVE MY PIT BULLS SO MUCH .LOVE ISIS H. 

Name: Christina | Date: Oct 27th, 2007 7:08 PM
I have a Purebred ACA Registered Boxer. She is pure WHITE with skin markings of Brindle. She is 5 WEEKS PREGNAUNT with a Purebred ACA American Pit Bull terrior. He is Fawn with white markings. She is due around the end of November 2007. Anyone looking for a full ACA / ICA papered pitbull/boxer (bull boxer) puppy feel free to contact me via [email protected] 

Name: Christina | Date: Oct 27th, 2007 7:17 PM
EXTRA INFO FROM ABOVE ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

I'm located in Green Bay, WI and charge for shipping a live pet.
The ACA / ICA Registered Pitbull/Boxer pups will not be have cropped ears or clipped tails unless at your expense and MUST BE DONE within the FIRST 5 DAYS after Birth. Will provide full access to pictures of mother, father, birthing day and such. Any information requested will be fully provided! (Documents, papers and pictures at your request.) We love Angel (Our Boxer's Name) and we love Tank (Our Pitbull's Name). We want their puppies to go to GOOD HOMES with Lots of Love. 

Name: Christina | Date: Oct 27th, 2007 7:21 PM
FROM ABOVE^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Opps!!! First I submit forgetting to put my location and the other info. So I submit one with that information and FORGET my email address on the second submit. So for the last 2 postings....... they are both from me! Sorry about the confusion

Thanks,
Christina

[email protected]
 

Name: phil | Date: Oct 28th, 2007 8:14 AM
I use to breed pitbulls, but stopped due to irresponcible people. every pup I sold i made sure to give training tips and kept in contact whith the owners. my last litter a few of them went to bad owners. I found out one of the owners used his pup as a fighting dog another put the dog on a 10 ft chain in his back yard and the last owner well just did not take care of the dog. I tried getting the dogs back but had trouble getting them back. It was heart breaking. The problem that we have with pitbulls or any other breed is lack of knowledge. If your planning on getting a dog what ever breed you choose make sure you study up on the breed first to make sure the breed is for you. Once you have chosen the breed make sure you have the time, money, desire and patience to take care of it. Then find a local trainer and ask him question, a gud professional trainer will have no problem helping you out. Let him know the type of life style you live and type of people thats going to be around the dog. Ask him what traits to look for and how to look for them in the dog your looking for. As for where to find the breed your local trainer might have a few connection with good breeders in your area. The animal shelter is source to find what your looking for, I myself have found some awesome dogs at my local shelter for people that I know. One thing that people don't realize about shelter dogs is that these dogs become totally different dogs once thier taken to a good home with proper training. speaking of training if you don't know to much about dogs puppy trainning classes are a must, in the same breath dogs need training threw out there lives. Daily exercise at least 20min a day along with I repeat trainning is a good way to keep your dog balenced. Now we get to the pitbull boxer cross. It is one outstanding breed I recently aquired one threw a friend of mine thats why i seaked out this blog. four years ago I owned one his named was fatu. He was intelligent, friendly, and protective exspecially around my ex girlfriends five year old son, of course I worked with both fatu and her son and taught them how to work together. When it came to her son fatu knew that her son was alpha male over him. He had a six sence about people, Its like he knew if a person should be arond us our the home and whould show his disapproval by staying clear of that person and keeping a close eye on them. With the right training the mix is awesome the pup I have now is 8wks old and he has already started his crate training and is doing outstanding. 

Name: Dawnag | Date: Oct 28th, 2007 6:53 PM
does anyone have a picture of their Pit bull boxer mix. Please.... My email is [email protected]. Thanks a bunch. 

Name: Dawnag | Date: Oct 28th, 2007 6:57 PM
Minnie, are you still looking for a Pitbull boxer mix. I have one for sale 100.00 for a 6month old and already has its first set of shots, worming and physical. Let me know. My email is [email protected] 

Name: Please adopt | Date: Nov 2nd, 2007 1:27 AM
PLEASE ADOPT!! Spending money on a puppy/dog that is breed ONLY for money is letting all the great pups/dogs that are homeless suffer!

Please consider adopting a rescue dog BEFORE you spend the money encouraging breeders and (in part) killing all the dogs waiting for homes. 

Name: michelle | Date: Nov 3rd, 2007 9:54 AM
i have a boxer whom loves to eat wood, is there an answer for this problem. 

Name: mike | Date: Nov 4th, 2007 1:47 AM
I have a brown pit with a white patch on its eye for 100$
contact [email protected] 

Name: jaelene | Date: Nov 9th, 2007 4:42 AM
do you stil have the puppy? 

Name: jaelene | Date: Nov 9th, 2007 4:44 AM
I JUST HAD TO PUT MY PRESIOUS BEST FRIEND DOWN TODAY. AS I WRITE THIS I CRY LOOKING FOR A ALL WHITE BOXER. I WILL GIVE THE BEST HOME
EMAIL ME AT [email protected] 

Name: dude | Date: Nov 9th, 2007 5:44 PM
how gayasfsdgsdfhsdghfg 

Name: Joe Diago | Date: Nov 10th, 2007 8:11 PM
I just got a beautiful pit/boxer mix, she is fixed, has all her shots and she is the best dog I have ever known! She is SO smart you have no idea.. She is learning very well and very fast. She is 9mo and was a bit spastic when i first got her but she also came from a house with two other dogs. One pit/boxer(her bro) and a rottie. She has calmed down so much in just the few days I have had her. She is fantastic with people and shows absolutly NO signs of agression. now dont get me wrong.. she is a very energetic playful dog and there are habbits she has i am working on breaking such as jumping up at people and going to give kisses to the face but all in all she is a loving smart wonderful dog and I recomend this breed to anyone who is willing to dedicate the time and energy to train this dog.. they love to play outside and expell lots of energy.. I love my pup so much!!! 

Name: adienmarie | Date: Nov 10th, 2007 9:52 PM
i have a beautiful female pitbull that is about a year old that i adopted when she was 10 months old, the place i adopted her from said they didnt fix her and that she hasnt came into heat yet (that they know of) how would i know if she has already had a heat? or if she's coming into heat? 

Name: adienmarie | Date: Nov 10th, 2007 9:59 PM
you hear to many bad rumors about pitbulls!!! but you never hear anythingn good about them... i have own nothing but pitbulls for the past 4 years, they are the most loyal and loving dogs there are... they are great guard dogs, very loyal, great with kids... its not the dogs fault they turn ou tto be killers.... its the OWNERS 

Name: chris | Date: Nov 11th, 2007 10:55 PM
i have a pitbull german shepard mix 

Name: OOdoggoO | Date: Nov 14th, 2007 8:39 PM
hej hej

what are you alle doing for good 

Name: Mel | Date: Nov 24th, 2007 12:12 AM
Hey, we have a 1 year old boxer/pitbull cross, and she's the best dog we've ever had. I would recomend that mix to anyone. She learns very fast, loves people and kids, and other animals, and is extremely well-tempered. She also looks great, red-brown with white markings. A very lovable dog that we've gotten so many compliments on. We've known people who called us crazy for getting a pit mix, but were totally won over when they met her (once again, a breed that has gotten a bad rep, there are no bad breeds, only bad owners). Again I'll say, the best dog we've ever had. 

Name: pam | Date: Nov 25th, 2007 5:19 AM
my son brought home a chocolate lab/pitbull how big does this dog get, what is there temper like, are they good around kids? please give me some info on this please. thank you 

Name: carlos | Date: Nov 28th, 2007 9:20 PM
when do you put a male and female together when shes in heat 

Name: T-rabbit | Date: Nov 28th, 2007 10:07 PM
If your dumb enough to be asking this question you have no business breeding.
If you have a WEAK STOMACH I suggest that you STOP reading this.

mom and pups seem fine; the puppies are four weeks old and are at their cutest. One day, one of the puppies disappears. You search everywhere but you can't find it. A few days later another puppy.
I dedicate this to all the people breeding their dogs on purpose, who have no clue what they are doing. Those of you who breed and give those pups away with out health testing the parent's or vaccinating and guaranteeing the health and temperament of the pups you produce through BYB, this FOR YOU.

Sorry Im quite bitter, but I can't stand how much people don't really care about their dogs as much as they claim that they do. These things can happen to reputable breeders too, but at least they have the knowledge and money to deal with the situation if it were to ever arise. The also would know that in some of these cases the bitch will be spayed due to cannibalistic tendencies where a BYB might just breed her again, due to their un knowledgeable breeding practices!

But with out further adu...

So you want to breed your female ??


You know what to expect if everything goes right. Your little girl will present you with tiny bundles of joy. She will lovingly nurse them and care for them until they are old enough to be weaned.

You and your family will find great joy in watching and playing with these little dolls, and then when the time is right they will all (or maybe you keep just one) go off to special homes to live out their lives as cherished companions. But have you given consideration to what if something goes wrong?

I have listed here a few of the problems that I myself have personal knowledge of. Everything listed has happened either to me or someone I know. These are not isolated incidents. I'm sure other breeders could add miles to my list. Learn from our mistakes! Leave the breeding up to those who know what they are doing, have the experience, know what to expect.

What if during the breeding...

The stud dog you have chosen is carrying a venereal disease and gives it to your female. She not only doesn't conceive, but you have to pay the vet bills to get her infection cleared up and she is now sterile.


The stud dog you decided to breed your darling to is not experienced. Once the two dogs are joined tightly in a tie, he decides to chase the neighbor?s cat out of his yard. He bolts for the cat ripping his penis loose and causing your bitch to hemorrhage from within.

Your modest girl decides she doesn't want the attentions of this jigalo mutt chosen for her, without her consent. She snaps at him catching her tooth on his loose cheek and rips it open sending blood everywhere. He retaliates by sinking his teeth into her left eye.

You leave your dog with the stud owner because the breeding is not going very swiftly. In fact, it's been three hours and nothing is happening. The stud owners leave the two dogs alone in the back yard. The dogs get out through a tiny hole in the fence and a truck hits your female.

You have paid the $250-$1,000 stud fee, up front, figuring you will make that and more, back when the pups sell. The breeder guarantees the stud service to work or you can come back again. After 2 months you discover it didn't work and now you must wait another 4 months to try again! Of course, it doesn't work again, so in another 4 months you take your dog to another male and risk loosing another stud fee.

You get her bred, bring her home, she bothers you so you let her outside (she is still in heat and still receptive to males). You here a commotion outside, there is your girl all tied up with the neighborhood mutt. When she whelps, there will need to be DNA testing done on the pups to see who fathered each pup.

You get her bred, bring her home, let her out (she is still in heat and receptive to other males), but you do not see the neighborhood mutt breed her. The pups are born but they look odd. You call the stud owner, he suggests DNA testing (at your expense). You have a litter of mutts! What do you do about the ones you have already sold?

Or knowing she tied with the neighborhood mutt you decide to terminate the pregnancy and try again being more careful next time. But a few weeks later your female is VERY SICK because you had her given a miss-mate shot which creating a hormonal imbalance causing a uterine infection and now she has Pyrometer and needs a complete hysterectomy. All plans of a litter are gone and your female's life is now in danger if she does not have the operation.

What if during the Birth...

The puppies are too large for the females? hips. She never goes into labor, the puppies DIE and she becomes infected by the decaying bodies.

The puppies are coming breach, and they drown in their own sacks before they can be born.

The first puppy is large and breach. When it starts coming your female starts screaming, and before you can stop her she reaches around, grabs the puppy in her teeth, and yanks it out killing it instantly.

A puppy gets stuck. Neither your female nor you can get it out. You have to race her to the vet; the vet can't get it out either. She has to have an emergency caesarian section and of course it?s now 3:00 am on Christmas Day.

A puppy is coming out breach and dry, the water sack that protects them has burst. The puppy gets stuck Mom tries to help it out by clamping her teeth over one of the back legs. The head and shoulders are firmly caught, Mom pulls on the leg, hard, peeling the flesh from the leg and leaving a wiggling stump of bone.

A dead puppy gets stuck in the birth canal, but your female is well into hard labor, she contracts so hard trying to give birth that her uterus ruptures and she bleeds to death on the way to the vet.

What if Directly after Birth...

The mother has no idea what to do with a puppy and she drops them out and walks away, leaving them in the sack to drown.

The mother takes one look at the puppies, decides they are disgusting droppings, and tries to smother them in anything she can find to bury them in.

The mother gets too enthusiastic in her removal of the placenta and umbilical cord, and rips the cord out leaving a gushing hole pulsing blood all over you, as you try in vain to stop the bleeding.

Or maybe she pulls on the cords so hard she disembowels the puppies as they are born and you have a box full of tiny; kicking babies with a tangle of guts the size of a walnut hanging from their stomachs. Of course, all the babies must be put to sleep.

What if because of some hormone deficiency she turns vicious allowing no one near her or the babies, that she refuses to nurse, or you have to intervene with.

You notice something protruding from her vagina when you let her out to pee; you take her to the vet and discover a prolapsed uterus, which needs to be removed.

What if when you think

You are in the Clear...

One or more of the puppies inhaled fluid during birth, pneumonia develops, and death occurs within 36 hours.

What if the mother's milk goes bad? You lose three of your four puppies before you discover what is wrong. You end up bottle feeding the remaining pup every two hours, day and night. After three days the puppy fades from infection and dies.

The puppies develop fading puppy syndrome you lose two. You are bottle-feeding or tube feeding the last remaining baby. It begins to choke and despite your efforts to clear the airway, the pup stiffens and dies in your hands.

Your female develops mastitis and her breast ruptures.

Your female develops a uterine infection from a retained placenta, her temperature soars to 105. You race her to the vet; he determines that she must be spayed. He does spay her in an attempt to save her life, you pay the bill that is hundreds of dollars. The infection has gone into her blood stream. Infected milk kills all the puppies and the bitch succumbs a day later.

All the puppies are fine, but following the birth the female develops a hormone imbalance. She becomes a fear biter and anytime anyone tries to touch her she viscously attacks them.

Mom and pups seem fine; the puppies are four weeks old and are at their cutest. One day, one of the puppies disappears. You search everywhere but you can't find it. A few days later another puppy is gone, and another. You can't figure how on earth the puppies are getting out of their safe 4' x 4' puppy pen. Finally there is only one puppy left. The next morning you find the mother chomping contentedly on what is left of her last murdered puppy.

What if the new homes are not so happy?

You give a puppy to a friend. Their fence blows down so they tie the puppy outside while they go to work. A roving dog comes along and kills the puppy. Your friend calls you up to tell you about the poor little puppy and asks when are you having more puppies?

You sell a puppy to an acquaintance, the next time you see them you ask how the puppy is doing. They tell you that it soiled their new carpet so they took it to the pound.

You sell a puppy to a friend (you give them a good price and payments). They make a couple of tiny payments. Six months later they move to an apartment and ask you to take it back. You do take it back and of course the payments stop. The dog they returned is so shy and ill-mannered from lack of socialization and training it takes you a year of work providing socializing and training to be able to give it away.

You sell a puppy to a wonderful home. They love her like one of the family. At a check done by their vet it is determined that the puppy has a heart murmur (your vet found nothing when he checked the puppy before it was sold). They love their puppy and want the best for her; they have an expensive surgery done. The puppy is fine. They sue you for the medical costs and they win, because you did not have a contract stipulating conditions of guarantee and so, as the breeder, you are responsible for the puppy's genetic health.

You give a puppy to your mother, she is thrilled. Two years later the puppy starts developing problems, it begins to develop odd symptoms and is suffering. Hundreds and hundreds of dollars worth of tests later it is finally discovered that the dog is suffering from a terminal condition that was inherited. Possibly from your female since you know nothing about her family lines.

One loving home decides your puppy is untrainable and destructive, they want to return the pup and get a full refund, money which you have spent on your vet bills.

One loving couple calls you and is very upset because their pup has crippling hip dysphasia and wants to know what you are going to do about it. You have spayed your female so a replacement is out of the question, looks like another refund!

The Sale...

You put your ad in the local paper for your pups at the usual price and get only 2 responses and no sales. You cut the pup's price in half and broaden your advertising to 3 other newspapers in which the advertising totals $120.00 a week.

You get a few more puppy inquiries from people who ask all about health testing you did before breeding and if the pups are registered. You tell them your dogs are healthy and it was enough, and that you could get the papers. The callers politely thank you and hang up.

The pups are now 4 months old and getting bigger, eating allot and their barking is really beginning to annoy the neighbors, who call the police who inform you of the $150.00 noise bylaw.

Your neighbors also call the humane society which comes out to inspect the care of your dogs. You pass the inspection but end up feeling stressed and harassed.

You finally decide to give the rest of the litter away but still have to pay the $1200 advertising bill and the $600 vet bill.

So you gotta ask yourself...

Do you feel lucky?

Well, do ya "breeder?" 

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