The demand for Berner puppies is intense. I have received dozens and dozens of inquiries from wonderful people who just want a puppy.
Producing family companions is not actually my first priority as a breeder. What I am trying to do is create MY next puppy — or in the case of the Moonshadows, Toby’s next puppy.
This means the goal for every breeding I do is based on what I value: I want a healthy, sound Berner with a strong work ethic who can compete at the high levels of performance events AND conformation (aka beauty pageant). This means my dog must have a solid temperament and a certain “look” — it also means I tend to produce smart, active Berners who are not couch potatoes.
Many of our dogs live amazingly wonderful lives as family companions — most them, in fact! Those family companions were also bred to be sound, active, smart, and pretty. For any number of reasons, they were not placed as a “show puppy” and so their interesting lives look different than the one who will stay here or go into a show home. Not better or worse — just different.
Some homes that start off wanting a family companion discover the fun of performance events and next thing you know they are off competing. That is wonderful! It is also fantastic if the dog’s interesting life is being a Therapy Dog or hiking in the mountains.
There is no one perfect life for a dog — as long as it is kind, safe, and interesting a dog’s life can be so many things.
I am so grateful that most of these puppies will go to people I already know and/or who have previous Berner experiences. The selection of which new homes to welcome into our Berner Community is hard on all of us. People just want a puppy — and it seems like it should be easy.
It isn’t.
I do not want to mess this up — a puppy’s life depends on me making an optimal match. Further, I have contracts with stud dog owners. They — and others who have worked with me through generations of dogs — have every right to expect me to keep doing the honorable and ethical things I agreed to do. Terri Zimmerman doesn’t deserve to have the progeny of any of her Z Boys in bad situations — these puppies are part of her legacy.
You get it. This stuff matters.
I cannot choose my puppy until they are 7 - 8 weeks old. There are a few homes that want something similar to me — and again, those puppies cannot be identified before they are 7 - 8 weeks old. In fact, I cannot make any puppy matches until that age because I have to know personalities.
I will not breed Claire again — this has been much too hard on her. She is a lovely mother and has produced gorgeous babies but her quality of life matters more than anything. Claire is one and done in the motherhood department.
And so I am tempted to keep two puppies from Claire. I am not sure I will but yes, I am tempted.
Complicating things more — if I only keep one puppy, I need a back-up girl in a home I trust in case the girl I keep doesn’t turn out. With only one litter from Claire, I need options going forward and so placement of puppies is also based on what I need as a breeder.
All this is to help explain why it is hard to say whether I have a puppy for someone or not. Yes, I can commit most of the puppy slots but there will be last minute decisions and those are hard on all of us; this is especially true of the girl placements.
I write this blog to help people understand more about what it means to live a Life with Dogs that includes occasional litters. This post should give an inkling that it is surprisingly complicated. Who knew?!
Have an uncomplicated day — I bet that would be nice.
Evening Pics
Today got more complicated — Claire’s good back leg is not so good anymore — and so just three photos from the Bright Stars today…