The Advantages Of Puppies From Bichon Frise Breeders

by Mary Stevenson

There are many advantages of getting your Bichon Frise puppy from a Bichon Frise breeder rather than a pet store. Bichon Frise breeders spend lots of time on only a few puppies, making sure they are healthy and properly socialized. Pet store puppies get very little attention and are stuck in cages at the time of life when they should be getting training. And, most importantly, Bichon Frise breeders are not puppy mills.

All pet stores get their puppies from puppy mills without exception. If they tell you otherwise, they are lying. They are just trying to make a sale and will say anything in order to close the deal. Pet shop owners and employees use the exact same sneaky selling tactic that you are probably already familiar with in other stores and car lots. No respectable and caring Bichon Frise breeder (or any other dog breeder, for that matter) would sell his or her puppies to a pet store.

Bichon Frise breeders spend an incredible amount of time and money on the breeding and raising of their puppies. They often raised the mother from a puppy. Bichon Frise dogs aren’t merchandise or a business to them. These puppies are like their grandchildren. They would not then blow all of their tender and careful care by selling their puppies to a pet store, where anyone can buy a puppy if they have the money.

Pet stores that sell puppies rely on impulse purchases and do not do any background checks on what kind of person this puppy is going to. Quite often, people who have no idea what is involved in raising a puppy buy these puppies on a whim. Most puppies bought in pet stores wind up being abandoned when the puppy gets to be about nine months to one year old. Half of all dogs and cats that are surrendered to shelters are euthanized.

The next inhumane thing about buying a puppy from a pet store, rather than a Bichon Frise breeder, is that puppies are not animals that should be in cages. Other animals like baby hamsters do very well in cages. However, a puppy is caged right at the time of life it needs to learn how to be a dog in today’s complex world. The time a puppy can best learn is when they are seven to fourteen weeks old, right around the same time they are in cages at pet stores. This means that pet store puppies are often a lot harder to train than puppies from breeders.

Bichon Frise breeders will also give their puppies’ basic training in how to get along with people, other dogs, household objects and everyday situations. Your Bichon will be socialized, taught its first housebreaking lessons and first basic training lessons. Your puppy will often be sold to you at just the right time they can best learn. This is often why you are put on waiting lists before the pups are even born, so you can pick the puppy up at the best time.

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