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> This "PDSA is committed to assisting prospective pet owners to make the right choice before they actually acquire their pet" is suggesting that the right choice is not to choose a pedigree :-(
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> And what about if you save up to get as HEALTHY a dog as possible from a good pedigree breeder, THEN fall on hard times? Is it more responsible to already be unemployed, go out and get a mongrel who then develops all sorts of health problems as it wasn't carefully bred?
> If someone goes out and buys a dog from a responsible breeder who health tests
> In that case you might as well say no more than one pet full stop, because you can always dump them on the RSPCA or Dogs Trust.......
> Basically what you're saying support irresponsible breeders rather than responsible ones!
> Just cos folk buy a cross breed (often at extortionate prices) doesn't mean they deserve help more given the same circumstances as someone who's make the effort to buy responsibly, from health tested stock.
> But you're forgetting just how many pedigree pets come from irresponsible breeders
>If someone goes out and buys a dog from a responsible breeder who health tests
>In recent years there has been a large and unsustainable rise in the number of PDSA PetAid hospital clients bringing more than one pedigree pet for treatment.
> all low income families here have Staffies. those are the cheapest easiest to obtain puppy
> It would also appear to be the wishes of the majority of their donors without which nobody gets anything.
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> Well Dogs Trust claimed the majority of their members had said they didn't want a presence at Crufts, yet nobody seemed to have actually been asked! So I'd take that statement with a HUGE pinch of salt.

> Why (hypothetically speaking) should I be penalised for giving a home to unwanted dogs, just because they are purebred? As I say entirely hypothetical - but it just smacks of breedism to me and that irritates me, given the effect it's having on breeding/rescue and so on.
> It seems like yet another way to encourage designer cross breeding.
>'Designer dogs' are not classed as pedigrees. However, pet owners deliberately breeding from any species for profit, and without considering the health and wellbeing of the pet, would be stopped from using PDSA services.
>Sadly, pedigree pets often need high levels of veterinary care due to inherited illnesses and breed related conditions as a result of irresponsible breeding associated with certain pedigree matings.
> I think the responsible breeder really appears to be a minority group, a very small minority
>What are the statistics for cesearian section in Chihuahuas I wonder?

>Do you look t the boys lines too and use suds from self whelping dams
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