> Breeding is expensive, especially the first litter when so much equipment and one offs need to be covered. A C section in surgery hours can set you back £500, in the small hours 3 times that. Would you realise if your bitch was in trouble?
Here's my recent/current experience. Out of hours C-section requiring x-rays and time before the section to bring bitch's fluid and chem levels up to where they felt it safe to operate - £1500. We could have lost all pups AND mum. First pup had been born naturally, but the second pup was malpresented across the birth canal and blocking the other 5 behind her. We were lucky they all (and mum) survived. But it was a very real possibility we could have lost all of them.
In addition I've spent close to another £1000 on pup number 1 who was cramped in utero so was born with her front legs all cramped up. They've come mostly right, but her toe ligaments are overstretched from the way she used them while the legs came right and we don't know if the toes will come right, or if they'll pose real problems for her later in life (ie arthritis etc), or if she'll be fine but just have them look not right. So far it's mostly cosmetic and she is fine on them now as far as walking and running and from a distance you'd never know there was a problem, however the issue couldn't be ignored and cost of investigating all of that plus rehab for her has already come close to 1k, and could potentially cost us more in the future if it does cause joint/arthritic issues and won't be covered by insurance. It didn't occur to us for a second to put her down (though it may have to many breeders) because we know that these things happen in dogs and humans and most of those types of things do come right over time and from the outset she was a strong healthy happy pup. Many breeders may have seen a defect and put the pup down, but while it doesn't affect her quality of life we won't.
However what this means is that we are also keeping her because we don't feel we could sell her or give her away so that means we are keeping 2 rather than the one we intended. So not including ANY other costs (health tests, stud fees, travel, supplies, food etc) that's about £2500 in additional expenses!
Add to that that we had 5 males, there were several litters on the ground at the same time as ours, 4 people who had pre-booked before the mating was even done decided at the last minute to go elsewhere (to get their pup sooner or because they worried we wouldn't have enough, or because they liked the colour of the other litter better) or just didn't end up getting a pup at all, everyone enquiring after they were born wanted bitches, and at 16 weeks I still have 2 unsold boys as well as the 2 (was supposed to be 1) bitches that I'm keeping.
This was a litter that has been planned for 3 years, to fantastic foreign lines that many people admire. The sire is from out of the country, and I had several enquiries and 'solid bookings' before the breeding from people who were very interested in having these lines and it was simpler to buy from someone using them than to jump through hoops to import. But circumstances change, and even a couple of the most 'definite' buyers who I never would have thought would back out did because things changed beyond their control. And because I had mostly boys the two people who booked bitches didn't get one...
This is my second litter. I had plans to breed from the pup I kept. After this I honestly don't know if I can do it again. It's hard work when things go perfectly - this has really shattered me. And I went into this breeding with my eyes WIDE open because we had a bit of a scare with our last whelping (completely unrelated to the issues we had with this one). So I didn't think 'it can't happen to me' because I knew it could.
So I won't tell you not to do it, but I will tell you to think long and hard. Is 'wanting to have a litter' enough to consider risking your bitch. You may think people are saying this to scare you. I'm telling you they're saying it because it's the truth. Especially if you're not planning to keep one. You could go through all of this, spend a lot of money and end up with no bitch and no pups. This is a very real possibility that we all face every time we breed. We all know it's a possibility but if we're honest with ourselves none of us believes it will happen to us, but it does anyway whether we want to believe it or not.
Or the opposite scenario... Are you prepared to keep them as long as it takes to sell them? What if they don't sell? You don't want to keep one, but what if you have 6 or 7 pups, they don't sell at 8 weeks like we all expect them to, and you're like me at 16 weeks with 4-6 very busy active puppies - and you're talking about a busy active breed! Are you honestly and truly prepared for that? I knew in my head it could happen, but didn't really think it would because I had 6 'definite' buyers. In fact before the breeding I was terrified I wouldn't have enough pups for everyone who booked. 7 puppies were wonderful when they were little, but then they get bigger and busier and naughtier and HARD WORK. I had them all till 9 weeks, next went at 10, next at 13. The older they get the more they need, and now when I should be focusing all my attention on training the 2 I was keeping I'm having to work a LOT harder because I have 4 to train and socialise and watch - in addition to my current 4 adults.
And I WAS prepared for this in my head! But there are days (less now that they're a bit older and more integrated into the family and pack) that I have a complete meltdown and just have to have a 10 minute cry because it's STRESSFUL! and FRUSTRATING. And I love these puppies, but I just wish they had their forever homes. Not because I can't cope (though I do have moments of not coping as I've said above), but because it's what they need and it breaks my heart every single day.
Are you honestly and truly prepared for the practical, financial and emotional toll that this could take on you. If you can honestly answer yes, then go for it, but please please please think long and hard about why you want to do this. If you do decide you would like to go ahead then the advice given to discuss this with your girl's breeder and get advice regarding lines etc is definitely the route to go. But if I were in your position I really wouldn't do it.
(edited for spelling and grammar)