
Yes in 2000.
I did not have a written contract, but would urge you to get terms in writing.
Agree who pays for:
Bitches health testing.
What fee for the loan ( if pup which sex/pick).
What happens if litter or bitch lost, emergency spay?
If bitch misses, do you try again.
Who handles mating, and costs.
When do you have bitch come to you, and importantly how long she stays after (you will want her until last pup is homed).
My mentor asked me if I would consider breeding a litter for a felliw breed enthusiast and judge.
He was still in full time work and his wife's health was too frail to rear a litter.
My mentor and her husband were also coming to the end of their breeding, fitting in a litter very occasionally having started in the 1950's.
Mine is a numerically small breed, needing more well bred.litters to keep a viable gene pool.
The plan was that they wanted a pup for themselves and chose the stud. They had paid for her health testing.
I would have the bitch to stay once confirmed in whelp.
In the event they couldn't have a puppy, as early retirement plans had not materialised after all.
So I paid them the price of a puppy for the use of their bitch, as well as stud fee.
From the litter a new owner showed their dogbto his title, even though they had bought him as 'only a pet'. The owner bought a half sibling two years later from another breeder, made her up to a champion, with BOB at Crufts one year. The man progressed to judging. They never bred as they live in a flat.
A bitch fom the litter bought by a breeder of another breed was shown to RCC and ha one litter, and her owner is a committee member for our breed club.
So all in all the litter did some good for the breed and breed cimmunity, as well as providing loved companions.
Would I do it again. NO!!
The bitch came to me at 6 weeks in whelp with a severe case of direhoea. This resulted in poor appetite. I had to hand feed her, and she was in poor bodily condition by whelping, as not enough time to make up the deficit.
Whelping didn't progress after first pup. Vets managed to get two more with shits of Oxytocin and Calcium (which was very low), and finally the rest of litter of 7 delivered by C section.
The inappetence continued. So I had 8 weeks of stuffing soaked balls of food down her neck. I also had to supplement Calcium.
Pups reared well, and I had her in decent weight by 12 weeks after whelping, when she went home.
My kids were upset at her going home, as they had become attached!
The stress of the responsibility for someone elses beloved dog weighed heavily, she could have died!