I’ve ummed and ahhhed about writing a post before and always came to the conclusion it would do more harm than good, create trouble that I don’t want to be apart of. But here goes: *may need a cuppa, its a long one*
We got our first dog in 2007 (I was a young teen then) didn’t know a whole lot about dogs other than I REALLY wanted one. We’d had one rescue before then, and other members of the family had dogs, again mainly if not all rescues. Due to the fact my mum had us children to look after and my dad worked full time they decided we needed a dog rather than a puppy. My dad met up with a friend of his that had a fox red lab (they weren’t as common now as they were back then) that was part trained and highly recommended this gundog kennel. Cutting a long story short mum phoned up and spoke to someone who worked there and explained what she was looking for. A family dog that was already trained that we could all walk together, but that wasn’t too in your face as we had a lot of children over and some weren’t keen. At that time they only had two part-trained dogs for sale on their website. But the lady said there was one that they weren’t advertising that could be what we were looking for. We drove there and saw her, each got to walk her round on the lead and we decided we wanted her. I was young and not paying attention and so can’t remember the details - but there was talk about her paper etc. They said that they hadn’t put her up for sale because they couldn’t bare to part with her but it was unfair to her as she was a failed gundog and they no longer took her out on shoots. My parents asked if they could speak to the trainer but they said he was busy. He was in the room next door and we knew that because he was on the phone to someone screaming and angrily shouting - the whole thing now looking back was rather odd. Our girl was very scared now when i look back, she wasn’t pulling but crouching to the ground in fear that if she pulled she’d get hit. But we collected her a week or two later, my parents did and got her paperwork too, although I don’t think they were told about transferring documents in their names...at least mum says she doesn’t remember them every telling her that.
Apparently I don’t remember just how bad the first week, or even days, were mum says. She wouldn’t leave mums side, constantly shaking. Wouldn’t eat either and cried night after night, mum ended up sleeping on a mattress next to her. She was petrified of other dogs, scared of everything except us children and mum. We also took her to the vet to get her checked, and they informed us that she was healthy albeit a bit underweight (so not healthy then) and had already had a litter (she was just 18months and was due to come in season when we got her). Mum phoned the place up on the third day to say that this wasn’t the dog they’d described and also confronted them about the fact the vet had said she’d had a litter. They admitted she’d had a litter ‘by accident’ before she was 1 when a friend was looking after them and a male dog had got with her whilst in season without them knowing?!
Anyway we decided to keep her, me and my siblings couldn’t bare to part with her and although she wasn’t the dog mum wanted necessarily I think she didn’t want to take her back to that place. A lot of meetings happened at home, and it was clear that she was petrified of men. She’d bark and bark and back herself into a corner when a strange man walked in the house, if they were wearing a hat even worse! It was clear to us all, even as kids, that she’d been beaten into submission. Sometimes and adult would put their hand out and her head would duck and cower. The first year or two were the worst in terms of her being scared, that’s how long it took. She was a flight risk and if a dog approached her wrong she’d often run away or run out the park home. But she slowly started trusting us more, as I got older and learnt more about dogs I helped her with training, which did help. But there was always a fear there, I think genetically she was nervy and then how she was treated before made her worse. In hindsight maybe we should’ve sought a behaviourist, but what little knowledge I or my parents had back then I wonder if we would’ve found the right one - in my opinion only R+ (Or LIMA) would’ve worked.
She got better and we had a good few years (although we saw a vet that said due to how nervous she was they thought she wouldn’t make it much past 8 years old). But as she got older that nervousness, that was once cowering and running away from dogs, turned into aggression and reactivity. She was still scared of certain people, mainly men, and we were very aware of arguing around her and tried not to...she’d stand by the door staring at the ground with her head lowered if we started shouting, even at the football or olympics I solidly remember we jumped up and yelled in victory and she got up slowly and crawled to the door and looked back at us so scared.
I think she didn’t trust anyone, but out of us all my sisters and mum she felt the most comfortable with. I do want to add that she was fine with dogs we introduced slowly into the house, we had a lot of guide dogs coming and going as well as puppies and she was always fine with them, apart from one who ended up bullying her so we had to let him go. I also had her round my girls and she loved them in fact, she’d cuddle up so close to them to keep her warm. She played with one of my girls, the first time we saw her properly play with another dog. She hadn’t played before coming to us and didn’t know how to, when my parents picked her up they had said she didn’t need any toys. So me and my siblings taught her to play, and eventually she did. The place she was most free was at the beach, again she’d never been to the beach before being with us and she was the most reliable there and the least scared, she loved it and you could literally see it pouring out of her when we took her there.
In appearance she was what we got told was a fox red ‘working labrador’ skinny in stature and in face. (I know now that that is NOT what a working lab looks like, sigh) You could tell she was a labrador, but she just looked slightly different. Deep red though. Then as she got older her deep red shade went whiter and whiter, until she got to about 9 when just her ears and hocks were red. Her coat went very wirey too. Her eyes that seemed always too round and big, seemed to get more prominent and her back and legs were awful. We took her to the vet and they agreed that it was most likely due to bad breeding and due to her age and nervousness (she was a shaken mess when at the vets) probably best to not put her through surgery.
It’s also important to point out in total I’ve met 6 other dogs from those kennels that people have bought, 4 part trained, and 2 as pups. All in my opinion are very nervy dogs. One was even more nervy than ours. So much so that the owner can’t stop and chat to someone because the dog then won’t go anywhere near her. I’m also pretty sure this dog has dwarfism (SD2). They all have the same features my girl had, too bigger round eyes for labs, to skinny face not the proper lab head etc. Only one is fox red but she has also gone white and wirey...although not as white.
She passed away last year days before she turned 14, peacefully in my arms, the most heartbreaking thing I’ve ever experienced. Gosh she got us through some tough times and although so nervous, she did have so much love to give and spent the first 4 years (after the first few weeks) in my bed every night.
After she passed and I was able to sort through her things, I came across her original papers. All from the kennels she was originally at. They had her Kennel name on and I suddenly realised in all these years I had never looked up her documents. So I went on mykc and what I found shocked me. As I said we got her in 2007. Her documents and everything we have is ligit. And when I searched her up comes two litters she apparently produced, after she was already ours, not only that but they were both in 2010 within 6 months of each other. So either we were given false papers by the kennels, which I really doubt because they look real, or they’ve had multiple litters and faked the mum because they’ve overbred there girls perhaps or they don’t have good health results etc?
So I guess 1) I’m posting about it because I’m angry still after all these years, because of everything she went through and the amount of suffering she must’ve been through there on top of what I’ve then found out about them. 2) Because not many people ‘get it’ apart from doggy people who know about ethical breeding and training etc etc and 3) Because the kennels are still relatively ‘big’ in terms of selling and producing pups. I will add they’ve started selling on ‘that’ popular dog selling site as well as their own website.
I don’t know what to do, or even if it’s worth doing anything...do I go to kennel club because realistically what will they do now, there’s not much they can do but it does lead me to think what else has that kennels lied about if they’re faking documents or faking the dam of litters etc. In an ideal world I’d love to out them and for them to be over but I know it doesn’t work like that. The reason I haven’t put anything on socials, and why I won’t explicitly name them is because honestly I don’t want the backlash from them or other in their circle. When people come to me for advise then I say steer clear from them and point them in the direction of good breeders (other than myself ha

) If this is as far as it goes then that’s fine, I just feel I need to put it somewhere. Would definitely like to hear peoples thoughts and or advice if they think I should take some sort of action in terms of reporting them? I think legally it’s too late to do anything, because I was too young to remember details of sale etc anyway.
P.s. they advertise themselves as working kennels but haven’t got any dogs they’ve bred or trained themselves that are even FTW, or even do field trials as far as I know. They state the dogs are ‘field trial champions’ but they have non proven that actually are champions and have won anything.