THINGS TO CONSIDER BEFORE YOU BREED YOUR ROTTWEILER
I frequently get asked the question, "How old should my dog
be before I breed him/her?"
Rottweilers, like most large breed dogs, take longer to mature
physically than smaller breeds. Two years of age is the youngest
that any rottweiler should be bred, and the health clearances for
genetic diseases that are common in in the breed must be performed
prior to any breeding taking place.
For rottweilers, that mean clearing both sire and dam for:
- Canine hip and elbow dysplasia through OFA
and/or PennHIP
- Genetic heart defects (sub-aortic stenosis, or SAS) by a canine
cardiologist and submitting results to OFA
- Entropian and ectropian, genetic eye defects by a canine opthamologist,
and submitting results to OFA
- thyroid disease, and submitting results to OFA
The costs for these tests will cost you about $400-$500 to perform,
but to not have clear results of these commonly occurring genetic
problems prior to breeding is irresponsible, both to your dogs,
but to the future owners of your puppies.
Before you decide to breed your rottweiler, I have to ask why you
are considering do so? Since your dog is a puppy, at this point
you don't know how he/she will mature. There are many things to
consider before breeding your dog, and the fact that he/she is a
purebred is not in and of itself a good reason to want to breed
him/her. There are many purebred rottweilers that are not good examples
of the breed, and should not contribute to the gene pool.
Since your dog is just a puppy, you do not know what kind of temperament
he/she will have when your dog matures (temperament is at least
50% genetic), what kind of physical structure will he/she have (most
dogs don't finish growing until they are 2 years old, or older),
or if he/she will be healthy enough to breed (all purebreds have
propensity to specific genetic disease that should be cleared in
breeding pairs prior to any breeding).
There is a great deal of risk in breeding any dog, including having
your dog and the entire litter die at any point during the process.
I'm sure you love your puppy, and as time passes, you will grow
to love him/her even more. The risk of losing your dog because you
decide to breed her is something that you have to carefully consider,
because it does happen.
There is also a great deal of financial risk involved in breeding
a litter. Whelping a litter can end up costing you thousands of
dollars in expenses if you run into the slightest problem with your
girl or the puppies. Approximately 25% of births encounter problems
that do not follow the text books, and if you are inexperienced,
you absolutely must have a vet on call, or a 24 hour emergency vet
available when your girl goes into whelp. That is expensive.
Dogs never whelp during office hours, by the way. If a pup gets
stuck in the birth canal or is presented breech, what are you going
to do? If you can't get them to a vet immediately, all the pups
and the dam are at risk of dying. What if she doesn't produce milk,
or she dies? Are you prepared to bottle feed a litter of pups every
hour or two around the clock, until they are 4 weeks of age? Are
you prepared to take off of work to do this if it is necessary?
Fading puppies, coccidia or giardia can cost hundreds of dollars
if your vet has to treat an entire litter. Rottweiler puppies are
particularly susceptible to parvo, which can live in the soil for
years, and be transmitted to puppies by your hands, shoes, or even
their dam.
Even if you are lucky and everything goes smoothly, do you have
money set aside to pay your vet for docking tails, removing dew
claws, vaccinations and worming of puppies, prenatal and postnatal
care of your dog, which will in the best case scenario, cost you
at least $1,000 out of pocket before you sell one pup.
Further, we live in a sue happy society where everyone looks for
someone to blame when something goes wrong, and producing dogs with
health problems, genetic problems, or even temperament problems,
can land you in court years down the line if something goes wrong
with a puppy that you have bred. The attorney of the parent who's
child is bitten, seriously injured or killed looks for money wherever
they can find it. If you didn't properly socialize the pups, or
released them to their homes before 8 weeks of age, then you expose
yourself to legal liability. If you have not done your due diligence
as a breeder to ensure that any pups you breed are properly cleared
for genetic health or temperament problems, you expose yourself
to a potential lawsuit.
If your motivation is financial, many people think they will make
a pile of money on breeding purebred dogs. Trust me, this is a myth.
Most breeders are bleeding money by the time the last pup is sold.
Yes, there are large scale puppy mills that live off of breeding
dogs, but for the person wanting to breed their pet, you will be
very lucky to break even. Without investing in your dogs by showing
them to championships, performing necessary health clearances, and
having this same background in every dog in the last three to five
generations of your dog's pedigree, your prospects for selling your
puppies is limited to other pet owners. Very few pet owners will
pay more than a couple of hundred dollars for a backyard bred rottweiler
puppy, and you will end up with more invested in your litters than
you will be able to recoup.
Whelping and raising a litter is a lot of work. Prepare to take
at least a week, if not two, off of work when the litter is born.
Plan for several sleepness nights prior to whelping and for a week
or so afterwards. Be prepared to wash load after load of laundry
and constantly clean up poop and urine after the puppies.
If you are not prepared for any of these scenarios, then please
reconsider breeding your dog. I am not saying this to scare you
out of wanting to breed your dog, but these are simple facts of
life that few people think about before they breed. When these are
not carefully considered, it is the dogs that end up with the stinky
end of the stick.
There are millions of homeless purebred dogs bred by well intentioned,
but uninformed pet owners that simply wanted to breed their pet.
Rottweiler rescues can only take in a small percentage of these
dogs, and the rest get euthanized because there are not enough homes
to go around.
Millions of dogs are killed each year in this country because there
are not enough people who can or will provide good homes to the
dogs they buy from people just like yourself. The sad reality is
that some of the dogs you breed will eventually make their way into
a shelter because people won't be responsible owners that make a
lifetime committment to their dogs. That, unfortunately, is a cold,
hard reality. Do you really want to contribute to that?
|