Double B Bullies

Double B Bullies Family owned breeding program for American Bullies. These amazing dogs may look like big and but they're the biggest softies you could ever own!

Great with other animals and kids of all ages! We plan on Breeding Piper in time. stay tuned for updates

Another good read!!!
04/11/2022

Another good read!!!

Problems with "adopt don't shop"

What comes to mind when you hear “adopt don’t shop”? Many people in the advocacy community are also involved in rescue. They encourage adoption and aim to dispel myths about rescue dogs being undesirable pets. This is great work and often it's where people are coming from with the "adopt don't shop" messaging.

But while “adopt don’t shop” comes from a positive place, it can also cause division in other areas of our work, and cause people to feel alienated when we should be working together.

Dog breeding is a contentious subject, and some people might object to our position on this, but please bear with us and keep an open mind.

--

On one end of the spectrum is the belief that all breeders are the bad guys and are ultimately responsible for unwanted pet populations and breed specific legislation.

In the middle are people who believe that pet owners should have the right to choose between an ethical breeder or ethical rescue, and that both can and should exist.

On the other end of the spectrum there is a belief that rescues are so focused on “saving” dogs that they are simply recycling poorly bred, unhealthy, and dangerous dogs into the community, and contributing to breed-specific crackdowns.

Our position is that the world needs a healthy balance of ethical breeders and ethical rescues. Both should be held to high standards with respect to the dogs they are placing in the community. Both should work hard to set their dogs up for success and ensure they don’t end up in the shelter system or causing harm to the community.

--

Ethical breeders aim to produce dogs with outstanding accomplishments, health, functionality, and temperament. They will screen all new owners thoroughly, support them in providing for all their training and care needs, and take the dog back if the placement doesn’t work out.

Ethical rescues aim to make a good match between a dog and family. The dog should have adequate an temperament assessment, foster hold, and veterinary screening before being placed in a home, and the rescue should offer ongoing support to the adopter. The rescue should take the dog back if the placement doesn’t work out.

See how maybe – just maybe – we may have more in common than we think? Both ethical rescues and breeders do this for the love of dog and that should be the only focus.

--

At the end of the day, consumers need to take responsibility for their decisions. If people support unethical rescues because they didn’t do their research or only paid attention to a sad story on a website, they are part of the problem. If people buy dogs off Craigslist out of convenience, or take home a pet store puppy because they feel sorry for it, they are part of the problem.

If we cut off the demand for poorly and unethically bred animals, there will be less financial incentive to keep producing them. The result? Fewer unwanted litters, relinquished pets, and pets that take up considerable resources as they are recycled back into the system.

We all care about animal welfare and advocating for breed-neutral legislation. When we talk about these issues, we suggest that judgements about rescue vs. adoption be largely left out of the equation. Legislators paint all of our dogs with the same brush anyway: BSL rarely makes a distinction between well-bred, poorly-bred, ethically rescued, or unethically rescued dogs.

Let’s keep our conversations constructive and focused on our common goal!

Long but solid read! "PIT BULLS" have such a mixed reputation, a lot from lack of knowledge. Piper is a pure bred Americ...
04/10/2022

Long but solid read! "PIT BULLS" have such a mixed reputation, a lot from lack of knowledge. Piper is a pure bred American Bully and has the pedigree to prove it. It's important, unless owning a rescue, to know what you have, understand their breed, the breeds requirements, temperaments, health testing, health concerns etc.

What are your thoughts

"Pit bull"

We have talked about the term “pit bull” and its origin a century ago as shorthand for the American Pit Bull Terrier, a specific breed of dog. Over the years the meaning of the word "pit bull" has shifted. It has become a term used to encompass several breeds and mixes of that share “similar characteristics”. Most commonly these breeds include American Staffordshire Terriers, Staffordshire Bull Terrier, American Bullies, and American Bulldogs (breed information below).

This change, from a nickname to a loosely applied category of dog, comes with serious consequences for any dog carrying the label "pit bull”. This includes discrimination, breed specific legislation, lower adoption rates, housing discrimination, service discrimination, and higher rates of euthanasia.

The stigma applied to dogs labelled as "pit bulls" will often last their entire life. Not only is this stigma unfair, the label itself is probably inaccurate in many cases.

The majority of dogs in our community are mixed breed and/or of unknown parentage: they may be accidental litters, backyard bred, rescues, strays, or second-hand dogs with no pedigree. Unless a dog is purebred and its parents’ interactions are closely monitored, it’s difficult to be 100% certain of the parentage – pups from the same litter can even be sired by different males!

A lot of people use the ‘pit bull’ moniker with pride. The breeds above are wonderful breeds with great qualities, and mixed breeds are wonderful too! Some advocates believe that the more people hear about ‘pit bulls’ as regular dogs in our community, the more they may re-think stereotypes and breed specific legislation.

But there’s a downside to using the term too loosely. If your dog is a mixed breed or of uncertain parentage, calling them a ‘pit bull’ may seal their fate down the road. If BSL comes into your community, and you have been proudly posting about your amazing ‘pit bull’ on social media, or you’ve registered your dog as a ‘pit bull’ at your vet’s or licensing department, you might find yourself in big trouble. This has happened to people in Ontario, Montreal, Denver and other BSL communities.

If owners of mixed breed shelter dogs are calling their dogs ‘pit bulls’ and assigning values to that category (pit bulls will lick you to death, pit bulls are great with children, pit bulls are a product of their owners) we are still reinforcing the idea that ‘pit bulls’ are a homogeneous group.

And lastly, weak breed labels wreak havoc with statistics! Population, licensing, and bite stats are generally tough to gather because breed information is gathered through owner reporting or visual identification, and both of those are notoriously imprecise. Perhaps if we insisted on “mixed” or “unknown” breed as options, these statistics would better reflect reality.

Many advocacy groups are advising shelters and owners to drop labels that are based on visual appearance or even on DNA tests (sorry, folks, but DNA tests on mixed breed dogs aren’t much better than visual ID).

Justice for Bullies advocates that dog owners . If you have the pedigree to prove your dog is indeed a purebred, call them by their breed name, but otherwise we encourage you to drop the labels being placed on dogs of unknown parentage and instead use their individual personalities to describe them.

Where do you stand on this debate? How do you answer the question ‘what kind of dog do you have’? Has this changed over time?

Top Dog Bullies in Huron, Tennessee is where both Pipers parents were born, then brought to Canada by Shawn at Prarie Fi...
04/02/2022

Top Dog Bullies in Huron, Tennessee is where both Pipers parents were born, then brought to Canada by Shawn at Prarie Fire Bullies in Asquith Sk. Top Dog Bullies is a prestigious Dog Breeding Program, home of the Legend Ace. The pedigree coming from this program is nothing less then stellar and we are proud to have part of their lineage as a family member! Check out their Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/reel/Cb2aLYzgpjh/?utm_medium=copy_link

FE**SH • Come Check This

These are Pipers Parents! Owned by Shawn at Prairie Fire Bullies in Asquith, SK  Dad- Chocolate- Top Dog Bullies Koda Mo...
03/31/2022

These are Pipers Parents! Owned by Shawn at Prairie Fire Bullies in Asquith, SK
Dad- Chocolate- Top Dog Bullies Koda
Mom- Fawn- Top Dog Bullies Kianna

PFB Piper
03/31/2022

PFB Piper

03/31/2022
03/31/2022

Address

1st Ave
Maidstone, SK
S0M

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Double B Bullies posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Double B Bullies:

Share

Category