Lawsonhaus German Shepherds

Lawsonhaus German Shepherds Breeding quality German Shepherds with great minds and excellent temperament.

Wishing my family and friends a very Merry Christmas and a Healthy Prosperous New Year.
12/17/2023

Wishing my family and friends a very Merry Christmas and a Healthy Prosperous New Year.

08/31/2023

STOLEN FROM ANOTHER 💯💯

I wanted to touch base on a common issue that breeders come across with new owners.

Realistic Expectations

You go to the breeders home. The pups are all social. They are quiet in the pen. The breeder shows you videos of them being totally relaxed at a dog show. All looks amazing and you bring your puppy home.

Then reality hits. The puppy may cry in the crate for the first few nights making you tired and agitated. The happy social puppy is refusing to greet the half dozen overly excited friends you invited over to see your new puppy. The puppy refuses to walk on a leash. Many are wondering how did my perfect puppy turn into a nightmare.

So let’s discuss realistic expectations of when a puppy goes home. First of all the puppy has been in the breeders home since birth. They had their mother and often littermates. They had their routine, were taught expectations and were completely in their comfort zone.

Now suddenly they are taken to a totally new environment. Picture yourself being dropped into an unknown country, often in a different part of the world. You know only a few words of their language. Differnt trees, animals, smells, temperature and people. Now in the middle of this we are switching up your routine, decide to have a party with people you dont know, and ask you to do jobs you have no idea about. Overwhelming to say the least.

This is what every puppy goes through when going to their new home. Stress manifests in different forms. From not eating, reluctancy to play and greet people. Being apprehensive at the vet’s office or as strangers reach for them. Diarrhea, vomiting and being depression can occur.

So what can you as a new owner do to help your little one acclimate?

- most puppies take 3-4 weeks to acclimate to their new home. Repeat after me THREE to FOUR WEEKS! Not a 1-2 days. I can’t stress this enough about how much time is needed for a dog or puppy to feel comfortable in their new home!
- limit guests during the first week. We understand you are excited to show off your new baby but they need time to adjust. Plan on waiting 1-2 weeks before inviting people over
- ask guest to sit on the ground and let the puppy approach them. No squealing and grabbing the puppy
- set up a good routine
- restrict the puppy to a small area of the house. This not only reduces them being overwhelmed but also allows you to watch them
- don’t expect a 9-13 week old puppy to walk on a leash. Instead work at home with a leash where they are comfortable. Let them drag the leash, use treats to encourage them to walk with you
- if your puppy is refusing to walk give them time. My first trips to town with puppies a walk around a small block took 1 1/2 hours. We only move when they initiate the movement as they need time to take in the different environment
- understand your puppy needs time to see you as family. Expecting an immediate bond is unrealistic
- train your puppy. This not only helps you to bond but the puppy to look to you for direction and input
- lastly be patient. Don’t declare “omg there’s something wrong with this dog”. Nothing occurs overnight. Outings should be planned at puppy speed. So while you might imagine a fun walk around the lake in reality your puppy might only be able to handle walking a short distance that day.

Most outings for me take a long time, as I am often just standing still as the puppy cautiously explores the new environment. Patience is key!

Remember if the puppy was wonderful at the breeder’s house but now struggling you as the owner need to help the puppy adjust which takes time, patience and training. have realistic expectations and give the puppy positive experiences. Each puppy is an individual, don’t compare your current puppy to past pets and judge their behavior based on how another dog handled things. Lastly, try to see thing’s from a puppy’s perspective and adjust situations accordingly.
Author unknown

Quinn's father.
03/16/2023

Quinn's father.

Vera's father. VA Mars von Aurelius.
10/22/2022

Vera's father. VA Mars von Aurelius.

Love getting updates on pups that we bred. This is A Logos Tiberius (Rocco von Langenbungert/Dascha zum Kolbenguss litte...
10/18/2022

Love getting updates on pups that we bred. This is A Logos Tiberius (Rocco von Langenbungert/Dascha zum Kolbenguss litter).

Received my book.
09/17/2022

Received my book.

Some photos taken with my tablet tonight dogs were not cooperating with me. I hadn't taken any of Vera and Quinn in a lo...
06/08/2022

Some photos taken with my tablet tonight dogs were not cooperating with me. I hadn't taken any of Vera and Quinn in a long while.

05/28/2022
As the weather heats up some important facts to remember.
05/13/2022

As the weather heats up some important facts to remember.

Dog Breeders Being a dog breeder is NOT for the faint of heart. People think breeding is just an easy way to get money a...
02/15/2022

Dog Breeders

Being a dog breeder is NOT for the faint of heart.
People think breeding is just an easy way to get money and that dog breeders are only “in it for the money” or whatever. Let me tell you that dog breeding is NOT easy money. Period.

Good dog breeders know what they are doing and invest in their dogs. They invest in health testing, proper grooming (or they take the time to learn how to do it right and spend hours doing it themselves), they are always educating themselves and bettering themselves. They are striving to keep up with the newest science and research on all kinds of things. Coat type, color, health and genetics, testing their dogs need etc. Always trying to keep up with NO guarantees.

Let me tell you that once you THINK you are well educated on something related to animals, something new ALWAYS comes up and you NEVER stop learning. Anyone who thinks they know everything about anything truly knows nothing at all.

On top of all that, the biggest stressor about being a dog breeder is the uncertainty.

They have just invested $5000 into a breeding dog. Will this dog even pass it’s health testing? (About an additional $1000). If the dog does not pass it’s health testing, which is typically not even done until 1-2 years, then all the money invested in that dog is gone. Even if the dog was guaranteed, you still need to wait for the breeder to have another suitable litter, for there to be a suitable puppy, and then it’s another year or so before that puppy matures and is old enough to pass (or possibly fail) health testing.

Let’s just assume this breeder got lucky and all their dogs passed all their health testing (I say lucky but buying from quality lines really gives you the advantage with this), then it’s time to breed the dog.

Most breeders breed their dogs for the first time between 18-26 months. This presents a new challenge. Will the male be fertile? Will the female even “catch”?

Great the female is pregnant! Will she stay pregnant? She could miscarry. Will she require an emergency c-section? A planned one? Will the puppies be born alive? Will some be born dead? Will i have to revive some? Do I have the skills to assist in a situation where something goes wrong with the labour? The vet is half an hour away, will we make it there?

Okay! Let’s say we had a smooth delivery and all puppies have made it into the world safely. Will any have any birth defects causing them to have to be put to sleep or require round the clock care? Is there a cleft pallet? A smaller and weaker puppy? Will any puppies need tube feeding? Do I take this sick newborn puppy with a very low chance of survival to the vet? Will the vet even help? What is my budget on this newborn puppy that will likely not make it? $1000? $5000? Or do i let nature take its course? What is best for this puppy? How do I balance real life and making sure I’ve done enough? How do I live with the guilt if the puppy does not survive? How do I watch a puppy pass away? Should I hold it? Should I let it be with mom? Vet says there’s no hope/ not to bother bringing pup in. What do I do? What if another puppy gets sick? How do I dispose of the body once the puppy dies? Should I keep the body and pay for an autopsy that will most likely be inconclusive?
What if I have taken a deposit on this puppy already? How do I tell the family? What if it’s due to sickness and I lose the whole litter?

These are just some of the thoughts that go through a breeders mind when something isn’t quite right with ONE or TWO of the puppies.

Let’s assume the litter is healthy and they make it to the week mark. Mom could get sick. She could get an infection from giving birth, she could get mastitis (this often results in the teat turning black and splitting open, losing your girl is a very real possibility). We are frantically checking on moms and babies multiple times a day and trying to prevent anything we can, but we can only do so much.

What if mom gets low calcium even when supplemented? I now have to bottle feed an entire litter. How do I manage that and make sure my puppies are still healthy? Will formula be enough to keep them healthy? What if they don’t like it? Do I try the home made formula that isn’t scientifically proven but that the pups like much better? Do I add supplements? Do I let mom nurse sometimes? How do I keep everyone healthy and happy until weaning?

Let’s just assume that the whole litter and mom is healthy and makes it until weaning.
Puppies seem a bit skinny but are being fed a lot, why? P**p is stinky? Time to take fecals into the vet… or do we treat what we think it is with the meds we have on hand and have paid hundreds of dollars for.
What if puppies catch parvo before they get a chance to be vaccinated? Will i lose the whole litter? Do I treat at home or at the vet? How will I handle a whole litter being sick? Most dog breeders have more then one breeding dog and Parvo lives in the soil for YEARS. Will all my future puppies get this? Am I ruined? Do I quit breeding? What do I do? Can this be properly cleaned? When do I let the families of the recovered puppies take them home? How do I tell my families that their chosen puppy that they have been waiting for for 7 weeks didn’t make it?

The uncertainty and stress that goes into breeding alone is something that only few can handle. This is why breeders don’t usually stay in the business for very long.

Let’s just pretend everything goes perfectly. Pups pass their vet checks, they go home and life is good. What happens if they get sick after they go home? Lots of things can happen. Are they grounds for replacement? If they are not, and the client insists on a refund, do you just make them happy by refunding regardless of your contract to avoid court and to preserve your good name… even when you know they are in the wrong?

Dog breeders’ biggest critics are often other breeders. You can never please everyone and there will always be someone trying to bring you down. Are you breeding purebreds? Are they registered? Are they the right colour to be in the show ring? Oh, All your dogs do is trot around a ring and look pretty to get titles? Oh, your dog is working lines and doesn’t show conformation? Gross. Wait your dog is registered and isn’t a standard colour for your breed? Well you must be a backyard breeder then. Your dogs are purebred? Well they aren’t as healthy as my mixed breeds… Wait, you breed health tested mix breeds? You are a backyard breeder. You only charge 1000 for your dogs? Maybe you shouldn’t be breeding. You make MONEY breeding dogs?!? You are doing it all wrong! Your dogs got a transmissible disease? Your kennel must be dirty. You raise your dogs in your home? That’s gross. You raise your dogs in a kennel? That’s abuse. You have more then 2 litters a year? You must be a puppy mill. You have less then two litters a year? You’re not a real breeder…

These are just some of the statements breeders of all kinds hear. The amount of scrutiny we face from other dog people is absolutely insane and really it’s quite sad.

Being a breeder is so not about playing with cute puppies all day. It’s cleaning up 💩 all day, stressing 24/7, and still loving the dogs and pups enough to provide them with good quality of care and giving them the best head start you know how.

Honestly this novel is just a fraction of what goes on with breeders.

I respect any breeder that has been doing this a few years and has seen the good, the bad, and the ugly, and still continues to breed and enjoy breeding.

As I said before, it takes a very special person.

I hope this will maybe change a few peoples perspectives on what it takes to be a dog breeder.


Written by : Nina Maillet

www.HughstonGermanShepherds.com

German Shepherd Dog Breeder | Hughston German Shepherds | Falmouth

01/05/2022

This is true for many many German Shepherds even with proper socializing!
Respect who your dog is!

Words written by a breeder of working lines

With the number of dogs that have been sold over the past year, I’ve begun to see a trend of posts popping up on German Shepherd Dog forums that go something like this:

“I brought my baby home 6 months ago and he’s been the sweetest thing until now. Then yesterday I took him out and just as a stranger was reaching in to pet him he snapped and tried to bite the stranger’s hand. What’s wrong with my baby?! How can I fix this?!”

Inevitably, a bunch of commenters chime in with helpful advice like “give the strangers treats and let them feed your dog before they pet him”, or “oh, you should have redirected to a toy”, or my personal favourite “you should get him neutered”.

Let me make it easier. If you wanted the personality of a golden retriever you should have bought a golden retriever. But that’s not what you brought home. You brought home a large guardian breed that is genetically predisposed to be wary of strangers. That a GSD owner is surprised by their dog’s aggressive reaction to having its personal space invaded by a stranger does not indicate a problem with the dog, it indicates a misunderstanding of the breed. Now there will be some GSD owners who will push back, saying “my boy just loves everyone. All he wants is to meet people and get pats and treats. He wouldn’t hurt a fly”. Those dogs unquestionably exist, but know this: as working line GSD breeders seeking to preserve and advance the breed, this is not a trait we select for.

To be clear, a properly socialized GSD (note that proper socialization does not mean allowing your dog to meet and interact with every strange person and animal it comes across) should not be lunging at the end of its leash at every stranger passing by. Non-reactivity should be a training goal from early in the dog’s life. However this is NOT the same thing as expecting your dog to enjoy - or even tolerate - being touched by strangers.

As owners it is our job to train our dogs to be non-reactive to stimuli outside our control. A dog that does not like being passed by strangers on a sidewalk must be taught to tolerate this stimulus as we do not control who we pass on a sidewalk, or when. However it is also our job to work within the bounds of our dog’s individual personality as it pertains to stimuli that are within our control, and to have enough respect for our dog to not put it in avoidable, uncomfortable situations.

The solution is not to give strangers treats to feed your dog before petting it, or to redirect to a toy, or to spay or neuter your dog. It’s not to try to train your dog to tolerate something it is genetically predisposed not to like. The solution is to stand up for your dog and stop allowing strangers to approach it. Some pet owners may not like having to manage their dog in this way. They should have bought a different breed.

In closing, allow me to leave you with the 5 words every GSD owner should get comfortable saying loudly and firmly: “Please don’t touch my dog.”

Copied

01/03/2022

BEFORE YOU DECIDE IM GONNA BUY MYSELF A DOG AND MAKE 50K 😂 MAKE SURE TO CHECK THIS LIST⁉️⁉️

1. Can you take 20k and throw it off a bridge 🤷🏻‍♂️ with a 50% chance you might get back 30k and a 50% chance you lose it all?

2. How much do you really like cleaning 💩??Really think on this one- on the days you are sick, had a long day, depressed you ready to deal with it because their are NO days off.

3. Are you ready to persevere and keep going when you lose the dog closest to your heart?

4. Do you have 2-4 hours per day for the enrichment of your dogs? (Keep in mind this goes up with every dog you add)

5. Can you afford anywhere from 500-3k vet bill at any given moment? We just had one this last week for 2k, not including 1k for emergency visit

6. Are you available to cycle all of your dogs for outside time when a female is in heat so a fight does not break out?

7. Do you love the sound of puppys whining? Don’t forget that new litter you couldn’t wait for needs to be fed every 3 hours on the dot. Team no sleep.

8. Can you afford 500 a month in miscellaneous dog expenses food treats toys bedding etc.?

9. Are you educated enough to take care of a litter that needs tube fed or has neonatal conjunctivitis? (Just examples, many things can go wrong with neonates- and quickly)

10. Are you ready to miss holidays and birthdays and other events with family and friends, because your dogs come first? Forget about a vacation.. what’s that?

This is just the beginning of a list. If your in it for the money just stop while your ahead.

We’ve taken L’s no one knows about because we don’t post them for sympathy. Weve invested more time, money, sweat and tears into these dogs than anything else. It’s a lifestyle, not a come up.

*Reposted for educational purposes only.

Wishing all my Facebook friends a Merry Christmas.
12/24/2021

Wishing all my Facebook friends a Merry Christmas.

Instead of a dog named Beau, I changed it to a dog named Dascha. I cried thinking of her.
11/30/2021

Instead of a dog named Beau, I changed it to a dog named Dascha. I cried thinking of her.

Legendary actor Jimmy Stewart brings host Johnny Carson to tears with a touching poem about his dog, Beau.

11/11/2021

To honor all those who have served, thank you.

11/05/2021

We are soooo excited to officially share our handout on the Stages of Training. Thank you Doggie Drawings by Lili Chin for bringing this to life! This handout is used for clients to follow their dog's training progress!
It goes through all the stages of learning:
1. Acquisition (get the behavior)
2. Fluency (add the cue)
3. Generalization (proof the behavior)
4. Maintenance (maintain the behavior)

Edit to clarify:
1. This is FREE for you to use/make copies of for clients, but not the edit.
2. “As taught by Jean Donaldson” refers to Push, Stick, Drop

Thanks for all the support! 🐾💙🐾

11/04/2021

Do you agree?...

11/02/2021

THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A 'BOMB-PROOF DOG' AND NO SUCH THING AS A 'CHILD SAFE BREED'.

Dear ladies and gentlemen dog fanciers.

Did you know up to 50% of children are likely to be bitten by a dog?

Children under age five are statistically most likely to be bitten out of any age group.
Bites usually occur on the face or neck and are most often inflicted by the family dog or family friend's dog.

Contrary to popular belief, dogs don't have an innate desire to protect or care for children, but rather, can find the body language and eye contact of young children unnerving.

Bites don't come out of the blue, there are always warning signs, yet these subtle signs of stress usually go overlooked. By the time a dog growls they have almost certainly been uncomfortable and showing it for some time.

Dogs generally don't like their space being invaded, arms around their neck or having children lean or sit on them. At best they will tolerate it (for a while). Nearly all of the signs you can see are dogs asking for space, and it's important to understand a dog will not always move away to create space, they will use their body language or eventually their teeth.

There is no such thing as a 'bomb-proof dog' and no such thing as a 'child safe breed'. EVERY dog has the capacity to bite. Understand that when children get bitten in the home this doesn't necessarily mean a dog is 'aggressive'. Our dog has many normal behaviours, using teeth is also normal.
It's our obligation to learn how to read and advocate for our dogs so they don't need to advocate for themselves.

Some of the many stress cues are:

- Tongue flicks
- Stress yawns
- Eye blinks
- Ears back/flat
- Whale eye (seeing the whites of the eyes)
- Closed/tense mouth
- Freeze/tense and stiff body language
- Averting gaze / turning the head away
- Shifting weight
- Lifting paws
- Appeasement licks (these are often thought to be loving kisses, whereas in this context they are space-increasing signals)

Please read your dog and learn to pick up these cues.

Source: Dog Sence Training and Behaviour, Perth Australia.

My heart is broken tonight. My heart dog Dascha zum Kolbenguss crossed the rainbow bridge today. Little did I know that ...
11/01/2021

My heart is broken tonight. My heart dog Dascha zum Kolbenguss crossed the rainbow bridge today. Little did I know that only 13 days after your blindness diagnosis that I would have to give you up. You were the best dog and I will miss you for the rest of my life. Forever is not long enough. Have fun in Heaven with Jeff and Tim. Camping will not be the same without you. You traveled the United States with us.

My heart dog Dascha is going blind. It breaks my heart to think that I won't have her with me for very many more years. ...
10/19/2021

My heart dog Dascha is going blind. It breaks my heart to think that I won't have her with me for very many more years. She has been one of the best dogs I've ever had. She will be 10yrs. Old in January. She has been with us through a lot of hard times and has traveled with us throughout the United States.

This is why I love my shepherd's.

This is one of my favorite photos circulating on the internet.
09/02/2021

This is one of my favorite photos circulating on the internet.

My new window decals.
08/13/2021

My new window decals.

Address

8622 Old Charleston Road
Leesburg, OH
45135

Opening Hours

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Tuesday 9am - 9pm
Wednesday 9am - 9pm
Thursday 9am - 9pm
Friday 9am - 9pm
Saturday 9am - 9pm
Sunday 9am - 9pm

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