16/04/2026
What responsible breeding actually looks like (the dog part) 🐾
A responsible breeding programme isn’t a pretty photo and a nice name.
It’s the quiet work you don’t see.
The kind that shapes a dog for the rest of their life.
For me, responsibility towards the dog means:
• comprehensive health testing and ongoing veterinary oversight
• thoughtful selection of parents based on health, temperament, and lineage
• gentle early neurological + sensory stimulation in the first weeks
• structured, age-appropriate exposure to real home life
• continuous observation of temperament and individual development
• raising puppies close to people, not in isolation
And here’s what makes my programme different (the parts families usually don’t realise matter… until they do):
• I’m not “just a breeder”, I’m also a dog trainer/instructor, so I raise puppies with the end goal in mind: a dog who can live calmly with humans
• I’m a graduate of medical biotechnology, I understand genetics, inheritance, and why “health testing” is not a checkbox, but a strategy
• The first ~3 weeks are protected and quiet (not a carousel of visitors). Safety first, stimulation later, in the right dose
• Each puppy gets an individual socialisation plan, based on who they are, not one script for the whole litter
• We build real-life resilience early: handling, vet-style touch, car rides, harness/collar/lead foundations, gentle novelty
• Health starts in the bowl: minimally processed food for mum and puppies, plus gut support (microbiome matters)
• We do temperament testing and matching. Not “first come, first served.” Not “pick by colour.” We match for the best life
This is the breeder’s responsibility towards the dog.
Not for a week. Not until pick-up day.
But as a long-term process built on knowledge, experience, and consistency.
And even though much of it stays unseen…
it’s exactly what makes life easier for the dog later. And for you.
Part 2 is coming next: what responsible breeding looks like from the human side.