04/30/2026
𝑾𝒉𝒚 𝑰 𝑫𝒐𝒏’𝒕 𝑳𝒆𝒕 𝑷𝒆𝒐𝒑𝒍𝒆 𝑪𝒐𝒎𝒆 𝒕𝒐 𝑴𝒚 𝑯𝒐𝒎𝒆
I get asked this all the time,
and I promise, I understand the question.
If I was getting a puppy, I’d want to see everything too. Where they’re raised, meet the mom, just make sure it all feels right.
So I get it
But there are a few reasons I don’t allow visitors into my home… and they’re very intentional.
First let’s talk about something most people don’t even think about…
Your shoes.
Anything you’ve stepped in vet offices, pet stores, gas stations, parks, even your own yard can carry things like parvo, giardia, coccidia and even worse brucellosis that can decimate my breeding program. Brucellosis is a contagious, often incurable bacterial infection caused by Brucella canis, primarily affecting reproductive organs and causing infertility, miscarriages (late-term), and weak puppies. It is a zoonotic disease, meaning it can spread to humans. Transmission occurs through contact with infected reproductive fluids, urine, saliva, or blood, usually via mating or sniffing/licking contaminated environments.
You won’t see it. You won’t know it’s there.
But all it takes is one visit, one exposure… and now it’s inside with a litter of puppies whose immune systems are still developing.
And once something like that is brought in, it’s not just “clean it and move on.”
It spreads fast.
It’s expensive to treat.
And in worst cases you can lose an entire litter.
That’s not a risk I’m willing to take. Ever.
And then there’s the part people don’t always want to think about…
SAFETY
Cases like the Paul Peavey case and the Florida dognapping shootout are a big reason a lot of breeders have changed how they do things.
To put it simply, these weren’t just “someone tried to steal a dog” situations.
Homes were targeted.
People were followed.
Dogs were stolen for resale or breeding.
And in one of these cases, it escalated into taking someone’s life.
All because someone knew where the dogs were.
That’s real life. Not just something you see online.
And when you’re raising multiple dogs and litters you have to think about protecting them long-term, not just in the moment.
So for me, it comes down to this:
I’m not running a storefront with people coming in and out all day.
These puppies are born and raised in my home. They’re part of my daily life.
And it’s my job to protect that environment even if it’s not what everyone expects.
That being said, I also never want anyone to feel like they’re going into this blindly.
So I offer other ways for you to see everything.
We can FaceTime so you can see mom, the puppies, and how they’re being raised in real time.
I send constant photo and video updates.
And we do public meet-ups so you can meet your puppy and the parents safely before bringing them home.
At the end of the day, it’s not about being unwelcoming. It’s about being protective.
Of my dogs.
Of my puppies.
And of something I’ve worked really hard to build.
And I’ll ALWAYS choose that!