Brodrick's Barkery

Brodrick's Barkery Family raised Cockapoos & Poodles for 25 years.

05/12/2026

Emailing waitlist families so please check your email.

F1B Cockapoos, born 4/30. Will be ready at 8 weeks 6/25. There are a few waitlist families to contact yet but we will al...
05/12/2026

F1B Cockapoos, born 4/30. Will be ready at 8 weeks 6/25. There are a few waitlist families to contact yet but we will allow visits soon. F1B = First generation cockapoo to a miniature poodle.

We recently switched to this food. Any retailers that carry Kalmbach feed, should have this. It’s family owned and so fa...
05/02/2026

We recently switched to this food. Any retailers that carry Kalmbach feed, should have this. It’s family owned and so far we are very pleased with it.

04/26/2026

We are expecting a litter of F1B Cockapoos very soon. (cockapoo mom-miniature poodle dad) A few waitlist families to contact. If you were on the list please PM to confirm you’re still interested.

02/04/2026
01/07/2026

Puppy checkups went great. First boosters (parvo-distemper and bordetella ) given today. Please schedule your wellness check with you vet for fhe week following pick up if uou babent already. NO vaccines at the wellness appt. Next boosters are 2/7.

Diamond naturals small breed puppy. We don’t recommend changing food when they leave. Please keep their diet the same for now.

SOLD!F1 Cockapoo male at 2.5 weeks. Ready 1/12.
12/05/2025

SOLD!
F1 Cockapoo male at 2.5 weeks. Ready 1/12.

After going through the waitlist families we have one male Cockapoo (f1) available. He will be ready 1/12/26. Out of Fio...
11/25/2025

After going through the waitlist families we have one male Cockapoo (f1) available. He will be ready 1/12/26. Out of Fiona and Loki.

Sharing as this is so true..https://www.facebook.com/share/17V5JHC4wu/?mibextid=wwXIfr
11/13/2025

Sharing as this is so true..

https://www.facebook.com/share/17V5JHC4wu/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Not All Breeders Are the Same and That’s the Problem.

I know what most people picture when they hear the word “breeder.”

Cages stacked high.
Dogs with matted coats and sad eyes.
Tiny, frail puppies behind wire fencing while some Sarah McLachlan song plays in the background.

And honestly… it breaks my heart too.

Because those dogs deserve better.
They deserve grass under their paws, sunlight on their faces, and someone who whispers their name with love.
They deserve what I …and so many others like me wake up every day fighting to give.

But somewhere along the way, the word “breeder” got ruined.

It became something people whisper with disgust instead of pride.
And now, every one of us who’s doing it the right way gets painted with the same brush.

The truth is…

You can’t lump us all together.

Because some breed for money,
and some breed for purpose.

Some count profits,
and some count heartbeats.

Some skip testing because “it’s too expensive,” and some spend thousands making sure no puppy ever suffers from something preventable.

We run OFAs, DNA panels, hips, hearts, eyes not for bragging rights, but for peace of mind.

Some raise puppies in barns or sheds,
and some raise them in their living rooms ,
in the middle of family chaos,
where babies giggle, vacuums roar, and coffee pots beep, because that’s how you raise a puppy ready for real life.

Some disappear after pickup,
and some stay up until 2 a.m. helping new families through crate training, puppy blues, or that first “why won’t he sleep” night.
We cry when they cry.
We celebrate every update.
Because when that puppy leaves our home a little piece of our heart goes too.

We are not the same.

We lose sleep over every decision what pairings to make, which puppy goes to which family, which girl needs a break, which one’s ready for retirement.
We overthink everything because lives depend on it.

We spend hours studying pedigrees, structure, genetics, and coat types.
We watch every litter like a hawk making sure they’re nursing, thriving, socializing right on schedule.

We give up vacations, weekends, and sometimes sanity all for the sake of doing it right.

But people don’t see that part.
They see the price tag.
They see “breeder” and roll their eyes.

They don’t see the tears when a puppy doesn’t make it.

They don’t see the mama we comfort through labor.

They don’t see the vet bills that stack higher than the profit.

They don’t see the hours of cleaning, journaling, planning, and praying.

And then, after all that, we get told “I’d never buy from a breeder.”

I get it. You’ve seen the horror stories.
The mills. The greed. The trauma.

But please…

Don’t confuse the careless with the careful.

Don’t confuse the greedy with the grateful.

Don’t confuse the ones who mass-produce with the ones who nurture, study, and build with intention.

We are not the same.

We care about structure, temperament, health, and heart.

We raise dogs who can go into any home and change someone’s world.

We raise mamas who are loved family pets before anything else who get belly rubs, walks, and bedtime snuggles.

We raise litters that are handled, adored, and taught what love feels like before they ever go home.

We don’t just produce puppies.
We raise forever dogs.

So before you say, “I’d never buy from a breeder,”
remember not all breeders are the same.
And that’s exactly the problem.

Because the ones doing it right deserve to be seen.
Heard.
Respected.
And supported.

The ones doing it right are the reason you fell in love with your doodle in the first place.
The reason your child has a best friend.
The reason a senior has companionship.
The reason a family has laughter again after loss.

We don’t breed dogs.
We build families.
We create joy.
We give hearts a reason to heal.

So maybe just maybe it’s time we change what the word “breeder” means again.

09/15/2025

Address

Greenville, OH
45331

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