Westport Labradors

Westport Labradors We raise and show Labrador Retrievers in north Texas.

This!!
12/05/2025

This!!

Looking to get a puppy in 2026? Read this first đŸ«¶đŸŒ

Most people looking for a puppy have no idea what they’re supposed to be asking a breeder. It’s not like it comes up in normal conversation and unless you’ve fallen down the responsible breeder rabbit hole on the internet (Hellllloooo 👋) then nobody really teaches this stuff. But since you’re here, let’s go over it and maybe you can share with your friends.. here’s a simple breakdown from your dog obsessed internet bestie.

1. “Health tested” is not the same as “my vet said they’re healthy.”
Real health testing means OFA or equivalent. It means hips, elbows, eyes, and breed specific DNA panels. You need to verify the results on the OFA.org database with the dog’s registered name or number because I have recently seen people making AI OFA certificates
 (just message me, I can help!) OFA also has a list for every breed of what “breed specific” testing you need for a CHIC #. That’s everything your breeder needs to be doing, it’s not a quick visit to the vet.

2. Ask about a contract. A good breeder will always have one.
It protects BOTH of you.
It explains health guarantees, spay/neuter terms, the return policy, and what happens if life changes. If a breeder refuses to take a puppy back at any age, that’s not a breeder you should support.. We should all be striving to keep our dogs out of the shelter systems.

3. Ask them why they bred this litter.
If the answer is along the lines of “we love the mom” “we wanted to teach our kids about the miracle of birth” “every dog deserves to be a mama once” “because blue merle frenchies are fire”
.. just walk away.
A ethical breeder can tell you what they are trying to improve, what they loved about the pairing, and what they hope to see in structure, temperament, and longevity.

4. Look for a waitlist, not “available today.”
The puppy market is weird right now, and people do back out at the last minute.. having a puppy available after evals isn’t a red flag. However, constantly having puppies available with no wait, and breeding more while struggling the place the last litter? That’s something to think about.

5. You don’t have to “meet the parents” to verify quality.
If you can meet mom ahead of time, that’s always great! Maybe she is showing nearby and you can see her in her element. Once mama has puppies, her hormones aren’t herself and she might be protective or just not into meeting strangers.. not a true representation of her temperament. Also, dad might be across the country. When we pick our studs, we pick the best one for our females
 and location has absolutely nothing to do with it.
But you should absolutely look at their titles, health testing, pedigree, and photos. Ask questions about their temperament, what they bring to the program and most importantly if you’re a pet owner, what are they like to live with? That all matters far more than seeing him in person.

6. Ask what they do for early development.
There are so many early curriculums that breeders can be doing with their puppies. It’s a personal choice and every breeder is going to do what they find works best for their program, but they should be doing SOMETHING. Puppy Culture, ENS, ESI, “Badass Breeder” Early Desensitization, Crate Training, Car Exposure etc
 If the breeder doesn’t do anything beyond “we hold them,” that’s not enough.

7. Ask how they match puppies to homes.
You shouldn’t pick a puppy based on color or a photo. Ethical breeders evaluate structure and temperament to make sure the right puppy goes to the right family. If you’re set on a specific color, be prepared to wait for the puppy to come along that has the perfect temperament for your family (that is also the perfect color) because temperament should always be your number one priority.

8. Look at the breeder’s adults.
You can tell a lot by looking at the dogs they kept. Are they well structured, stable, healthy, do they have good temperaments? Are they titled, proven, and do they have correct breed type? Overall, do they represent what the breed should be? The dogs living in the breeder’s home will tell you everything you need to know.

9. Price shouldn’t be your deciding factor.
A well bred dog from an ethical breeder is usually going to cost more than a backyard breeder. Save your pennies and wait. I know it’s hard to not impulse the cheaper puppy but in the long run, it’s an investment. Paying more for a well bred health tested dog is cheaper than dealing with lifelong genetic issues, difficult temperaments, or unethical practices.

10. An ethical breeder is a lifetime resource.
You don’t just get a puppy, you get support. I joke with my puppy people that they’re my contractual besties.. but for real you get someone to help you with training questions, grooming, feeding, health, and the things you can’t (or maybe just shouldn’t) Google and with me, a best friend. A breeder should care where their puppies end up, not just where the money goes.

If you’re looking for a puppy in 2026 and you want to do it right, save this list. Share it with your friends whose might be searching too. I’m happy to help look over a breeders website and point out questions you should ask!

Labradors only come in 3 colors đŸ’›đŸ€ŽđŸ–€
11/28/2025

Labradors only come in 3 colors đŸ’›đŸ€ŽđŸ–€

11/14/2025

Every breeder knows this feeling. Your phone buzzes a few days after a puppy goes home, and the message starts out sweet.

“We love him, but
”

And you can already guess the rest.
He barks. He nips. He cries at night. He’s “a lot.”

The thing is
 that isn’t a problem.
That’s a puppy.

They’re babies trying to figure out life without their mum and littermates. They’re confused, overstimulated, excited, scared, and curious all at the same time. That’s completely normal.

But a lot of people today want the easy version. The one they see online. The perfectly calm eight week old who never chews anything and somehow already knows every command.

They forget that behind every well trained, well mannered adult dog is someone who put in the work. Someone who showed up every day with patience, structure, and consistency.

So when someone says, “He’s adorable, but I don’t think we’re a good fit,” what they usually mean is that they wanted the love without the learning curve.

No puppy comes pre programmed. Even the best raised babies need time to adjust. They need guidance, calm energy, and someone willing to put in the effort.

People confuse an easy puppy with a good one.
The truth is every puppy is good. They’re just new.
And anything new is messy before it becomes magical.

As breeders, we see it all. We comfort the ones who come back scared and confused. We remind them gently, “You didn’t do anything wrong.”

Because it’s never their fault when someone wasn’t ready for the tough parts that lead to the best parts.

Puppies aren’t a trend, or a trial run, or something to “see if it works out.”

They’re a commitment. A little piece of your heart on four legs.

If you’re not ready for the messy parts of puppyhood, that’s okay. Just wait until you can give your whole heart.

These little souls deserve nothing less. đŸ’œđŸŸ

Shared from another breeder.

Pepsi introduced 8 beautiful puppies into this world on 10/29 🧡🎃🧡3 black girls and 5 black boys. They are now 2 weeks ol...
11/11/2025

Pepsi introduced 8 beautiful puppies into this world on 10/29 🧡🎃🧡
3 black girls and 5 black boys.
They are now 2 weeks old, really starting to get around and are slowly opening their eyes.

MBISS GCH CH Maidstone Edlyn Jolly Roger That JH x MochaLabs Sweet Carbonation at Westport THD GCG TKI

11/11/2025

A battle cry to the public.

So many breeders are selling puppies way below the price should be to get quality care and pedigree/lines.

Please understand that if that is all that is supported you are putting all of our dogs at risk. Responsible and ethical breeders cannot stay in business and hold the standards that our dogs deserve.

From careful selection of parents, health testing, veterinary care, quality nutrition, puppy curriculum, puppy evaluations, and on and on.

I am seeing ethical and responsible breeders pausing left and right and what I need you to know is that if all of our GOOD breeders are reducing our litters and or stopping breeding altogether (we will not breed to any other standard other than of excellence) then what will be left of our dogs? Our lines?

I need this message to be heard LOUD AND CLEAR. Our dogs are at risk. I know the economy is crappy. We are all feeling that, but please save, be patient, and research before getting a dog at a price that is "too good to be true".

I am watching this all unfold before my eyes and I need your help!

Please protect all of our ethical breeders.

Buy responsibly.

Our dogs deserve it.

Our ethical breeders are the ones we want to protect, preserve, and create the healing power of the dog. We do not want the fate of our dogs left in the hands of ill-intention breeders.

Happy 1st birthday to our girl Tw***ie 🎂 🎉
10/02/2025

Happy 1st birthday to our girl Tw***ie 🎂 🎉

10/01/2025
Pepsi had her ultrasound appointment
 đŸ„đŸ„ She has a belly full of babies!!We are so very excited for this litter. She was...
10/01/2025

Pepsi had her ultrasound appointment
 đŸ„đŸ„

She has a belly full of babies!!
We are so very excited for this litter.

She was bred to MBISS GCH CH Maidstone Edlyn Jolly Roger That JH

Pepsi is due the last week of October, and we are expecting all black puppies. đŸŽƒđŸ‘»

If you’re interested in a puppy, now’s the time to reach out!

Address

Princeton, TX
75454

Alerts

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

Share

Category