05/14/2026
We’re often called “breeders”
but that word has never fully captured what this is for me.
Because when I hear “breeder,” I think of two dogs being paired,
a litter being born,
puppies being fed and eventually sent home…
and that’s where it ends.
And that’s just not what happens here.
This is hands-on from the very beginning.
Before eyes ever open, before they ever take their first steps,
we’re already there.
From day 3, we begin gentle, intentional handling.
Early neurological stimulation.
Purposeful exposure.
These puppies aren’t raised in a kennel or a separate building.
They’re raised in our home.
In the middle of our everyday life.
They hear the sounds, feel the rhythm, experience real living.
They are touched, held, spoken to, and known.
Their parents?
They’re not “breeding stock.”
They’re our dogs. Our companions.
They live with us, sleep near us, are loved long before they ever become parents.
We don’t look at them and see income.
We see responsibility.
We see generations.
We see something we’re entrusted to protect and improve.
We invest into what most people will never see,
health testing, structure, temperament, genetics, nutrition.
Time.
Energy.
Sleep sacrificed.
Constant monitoring.
Endless cleaning.
Learning, adjusting, growing.
Because what we pour in during these early weeks
shapes the dog they become for the rest of their life.
This isn’t just “raising a litter.”
This is early mornings and late nights.
This is sitting on the floor surrounded by puppies, watching personalities unfold.
This is noticing the quiet one, encouraging the bold one, guiding them both.
This is preparing them not just to leave,
but to thrive.
We don’t rush this.
We don’t cut corners.
We don’t do “just enough.”
Every puppy is raised with intention.
Every decision is made with purpose.
Every life matters.
You can call us breeders if you want.
But what we really are
are caretakers of something much bigger than ourselves. 🤍