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View Full Version : Creator of fake doggy testicles says castration 'ruff' on Fido's self-esteem



Catty1
07-02-2007, 11:45 AM
Creator of fake doggy testicles says castration 'ruff' on Fido's self-esteem
Published: Monday, July 2, 2007 | 11:48 AM ET
Canadian Press: LEE-ANNE GOODMAN

TORONTO (CP) - Gregg Miller cheerfully admits he pampers his dog.

The creator of Neuticles, testicular implants for dogs, cats and other animals, warms up his boxer's food, treats him to nothing but chilled bottled water, has bought him $5,000 worth of toys - and made sure he was equipped with fake testicles when he went under the knife to be neutered a few years ago.

"The things I do to spoil Winston, you'd think I was nuts, no pun intended," Miller says from his home in Oak Grove, Mo. "But it's become our culture to accept emasculation of our pets as normal. Turning our pets into little eunuchs has become acceptable.

"(I) say: 'Yes, neuter your dog, but he can still retain . . . his natural look.' If anyone thinks that's odd, think about it - I think it's odd that you'd want to turn your dog into a eunuch."

Miller was awarded the spoof Ig Nobel Prize in the medicine category at Harvard University two years ago for his invention. But all joking aside, he insists that a dog's self-esteem suffers when he has his testicles removed during the standard neutering procedure. Same goes for cats, bulls and horses, Miller says.

"The pet would know if his nose, tail or foot got cut off - why wouldn't he know a familiar body part that he's kept clean and played with up until now is now missing?"

Since Miller and his vet developed Neuticles 13 years ago, he says more than 225,000 animals have been implanted with them, including a handful of pets in Canada. The implants are available in various sizes and degrees of firmness (www.neuticles.com).

Vets at the Morningside Animal Clinic in east-end Toronto implanted Neuticles in a pit bull terrier, says the clinic's Dr. Carl Porter.

"People tend to like the appearance of an intact dog in some of those breeds," Porter says. "We put one set in, but . . . we don't get requests for it very often. It's a little different."

The Canadian Veterinary Medical Association classifies Neuticles as cosmetic surgery, something it's opposed to - along with ear and tail cropping.

The association's Dr. Warren Skippon chuckled upon hearing Miller's theory that being deprived of their family jewels is a source of serious depression for male animals.

"I don't know if the science shows that animals are aware that their scrotums aren't as full as they used to be," he said. "We are a scientifically based profession and I think that's a bit of a stretch."

But he adds that those who put their dogs in shows might consider Neuticles if they have an animal with an undescended testicle, which would be considered a flaw.

Miller, 54, scoffs at the notion that there's something weird about Neuticles.

"Some vets say: 'Oh, Neuticles - they're not natural.' Well good God, what is natural about taking your dog in and having a body part cut off?"

His Neuticle adventure began 14 years ago, Miller says, when his beloved bloodhound, Buck, ran away from home. He was found four days later and 35 kilometres away after roaming the countryside, something unneutered dogs are wont to do.

"I had hesitated to neuter up until that point because his little thingies back there were a dominant feature of his personality," Miller remembers of the late Buck, who died in 2001.

"I asked my vet: 'Don't they make some kind of implant so Buck can look the same?' And the vet looked at me and said: 'I've been a vet for 45 years and that's the craziest thing I've ever heard.' So I just thought I was a neurotic pet-owner."

But the vet later had a change of heart and decided testicular implants for animals was a brilliant idea. Miller and the vet worked together to develop the implants and the procedure, and the rest is Neuticle history. Miller even wrote a book about how he founded Neuticles, entitled "Going Going Nuts."

"I am getting second-generation owners now - their pets have died and they're getting new pets and doing the Neuticle thing with their new pets," Miller says.

The vast majority of the fake cojones end up in dogs, but Miller says he sells a feline pair on average once a day and just sent off a pair of "really huge ones - five-and-a-half-inchers" to Pennsylvania to be implanted into a stallion.

"This isn't for everyone," Miller concedes. "It's for extreme pet-owners, people like me who spoil and pamper their animals. I grieved more when Buck the bloodhound died than when my own mother died, and that's the God's honest truth."
© The Canadian Press, 2007

lizbud
07-02-2007, 12:14 PM
A really dumb idea. Anything to make a few bucks I guess. :rolleyes:

dragondawg
07-02-2007, 02:32 PM
But it's become our culture to accept emasculation of our pets as normal. Turning our pets into little eunuchs has become acceptable.

And giving them implants will reverse the process? :confused:


you'd think I was nuts, no pun intended

Eh, one could always use the term lunatic for clarity. :cool:

I just asked my Barney if he wanted implants? His doggy language suggested he was more interested in another bowl of food (having just eaten a few minutes ago) - with extra fish oil pills this time around. Although I imagine any left over spaghetti tonight would also help the ease the humiliation he must feel every day. :D

CathyBogart
07-02-2007, 04:53 PM
You know...neuticles convince people to neuter their pets who otherwise wouldn't. What could be bad about that? They don't hurt the animal, it's not an invasive procedure to put them in, and I really don't see anything wrong with them unless you're using them to cheat in the show ring or something.

dragondawg
07-02-2007, 05:48 PM
You know...neuticles convince people to neuter their pets who otherwise wouldn't. What could be bad about that? They don't hurt the animal, it's not an invasive procedure to put them in, and I really don't see anything wrong with them unless you're using them to cheat in the show ring or something.

If neuticles are needed to convince a person to neuter their male dog, then they need psycological help, or at least should be educated in not being niave in the world.

Shall we take a survey of the forum...

Who with a neutered male dog ever even heard of neuticles before this post?

Who believes their neutered male dog is emotional scared for life (e.g. suffers chronic depression over the missing family jewels)?

Who has a neutered male dog that when approached by a female dog will run behind your legs in shame?

How would a Judge determine if a show dog has fake ones or not? :eek:

Who believes the inventor is more concerned with a dog's appearance than he is with the appearance of his banking account??? :confused:

CathyBogart
07-02-2007, 06:02 PM
If neuticles are needed to convince a person to neuter their male dog, then they need psycological help, or at least should be educated in not being niave in the world.

Be that as it may, the fact remains that a lot of people decide to neuter after they learn that their dog can retain his "natural" looks. Heck, I've SEEN IT HAPPEN at the clinic...There are a lot of pet owners who would benefit immensely from some education, don't you think? If a set of neuticles is the worst thing that happens to an animal in its lifetime I fail to see a problem with that.

I'm trying not to generalize too much, but a fair chunk of people who get neuticles for their dogs and cats are "macho" types who don't want to admit they have neutered their pet but don't want to deal with the behavioral traits or health effects of an intact male. When they learn that there's an alternative that will only cost them an extra $75. some of them jump on it. Some of them want a bigger set than the originals put in, too. :rolleyes:

crow_noir
07-02-2007, 10:51 PM
You make a good point.

I was going to say the idea is completely ridiculous.

Then again, the people that buy in to this sort of thing are probably the same exact people that SHOULD be getting their pets neutered.

I'm sorry, but i don't see dogs being emotionally scarred over getting neutered. Hormonal changes are something entirely different (and the reason i MUCH prefer to have in tact male dogs... at least until they're older.) Heck, King was the suave' type and the only problem he had when he had one removed was with the incision. It itched. The problem he did have was unrelated though... He FREAKED when he finally noticed the shaved patch of fur on his arm. He looked at, his eyes got huge, he yelped, and he leaped into the air from laying down, then proceeded to lick it. (This was the next day so obviously there wasn't any physical pain.) He was as into his awesome fur as i was... sometimes i think even more so. You can take his testicles, but do NOT take his fur!!!


You know...neuticles convince people to neuter their pets who otherwise wouldn't. What could be bad about that? They don't hurt the animal, it's not an invasive procedure to put them in, and I really don't see anything wrong with them unless you're using them to cheat in the show ring or something.