"There are seven states that are known as puppy mill states because they have the majority of the puppymills in the country. They are: Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania."
I took this quote from this page:
http://www.prisonersofgreed.org/Comm...nel-facts.html
I do not have a dog - yet. I am in process of adopting a puppy mill rescue. The rest of the information I have is from the web site of the particular rescue organization from which I am adopting. The stories and photos they show are horrific. Female dogs have no vet care and suffer with infections that could be easily treated and cured. They go blind because simple eye infections are ignored. They are underweight, bred continually, often do not see the light of day or ever get out of their cages.
Most of their rescues have no teeth, male or female. As long as the dog can eat, no need for dental or vet care.
The rescue dogs are primarily adopted out to families who already have a dog established in the home. The rescue needs a dog to observe, follow, copy, emulate, to learn how to exist. (I know I said I don't have a dog and I am adopting one; there are exceptions to every rule.)
The rescued dogs are purchased at auctions. There, the dogs not sold are dropped into the "burn pile." I can't tell you much about that, just the name gives me tremors and I couldn't follow that particular link. Many of the photos, you can see the smoke from the burn pile in the background.
These dogs are terrified of humans, they have never known love, tenderness.
Many breed rescue groups attend the auctions to end the cycle. Buying the dog, even a puppy, saves that do and all the puppies (estimated at 6700 per female!) that she would have produced in the cycle.
Here is a link to one rescue operation at one auction.
http://www.hua.org/dog-adoption4.html
Do I know what a puppy mill is? I think so. Can I tell you? Not really, and not without crying. I have no idea how they are defined to make the statement which I copied at the top, that 7 states allow puppy mills. But there must a definition that many folks agree with. One that maybe we could start with: the worst group you can find. Eliminate those groups, revise your definition, and work your way up until you reach some sort of humane set up.
This female was rescued. At 8 years of age, she had never stepped on grass!!!!
http://search.petfinder.com/petnote/...?petid=6605482
Thanks for reading this far. I guess I am caught up in this right now, because of the adoption I am working with. There is a lot of information out there on the internet on this topic. Just go to any rescue organization for any breed.
Sandra
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