Help next to putting my dog up for stud?
I have a bull mastiff dog who is now ready to be mate but i don't know how or what to do, i need a step by step guide. Any help great fully received.
visit oodle.co.uk and puff your dog for stud.
After a male dog is allowed to mate, it will want to do this again and again. At this stage I am assuming that you own a male dog.
Unfortunately there are very few b1ches that can cope near the amorous attentions of a Bull Mastiff, consequently your dog will spend the rest of its life feeling frustrated. It will become aggressive and wreck the house up in his attempts to find a mate on a each day basis.
An entire male dog can suffer from frustration and prostrate problems. You owe it to your dog to have him castrated. In the UK and whether you are on benefits there are organisations who will pay for your dog to be neutered.
Please guess about your dogs comfort and his future fell. Yes he will enjoy his first experience of mating, however you must consider the ramifications.
step by step
http://www.workingdogs.com/vcnobreed.htm
http://www.k9web.com/dog-faqs/breeding.h...
http://www.kaylar.com/doginfo/breedpage2...
please alter your dog
When you say ready...what do you mean? Have you researched the strength problems specific to his breed, and had him tested to be free and clear of those problems? Have you determined that he is a good representative of his breed standard...ie, no faults contained by his conformation, dentition, coloring, etc? Has he tested free of brucelosis?
If you've done all that, then you can advertise him for stud to bitches that collect the same qualifications. But know that most people looking for a stud dog out at hand want quality dogs that have proven themselves. So the best thing for you to do would be to contact his breeder and ask almost getting involved in the breed so you learn the best way to step about producing quality puppies.
Step one: receive an appointment with your vet.
Step two: follow the instruction to prepare him for next day's appointment.
Step three: take him within to get him neutered.
If you male is not a show competence dog, it's no sense to stud him out. If you are actively showing your male, I'm sure your fellow breeders and exhibitors notice him and they will contact you whether they want to use your male as part of their breeding program. Otherwise, follow the above steps to have him neuter.
You should access to lots of females if he has won his contest. If he is not good enough to show you probably have a pet part dog & should not breed him. Pet quality dogs that come from pet quality dogs & nothing special. Many are the equivalent to mixed breed dogs mete out the owner didn't understand the what all was essential to test for before they bred. There are um teen different tests that adjectives dogs should have before they breed.
Registry papers don't mean much whether it is a poorly bred dog. Poorly bred dogs bred to poorly bred dogs equal poor quality pups. AKC registered or not.
You need to do lots of research on the breed & on the breeding process. It takes almost 2 years to complete a championship & that is the earliest that you should breed & since he is a substantial breed dog you might even wait until he is three.
Get him into the show ring, do your research, know everything there is to know long before you breed & stir at as if you were working with Murphy's Law. Be prepared for anything that might move about wrong. Anything ! ! !
I have never bred a dog cause I do not want to be an Ignorant Back Yard Breeder that pops out poor quality dogs do I could never afford a quality dog to start with. It is hard to come up near several thousand for a dog but that is what it takes to make characteristic pups that true to the breed standards.
Personally I would neuter him. We don't need any more dogs filling up the pounds & shelters. Dying freshly because no one wanted them.
Answers: I think it would be best to enjoy your dog health tested then prove him in the nouns of show and/or work. If he is successful there you will not have to look for females for him ... they will find you.
Step one contact the breed club to discover what health tests the breed requires and ensure they are all completed and you enjoy all of the certificates
step two Ask the breed club to recommend a breeder who can take a look at your dog to ensure he is a apt enough specimen to breed
step three learn all in the region of breeding again breeders from the breed club should be able to help
I would never use a pet dog for a stud dog because the pet dog you know now will silver he will mark his territory, become dominant around other male dogs, attempt to escape etc, cause sure you can afford to replace all your belongings which he will pee on to mark domain.
If your dog came from a reputable breeder, that would be the human being you should be asking and they will be willing to offer advice. If he didn't come from a reputable breeder, likelihood are he's not good enough to be used anyway.
By "set to be mated" I assume he has been hip scored and elbow grade?
Well have you shown? Is your dog proven to breed standard? Have you done the OFA testing? If not don't become part of the problem and enjoy him neutered.
Well the first thing you involve to do is think about what your dog has to contribute the breed. Have all health checks done because most people will not discharge to breed with an untested dog & his parents would have to have adjectives good results on their hip scores etc. How dose he go contained by the show ring as most want pay to breed to a dog that hasn't been tittled. So if you own a registered, health tested, champion dog then clear a website for him. If you don't have all these things there is no agency I would pay to bred to your dog & neither will any other responsible breeder.
For the best information, contact the breeder you bought him from
Is your dog a champion show dog? Is he a perfect example of his breed? Will he bring something glitzy to the bloodline? If not, chop those knackers off, there's no point in breeding.