Hi,
Perhaps a nice short answer is "Good Lord! I couldn't afford too":-)
Rose
Jen wrote:
...this is the first question they ask, and when the answer is no,
they then ask why not. There usually isn't much time to get
into the whole responsible breeding spiel, so other than "she's spayed"
I haven't come up with a really short response to this yet.
Dear Jen, Cessi and T
"I'm not going to add to the surplus dog problem for shelters and I don't
have a waiting list started for puppies I breed."
Pamela and Dick
with Allegra, (the Beautiful!)
and Monty (the mischievous pup)
> Does anybody have a really short, one or two line ready response to this
one?
It does seem
tions, or they will think
you're a nut case and back slowly away.
Pauline Merrick
- Original Message -
From: Lucy & Yogi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2002 1:36 PM
Subject: "Are you going to breed them?"
> Does an
Lucy & Yogi wrote:
>Does anybody have a really short, one or two line ready response to this one?
"Because the only reason to breed two dogs is to contribute to the future
strength of the breed, and I and my breeder don't feel these dogs wll do
that."
For those that still want more of an answer
"Are you going to breed them"?
"No"
"Why not?"
"Because that is not my intention at the moment"
or
"Because we don't know if he will be fit for breeding yet"
or
"Because you can't breed a spayed female"
Or you combin
Does anybody have a really short, one or two line ready response to this one?
My dogs travel with me a fair bit - to work, away on weekends etc, and we
meet a lot of people. It seems that as soon as people learn that one is
male, and one is female, this is the first question they ask, and when