Indien u interesse heeft in een pup uit een
toekomstig nestje, neem even contact op:
info@tollers.be
If you are interested in
a puppy out of a future litter, please contact us:
info@tollers.be
**********
If you are interested
in a puppy, please contact us:
info@tollers.be
Indien u interesse
heeft in een pup, neem dan even contact op:
info@tollers.be
****
Puppy buyer etiquette
by Joanna Kimball
I am posting this specifically because I do NOT have any puppies here now, and
don’t anticipate any for a while. So you know that I’m not singling any real
person out. This is because it seems that there’s a lot of confusion about the
whole “proper” way to go about things. So, puppy buyers and anyone else thinking
about maybe someday approaching a good breeder about a puppy, here you go:
1) STOP LOOKING FOR A PUPPY. The classic mistake puppy buyers make is saying “I
need an xx breed puppy at the beginning of the fall” or whatever it may be. So
they go out looking for litters due in August.
BAD IDEA.
Puppies are not interchangeable; one is not the same as the others. This is
largely because every breeder has their stop-the-presses criteria for breeding
or not breeding, and each has preferences for size, personality, working
ability, etc. Breeder X’s “perfect puppy” is not the same as Breeder Y’s.
Stop looking for a puppy; look for a BREEDER. Make a personal connection with a
breeder you feel shares your top criteria, and then wait for a puppy from them.
Maybe they even have a litter on the ground, which is wonderful, but maybe
they’re not planning anything for a few months. Or maybe they’re not planning
anything for a year; in that case, ask for a referral to another breeder that
shares those same priorities and has a similar (or just as good) personality and
support ethic. However it works out, screen the breeder first, then ask about a
puppy.
1b) EXPECT TO WAIT FOR A PUPPY. It’s VERY rare to wait less than a couple of
months; four to six is normal. I’ve waited a year on a couple of occasions; no,
even we breeders don’t walk through the field, able to pick puppies like tulips.
We ALL have to wait, and we ALL have to get matched up by the puppies’ breeder.
2) INTRODUCE YOURSELF THOROUGHLY. The initial e-mail should be several
paragraphs long; block out at least an hour of quiet for the first phone call.
When you initiate contact, clearly communicate three things: You are ready for a
puppy, you are ready for a puppy of this breed, and you understand what sets
this breeder apart from the others and you share that commitment. Specifically
describe your plans for this puppy; be truthful. If you are not going to be able
to go to four training classes a year, SAY SO. Don’t say “Of course, training is
a huge priority around here,” or you’re going to end up with a puppy who’s
flushing your toilet sixty times a day because he’s so bored and you’re not
challenging him.
The ideal first contact e-mail usually goes something like
“Hi, my name is X and I’m writing to inquire about your dogs. I’ve been doing a
lot of research on [breed] and I think they’re the right one for me because of
[these four reasons.] I know puppies are a huge commitment, and I am planning to
[accommodate that in various ways.] I’m approaching you in particular because of
your interest in [whatever,] which is something I feel is very important and
plan to encourage in [these three ways.]”
That’s the kind of e-mail that gets a response, and usually pretty quickly. If I
get something that says “I hear you have puppies on the way; how much?” it goes
in the recyle bin before you can blink.
2a) Bring up price either at the end of the first contact (if it’s been
successful and you feel a connection to this person) or in a follow-up contact.
It’s nice to say “If you don’t mind me asking, about how much are [breed]s in
this area, if there is a typical price? I just want to be prepared.” The breeder
will usually give you two pieces of useful information: Her price, and the
median prices around you. That way, if you decide to go a different way, you
know about what to expect. If the second person you contact names a price that’s
double the median, try to discreetly find out why. A very difficult pregnancy,
nationally ranked parents, a surgical AI, c-section resulting in very few live
puppies, those are some reasons a breeder could be asking more and it’s
reasonable. If there’s no real difference from the other breeders except price,
think carefully.
3) BE WILLING TO BE TOLD NO. Not every person is the right match for every
breed. That’s just fact. There is no way on earth I could make our home
appropriate for a Malamute puppy, and I’d have to lie through my teeth to get
approved for one. And I have my entire life devoted to keeping dogs happy. I
don’t expect you to have anywhere close to the obsession I have, so that means
there will be some dogs that are just plain wrong for you. If a breeder says no,
ask why. If the answers make sense, don’t keep calling people until you finally
get one who will sell you a puppy of that breed. Go back to the drawing board
and be very humble and honest with yourself about what kind of dog really would
be right for you and your family.
4) PLEASE DO NOT GET ON MORE THAN ONE WAITING LIST unless you are VERY honest
about it. This goes back to rule 1. You need to understand that we think our
puppy buyers are just as in love with the puppies as we are. We’re posting
pictures, writing up instructions, burning CDs, researching everything from
pedigrees to nail grinding, all so we can hand off this puppy, this supreme
glorious creature of wonderfulness, with the absolute maximum chance that it
will lead a fabulous life with you, and we’ve built all kinds of air castles in
our heads about how happy this puppy will be, and what it will do in its life
with you, and so on. Finding out that you had your name on four lists shows that
you don’t realize that puppies are not packages of lunch meat, where getting one
from Shaws is basically the same as getting one from Stop and Shop.
Also, as soon as your name is on one of our lists, we’re turning away puppy
buyers. If we’ve sent ten people elsewhere because our list is full, and then
suddenly you say “Oh, yeah, I got a puppy from someone else,” it really toasts
our bread. So just BE HONEST. If someone came to me and said “I’m on a list with
So and So, but she’s pretty sure she won’t have a puppy for me, and I’d love to
be considered for one of your dogs and I’ll let you know just as soon as I
know,” I’m FINE with that. I understand how this goes. It’s not a disaster for
me to have a puppy “left over” at eight weeks because you ended up getting that
So and So puppy; it’s just frustrating to have the rug yanked out from under me.
5. PLEASE DO NOT EXPECT TO CHOOSE YOUR PUPPY. This one drives puppy buyers
CRAZY. I know this, trust me. I have a lot of sympathy because I’ve been there.
But the fact is that when you come into my house and look at the eight-week-old
puppies and one comes up and tugs on your pant leg and you look at me,
enraptured, and say “THIS IS IT! He chose ME,” I’ve been looking at people
coming into the house all week, and every single time this same puppy has come
up and tugged at them and every single one of them have said to me “THIS IS IT!”
What you are seeing is not reality.
You are seeing the most outgoing puppy, or you’ve fallen in love with the one
that has the most white, or the one that has a different look from the rest of
the litter (when I had one blue girl puppy in a litter of black boys, every
human that came in the house wanted her; when I had one black girl puppy in a
litter of blue boys everyone kept talking about how much they loved HER), or the
one that’s been (accidentally) featured the most in the pictures I’ve posted.
Or, sometimes, you have a very good instinctive eye and you’re picking the puppy
that’s the best put together of the litter. And that puppy, of course, is mine,
and you’re going to have to pry him out of my cold dead hands.
My responsibility is not to make you happy.
And that, dear friends, is why I am posting this now, and not when I have a
bunch of actual puppy buyers around :D. But it’s the truth. My responsibility is
to the BREED first. That’s why my first priority in placing puppies is the show
owners, because they are the ones that will (if all goes well) use this dog to
keep the breed going. It’s not that I like them better than I like you; it’s
that I have to be extremely careful who I place with them so that they can make
breeding decisions with the very best genetic material I can hand them. My
second responsibility is to the PUPPY. I will place each puppy where I feel that
it has the best chance of success and the optimal environment to thrive.
So while I do care, and I will try to take your preferences into account, do not
expect to walk into my living room and put your hand in the box and pick
whatever puppy you want. And do not expect to be given priority pick because you
contacted me first; conversely, do not expect that because you came along late
you somehow won’t get a good puppy. Sometimes the person who calls me when the
puppies are seven and a half weeks old ends up with what I’d consider the “pick”
for various reasons (sometimes because somebody called me up and said they’d
gotten a puppy from someone else; see rule 4 above). I am going to try to do my
absolute best to match puppies to owners as objectively as I can, not according
to who called first.
When I was waiting for Clue, I think I initially called Betty Ann six months
before she was born. I waited through two other litters, where Betty Ann thought
she might have something for me but then in the end told me no. Then I waited
until 8 weeks when she thought this one might really be the one, and then
another two weeks until she made her final picks and sent me a puppy. I was
about ready to vomit with the tension. I UNDERSTAND. But the rewards of waiting
and being matched with the right puppy are greater than any frustration with
having to sit with an empty couch for a few more months.
6) ONCE YOU GET YOUR PUPPY, THERE WILL ONLY BE THAT PUPPY IN THE WHOLE WORLD. If
you’ve been sitting around with your fingers crossed saying “Please, Molly,
please, Molly, I only love Molly,” and I say “I really think Moe is the one for
you,” you’re probably going to feel disappointed. But take Moe and go sit on the
couch, and put your finger in her mouth, and realize that she has a really cool
white toe on one foot but none of the other feet have white toes, and let her
try to find a treat in your pocket, and I guarantee you by the time you’re five
minutes out of my driveway Moe will be YOUR puppy. And a year later you may
remember that you thought Molly was so pretty, but Moe… well, Moe could
practically run the Pentagon she’s so smart, and her face turned out MUCH more
beautiful than Molly’s did. And so on.
7) PLEASE FINISH THE ENCOUNTER WITH ONE BREEDER BEFORE BEGINNING ONE WITH
ANOTHER. If you end a conversation with me saying “Well, this just all sounds
wonderful, and I’m going to talk it over with my wife and we’ll call you about
getting on your waiting list,” and then you hang up and call the next person on
your list, that’s not OK. If you don’t feel like you click with me, or you want
to keep your options open, a very easy way to say it is to ask for the names and
numbers of other breeders I recommend. That way I know we’re not “going steady,”
and I won’t pencil you in on my list. If you are on my waiting list, and you
decide that you don’t want to be anymore, call me AS SOON AS YOU KNOW and say
“Joanna, I’m so sorry, but our life has gotten a little crazy and I need to be
taken off the puppy list.” And I make sympathetic noises and take you off. If,
then, you decide you want to get a different puppy, be my guest. Just keep me
apprised and let me close off my commitment to you before you open it with
another breeder.
…Which brings us to something that is super important and most puppy people
don’t realize:
8 ) EVERY BREEDER KNOWS EVERY OTHER BREEDER. Now of course I don’t mean the bad
breeders, but the show breeding community is VERY small and VERY close-knit. If
you’ve been on my list for three months, I’ve kept in contact with you, I think
you’re getting a puppy from me, I’m carefully considering which one to sell you,
and finally I match you with a puppy when they’re eight weeks old, and THEN you
e-mail me and say “Sorry, I got a puppy from Arizona, bye,” my instant reaction
isn’t going to be “Oh noes!” My instant reaction is going to be “From Jill?” I
probably e-mail Jill several times a year, if not several times a month, and I’m
probably going to pick up the phone in the next sixty seconds and say, “Did you
just sell a puppy to Horace Green from Topeka? Did you know that he put himself
on my waiting list three months ago and has been saying all along how excited he
is?” And two minutes after that she’ll get a call from Anne in Oregon and Anne
will say “Did you just sell a puppy to Horace Green from Topeka? He’s been
feeding me lines for eight weeks! I had a puppy ready to go to him next week!”
And we will take your name in vain, Horace Green from Topeka, and Jill will feel
bad that she sold you a puppy, and oh the bad words we will say. And Horace
Green from Topeka will be a topic of conversation at the next Nationals, and
t-shirts will be made that say “DON’T BE A HORACE,” and someone will name their
puppy Horrible Horace and everyone will get the joke and laugh.
In the end, “Be excellent to each other,” as Bill and Ted so correctly ordered
us, is pretty much the paradigm to follow. If you err, err on the side of this
being a relationship, not a transaction. Try to act the way you would with a
good friend, not with an appliance salesman. And the ending will be as happy
for you as it is happy for us.
****
Het op dit moment enige Nederlandstalige boek specifiek over de Toller.
In 2010 is de vierde, geheel herziene druk verkrijgbaar.
Alle foto’s zijn dan in full colour. 240 Pagina’s met meer dan 160
kleurenfoto’s.
Een heel mooi naslagwerk over de geschiedenis (zowel in Nederland als België)
de gezondheid, het fokken, de opvoeding, de mogelijkheden met een Toller en
nog veel meer!
In de derde druk zijn er een aantal hoofdstukken bij gekomen, onder andere
over de puppytest.
Wilt u in het bezit komen van dit naslagwerk? Maak dan
Neem voor verzending buiten Nederland eerst contact op via e-mail adres:
judithgieskens@wanadoo.nl
Did you know? - The official flower of Nova
Scotia is the Mayflower