Kennel Rules
Our kennel rules are designed for the protection of our dogs and puppies as well as your own protection.
Please read them carefully.
Kennel Rules And Dog Information
Because it is dangerous to our Boston Terrier puppies and our adult dogs. You don’t know it, but diseases can lurk on your clothing, our little pups don’t have any immunity until they have a minimum of one shot and much better two in their systems, till then mom’s milk is the only thing providing any immunity. We have no way of measuring that to know that she is providing. There was an incident a few years ago where a person brought in kennel cough on their shoes and it infected our pups causing deaths and hundreds of dollars of vet bills to save the others and to get rid of it in our adult dogs. We aren’t willing to risk that again.
Another reason is due to increased risk of theft and home invasion, we are following the advice of our local law enforcement agencies and AKC and do not have visitation. We had some pups stolen from us because we cannot always be home and they watched and waited and stole! That certainly isn’t going to happen again! However, video clips or face time can often be arranged. Just let us know.
Introducing your dog to a new puppy needs to be done in a secure environment where your dog feels safe and non-threatened. All animals in your household will take time to adjust to a new puppy. Introduce your new Boston Terrier puppy to your dog through a doggie gate or fence so that they can see each other first, maybe even a day or two, then do supervised meetings and easy play. Don’t leave a puppy alone with an adult dog until you are certain the adult Boston Terrier will not play too rough and injure your new puppy.
We currently do genetic testing on our stud dogs as this can identify if a puppy will present with a inherited disorder such as JHC and DM. Both parents have to carry the gene in order for it to present itself. Our female dogs are free by breeding, having come from our own stock over many years.
I will be asking questions regarding the type of atmosphere the puppy will be living in. It is most important to me to know the lifestyle of the family that will receive one of my pups. I want to match the lifestyle with the personality of the pup so that you have the best fit possible. After all, the next 15 years are going to be spent at your home. They have only spent 8 weeks being hand raised at mine! Boston Terrier puppies are sweet and funny and also fragile, you have to respect that they are babies and need to be treated as such.