Bulldog French Puppy Sale
16 Jul 2009
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Bulldog French Puppy Sale Videos
8 week old french bulldog puppy crying
Bulldog Puppies For Sale, French and English Bulldogs Available Now!
Bulldog French Puppy Sale Q&A
I am looking for a french or english bulldog pup for sale?
Hello, I am trying to locate a puppy for Christmas. Does anyone know of any for sale?
Now responsible reliable breeders do NOT time their litters just for Christmas delivery - they do a breeding that is long planed in advance when the timing is right for the female based upon her age and reproductive history; and they have a wait list started for that future litter.
I suggest you find very good and reliable breeder and get on the list for the next litter due or available. You can present a card and stuffed toy for Xmas (which is the absolute worst time too bring a new puppy home with the excitment)
For Bulldogs (English) go here:
http://www.thebca.org/
http://thebca.org/breedref.html
http://www.rescuebulldogs.org/
For French Bulldogs go here
http://www.frenchbulldogclub.org/
http://www.frenchbulldogclub.org/BreederPage/BreederList.html
http://www.frenchbulldogclub.org/BreedInfo/Links.htm
Those take you to the National Clubs for the two breed which is the only club about each breed that is recognized and accredited by the AKC and it sets the standards for the breed . The Clubs' websites will give you an ENORMOUS amount of information about the breed - the good, the bad, and the why or why not to get that breed. The clubs websites also have:
(1) a breeders list - all of whom have agreed to abide by the breeders code of ethics (which you can read)
(2) a link to the breed rescue for their breed
Do give serious thought to adopting from an adult from a breed rescue. The clubs' breed rescues go to a great deal of trouble to determine the dog's temperament, personality, likes and dislikes (particularly kids and cats and other dogs in the household), health, and level of training. They make a huge effort to match the right dog to the right home - and if they don't have one they think will be suitable for your home, they won't place it. Great way to avoid the puppy training, newspapers, chewing.......They have dogs that are purebred and part-bred (1/2 or so of their breed.) Dogs that come through rescue are so thrilled to have a forever loving home having once been abandoned to a shelter or rescue that they are typically extra devoted and loving. Dogs lose their homes for reason that are not their fault: death, divorce, a move and they couldn’t keep them, financial problems….
If you decide to get a puppy, please use one of the breeders who are members of the breed club. A well-bred pet puppy may not be a candidate for the show ring (that nose being 1/8th of an inch to long or something else very picky) but they will be very healthy, the parents carefully screened for hereditary health problems, and from a breeder who has devoted a great deal of time to understanding the breed and bloodlines. A responsible breeder will have a written contract with a health guarantee for hereditary problems; require that if for any reason you ever have to give up the dog that it comes back to them; and always be available for help, assistance and advice about your dog. Such a breeder will tell you if they don't think their breed is right for you based upon your needs. They want a perfect forever home for the puppies - not the money. (In 43 years in the dog show world, I have never known a breeder of that caliber who has made a profit on their dogs - it is labor of love.)
A puppy from such a breeder costs no more - and often less as poorly bred dogs tend to have very high vet bills over the years - than from a backyard breeder who doesn't do the health checks, knows nothing about the breed or bloodlines, doesn't give a guarantee, never wants to hear about the puppy again and has breed from mediocre or poor quality dogs.
Now health screenings for hereditary health conditions are VERY important. They involve far far more than a physical by the vet - xrays, thyroid tests, caridac exams, eye exams by a borad certified opthamologist.... and a good breeder easily spends $500-1000 per dog to make sure they are fit to breed. Do you want to get that darling new puppy and 8 months or 2 years from now find out it has hip dysplasia (happened to a 5 posters on yahoo in the past 4 days) , or severe heart problems (happened to a poster here on Yahoo just the other day and his bulldog doesn't have long to live) or it is going blind because the breeder didn't check their dogs and just bred without caring about how the puppy turned out and the vet bills its new family would face?????.
You may find the breeder who has the type of dog you want but no litter on the ground at the moment. Most good breeders have waiting lists -get on it. You may find the breeder and puppy you want but at a distance. Among the really responsible breeders(members of the club) shipping a puppy is quite normal -they want the best possible home for the dog and the written contract is very extensive.
Do ask the breeders on the club list if they have any dogs they bred that they need to rehome - good breeders all require if the owner can't keep one, it comes back to them. It may be a dog they placed and it came back because the owner didn't have time, didn't realize how big it would get, got divorced.... It may be a dog who was a show prospect but as they grew didn't meet their early promise. It may be an AKC Champion they decided not to use in their breeding program because while it did get the Championship, they don't need more bloodstock or find a tiny conformation flaw they don't want to reproduce.
NEVER EVER buy from a pet shop. Those puppies came from puppy mills where the parents are locked in cages, bred until they literally die from it, never vaccinated, never wormed, fed just enough so they don't quite die of starvation, live in filth, never bathed or groomed or cared for, are typically of very poor genetic stock both physically and often mentally. The puppies are shoved off to pet stores with no vaccinations, no worming, no socialization or handling... You are buying nothing but heartbreak at a price higher than what a responsible breeder charged for a pet puppy.
IF A SERIOUS BREEDER OR RESCUE TELLS YOU THAT THE BREED IS NOT SUITED FOR YOUR SITUATION - BELIEVE THEM - NO MATTER HOW MUCH YOU LIKE THE WAY THE DOG LOOKS
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No items matching your keywords were found.
Bulldog French Puppy Sale Videos
8 week old french bulldog puppy crying
Bulldog Puppies For Sale, French and English Bulldogs Available Now!

Bulldog French Puppy Sale Q&A
Check out my new puppy! He arrives tomorrow! WOOOHOOO. Linus naming. Does anyone have any better name?
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