Hello my friend has a one year old in spayed staff she’s has had two…

Hello my friend has a one year old in spayed staff she’s has had two seasons so far. After her second we began noticing after she would urinate she would drip roughly 4-8 drips of blood. Then the same thing began happening when she pooed I was wondering if what this could be and if we must take her to a vets

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Charlea Downey
Charlea Downey
8 years ago

A title doesn’t make a dog. I’d take a untitled mongrel over a titled purebred any day

Charlea Downey
Charlea Downey
8 years ago

They don’t want her spayed they want her bred as they wish to keep some of the pups when she is of age (of course that would be after thorough veterinary examination and an all clear to go ahead with breeding) she plans to take her to the vets as soon as possible thank you very much for your feedback. Much appreciated

Charlea Downey
Charlea Downey
8 years ago

I don’t own animals my self as I can’t where I live but this dogs owner is the most kind and loving person towards animals. This is however her first female dog as she had a german shepherd who lived to a ripe old age of 13 before passing away due to cancer so she knows what to do with animals and is not being “unethical at best”

Charlea Downey
Charlea Downey
8 years ago

Pure breeds are more commonly in bred and most likely to have health problems. Cross breeds were bred for the genetic benefits that come with it ie no/less health problems. Yes I have been to shelters. Yes I have worked in kennels. I have experience with many different types of animals. But temperament isn’t just bred in to a dog. It is about your environment and their surroundings. Even the nicest and most easy going of dogs from the highest quality breeder can turn bad if brought up in the wrong environment. And a cross breed who’s raised in the… Read more »

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

YES, SHE NEEDS A VET.  urinating blood is VERY abnormal!  he should also schedule her spay while there…

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

unless she came from parents who: 1 – are BOTH titled in something (AKC Ch, Obedience, Agility, Rally, etc.), 2 – are BOTH fully health tested to the specifics of the breed (almost none of which can be done in a normal vet’s office), she should not be bred…and unless SHE is titled in at least one of the aforementioned venues, plus full health testing (which includes going to a cardiologist, an ophthalmologist, and OFA-certified vets for eyes, hips, elbows, thyroid), then she should not be bred. there are far too many bully mixes in shelters and rescue. that they… Read more »

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

and if they aren’t doing all of the above, their priorities are unethical at best.

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

unless she’s doing EVERYTHING i listed prior to breeding, her goals are suspect…which would make her an unethical breeder.

loving one’s dogs does not make one an ethical breeder. there’s a right way and a wrong way to go about it, and the right way is expensive and requires an entire lifestyle change to focus on trialing and titling those dogs. it’s HARD to do it right.

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

so what happens when the dog ends up with a horrible temperament because the breeder didn’t title their dog(s) to prove they fit the standard of the breed? ethical breeders make a point to ensure they breed dogs that fit the standard…because predictability is exceedingly important, ESPECIALLY for working breeds. i have never known a person to put down a well bred purebred dog for temperament issues, but i’ve known LOTS of mutts and poorly bred dogs with significant unfixable temperament problems over the years. what happens when someone dumps one of her puppies? an ethical breeder requires a puppy… Read more »

Anonymous
Anonymous
8 years ago

i’m referring to ethical, reputable breeders who do thorough pedigree research. it’s easy as hell to avoid inbreeding.

though the shelter system never sees these dogs – they never enter the system due to the contracts in place to protect those dogs. those breeders always take those dogs back, regardless of age or reason for return.

support ethical breeding and support shelters. do not support people who intentionally mix breeds or don’t bother doing the most basic things (titling their breeding stock to prove they should be bred, full health testing, full pedigree research). it’s pretty simple, really.