Havanese Puppies

ABOUT HARBOR HAVANESE PUPPIES

Our home is our kennel. Our Havanese are our companions first and show dogs second. If I have a Havanese that possesses exceptional temperament, conformation, and health, I may breed. If you would like to be considered for a future litter, please fill out this questionnaire.

All of our dogs are health tested whether I intend to breed them or not. We screen our puppy buyers very carefully to assure a successful placement. Many of our puppies are sold as companions with limited registration. This means they can not be bred and they will be spayed or neutered before they arrive at their new home. Breeding is for one purpose, to better the breed. I do not want any of my puppies to wind up in puppy mills or to be bred irresponsibly.

Our puppies go home at 12 weeks fully vaccinated  and Spayed/Neutered. We don’t ship puppies, but we do recommend visiting us in Sunny Florida! Most airlines will allow you to bring your puppy home on your flight for a nominal fee.

The question most often asked by prospective owners is how we decide which puppies are “show” and which are “pet”. First, let me do away with those labels. Puppies are sold on either full or limited registration. If a puppy is sold with on a limited registration, owners must sign a spay/neuter agreement. Our breeding program is based on the total Havanese and geared towards producing a sound dog in both structure and temperament. Ideally, we are also striving to produce a dog that follows the AKC breed standard closely enough to be competitive in conformation.

STRUCTURE – When our puppies are eight weeks of age, we evaluate them for structure. This means that we spend time watching them move and determine their physical strong points and weaknesses. Conformation quality in a litter can vary widely as can the depth of such quality. Every dog, even champions, and every puppy have at least one fault. Some have more and each fault comes in varying degrees, from minor to major. If a puppy has one or more major physical faults or a disqualifying fault that pup will only be sold on limited registration with a spay/neuter agreement, which means it is not to be bred and its faults would prevent it being successful in the show ring.

In any given litter, there might be one or two puppies that have only minor faults and on the whole appear to be very balanced, correct individuals. These puppies are sold on full registration and we either keep them for ourselves or for serious competitive homes. Most puppies fall in between the two ends, having perhaps a noticeable fault, but also possessing many good traits as well. These puppies we sell on limited registration.

MATCHING PUPPIES AND OWNERS – Usually, when the puppies are about six weeks old (or sometimes sooner) prospective owners start getting anxious about which puppy will ultimately be theirs. Because the best time to evaluate puppies for structure is at least eight weeks, and because the development of their personalities is an ongoing process and assessment, it would be unfair of us to start divvying up the lot any sooner than eight weeks of age. So, patience, hard as it is to uphold, is a must. What we try our best to do is match puppies to owners, not just maintain a first-come, first-serve list. The more open owners are to different colors or either sex, the easier it is for us to find the pup of the appropriate personality and structure to match their needs. The more specific they are the harder it is provide people with what they want.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a Reply