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I own a 9 month old boxer, he is starting to get curious lately. I am about to buy another boxer puppy, female, I want to breed them, but understand Im going to have to wait till the female is around a year old. How can I keep or deter my male boxer from humping her?

2007-05-15 05:11:38 · 10 answers · asked by smokering420 2 in Pets Dogs

10 answers

Semolina your thinking is not right. Just wanted to say that.

You said please leave breeding up to the professional..Do you know the so call professional were new at that at one time them self. If everyone told them to leave it up to a professional there would be no Professional because you not born being a professional breeder. The story I could tell you about some professional breeder would make you sick. But that is ok because they are professional. Give me a freaking break.

smokering..... you are on the right track you know you want to breed boxers. Since the male needs to be a year old and female needs to be two years old. This will give you plenty of time to read up on this and learn all you can on breeding boxers. Talk to boxers breeders maybe they will let you be around when one of their has puppies. Get books and books, know this breed inside and out. Learn what to do if something should go wrong. Be ready to answer any question anyone will put on you. Once you can do that then you are ready to breed these wonderful dogs. ( My brother has one ) he is really beautiful.

You did this backwards, you should have gotten the female first, then the male..but since you didn't you need to keep them separated during her heats.

2007-05-15 05:40:31 · answer #1 · answered by china 4 · 0 3

Do some research on the breed!! The idea behind breeding is to improve upon conformation and health. You are aspiring to be a back yard breeder with no clue. How will you know if your male will even compliment your female? I realize at this point you don't have a clue and don't care but maybe you should look into this before you become a breeder?
One year of age is to young to breed.
Boxers, like any other pure bred dogs come with a set of genetic problems. You need to learn about these, study pedigree's and be sure not to link them. How would you feel if you sold a puppy to loving home and it dropped dead of heart disease at an early age? How will you feel when your Young ***** has nothing but white litter that are blind, deaf or both? You are no where near ready to breed. Neuter your male, LEARN about breeding responsibly and once you have a mentor, and have a clue then you will better understand how to do this properly for the best results. Breeding dogs is not to be done willy nilly as so many people on this site seem to think. It's disgusting!

2007-05-15 05:21:03 · answer #2 · answered by Freedom 6 · 4 0

A BYB is somebody who has little or no understanding of the breed, does no formal assessment of the dam or sire's traits (like showing or overall performance activities) and breeds the canine to make money. An acccidental muddle is an indication of the two an accident by applying an in any different case considerate guy or woman or a elementary experience for a non-questioning guy or woman. in case you tutor canine with a view to evaluate them, and heavily tournament a sire and a dam according to those tests and do well being tests then i does not call that a BYB. if in addition they require spay/neuter on puppy canine, sell domestic dogs with a constrained registration, take back canine at any element of their lives for any reason, socialize the domestic dogs accurately, and heavily tournament families with domestic dogs then i'd call that throughout charge breeding. You reported "is a BYB a guy or woman who very own around 4/5 canine ALL registerd ALL have super bloodlines, and purely breeds her canine according to danger as quickly as a 12 months or much less? and cares for them, we could the canine stay interior her homestead,and doesnt EVER mistreat thier canine?" ands i'd call that guy or woman a BYB besides. They have not been assessed for well being, genetic issues, temperment, etc then the guy breeding them is a BYB. Bloodlines are a advantageous predictor of means---yet what concerns is the canine itself. some astonishing bloodlines produce canine that would desire to not be bred. My canine's breeder is spectacular. She shows and competes with the canine in numerous activities and averages a muddle each and every 2-3 years or so----whilst she needs a domestic dog for her very own breeding software. She tests references LOL and is notably strict approximately who gets a domestic dog from her. Her final muddle became into often spoken for in the past they have been born and that they have got been all spoken for by applying the time the domestic dogs have been 4 weeks previous. She takes canine back if the vendors can not shop them and is common to get in touch with if I even have any questions.

2016-11-04 00:10:05 · answer #3 · answered by ridinger 4 · 0 0

Both dogs should be 2 years old, have finished their AKC championships and received all genetic testing and health clearances available.
HERE ARE SOME THINGS TO CONSIDER BEFORE DECIDING TO BREED YOUR DOG:

Have they completed their AKC championships in the ring, thereby proving their quality as breeding stock?

Have you studied their pedigrees to determine possible genetic defects going back decades?

Have you evaluated male and female against the written breed standard to determine why their particular offspring would make a viable contribution to the breed?

Have you done the requisite health tests?

Are you willing to have their eyes and hips certified?

Do you understand the risk to the female in breeding her?

Are you willing to pay for a Caesaran, (quite common and about $1,000.00 + postnatal care)

Are you willing to supplement and tube feed puppies for 24 hours a day?

Are you willing to spend 12 weeks hand raising puppies in your home?

Are you willing to go to the expense of 12 weeks of shots and wormings for however many puppies you bring into the world?

Are you willing to interview dozens of potential pet buyers to determine exactly which ones will be the absolute Best homes for your puppies?

Will you have a spay/neuter clause in your pet buyer contract requiring proof of spaying/neutering before each pup is 6 months old?

Will you GUARANTEE that for if ANY reason during the life of the puppies you've bred, their owners can no longer keep them, they must be returned to you?


K

2007-05-15 06:18:07 · answer #4 · answered by K 5 · 2 0

You need to wait until BOTH dogs are 2 years old and have had and passed genetic health testing before even considering breeding. You also need to make sure the dogs are compatible and will compliment each other in conformation, pedigree, temperament and you also need to either show them or have them evalauted to make sure they meet breed standard.

As far as mating is concerned you will need to keep them separated for the entire time the female is in heat and an extra week after the heat is finished.

2007-05-15 12:33:33 · answer #5 · answered by Great Dane Lover 7 · 0 0

You will have to watch them closely. By the time your female is a year old she will have gone into heat at least once but it is dangerous to allow a dog to get pregnant on the first time because she is still growing. you will have to keep them apart during this period of time. Other than that if he humps her it is no big deal. She will probably retaliate if she is not in heat. She might even attack and that will teach him to back off until she is ready.

2007-05-15 05:17:10 · answer #6 · answered by connerito 3 · 0 0

I am not a fan of letting every person who has a male and a female dog breed.

Your question shows me that you are not very knowledgeable about these things.

Please leave breeding to the professional breeders who know what they are doing. They breed from stock that have been vet checked and have proven their value in the show ring.

I am not a show person myself, but them, I am not a breeder either. I do believe, breeders need an independant environment where the quality of their stock can be judged, and for that reason alone the show ring has its justification.

2007-05-15 05:17:37 · answer #7 · answered by Semolina's Pointer 4 · 4 0

for boxers, because they are large dogs, you have to wait until they are around 2 years old.

the only way to stop them from mating is keep them seperated or neuter/spay them.

please dont breed them if you dont know exactly what you are doing. it can be very expensive, for example if the ***** needs a c-section, youll be up for over $1000 (and this is common).
also it can be dangerous. even the act of mating is dangeous for dogs - ive had many females come tp me dying of blood loss from tears because breeders dont understand the mechanics of mating.
mother and pups can die of you cant identify a problem and dont know how to treat it. what are you going to do if a pup is dead and stuck inside the mother? what do you do with a breached pup?
theres a million things that can go wrong - dont put your dogs lives in danger.
.

2007-05-15 05:18:19 · answer #8 · answered by raspberryswirrrl 6 · 4 1

Actually you need to wait until she is two years old.

While she is in heat, you have to physically seperate them to prevent mating, when she is in heat you need to consider her in season for 21 days.

Some info on being a good breeder....
http://www.frontierrots.com/breeding.htm
http://www.jabed.com/byd.htm

http://www.dogplay.com/Breeding/ethics.html

2007-05-15 05:14:16 · answer #9 · answered by Nikki T 4 · 4 0

Actually two years old. You only have to worry about him humping her when she is in heat and bleeding all over your house.

2007-05-15 05:14:43 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

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