Pedigree Greyhound Puppies For Sale Uk

Greyhound X Lurcher Boy Lurcher bitch gave birth to a gorgeous litter of 6 puppies on the 11/07/16 of which this lovely affectionate boy is still...WHO WANTS ANOTHER 'TIMBER HOUSE?**THE CREAM OF COURSING BREEDING**2 DOGS - 3 BITCHESTHESE OUTSTANDING COURSING PUPS COME FROM ONE OF THE BEST DAM LINES IN COURSING TODAY.THER DAM 'ADIOS CAPRICE' WAS VERY LIGHTLY COURSED - DUE TO A REARING INJURY. (she was kept specifically for breeding)SHE EASILY WON THE JOE MCKEE MEMORIAL AT CAVAN & DUNGANNON.SHE IS ONE OF THE BEST BRED COURSING BITCHES IN IRELAND.HER DAM - 'EOIN BUI' - WAS VOTED COURSING BROOD BITCH OF THE YEAR.SHE PRODUCED THE LEGENDARY - 'ADIOS ALONSO' - WHO IS RATED ONE OF THE BEST DERBY WINNERS IN MODERN TIMES.'EOIN BUI'S - DAM - 'EOIN OG'- (also voted coursing brood bitch of the year)SHE IS OF COURSE THE DAM OF THE GREAT - 'BEXHILL EOIN' - THE DERBY WINNER - AND LEGENDARY STUD DOG.-'EOIN OG' - ALSO PRODUCED THE IRISH CUP WINNER - 'EOIN RUA'*NB* - 'ADIOS CAPRICE' - IN HER ONLY PREVIOUS LITTERBRED - THE VERY FAST 'ADIOS KING' - WINNER OF THE 2016 ULSTER CUP ALL AGE CUP
('Adios king' - produced some of the fastest clocks wherever he ran)- 'ADIOS CAPRICES - 1/2 SISTER 'LADY TWINKLETOES' - BOTH -(EOIN BUI BITCHES)WHEN BRED TO 'THOMAS THE TANK'PRODUCED ANOTHER ONE OF THE BEST COURSING GREYHOUNDS IN RECENT YEARSNONE OTHER THAN THE MAJESTIC 'TIMBER HOUSE' - COURSING DERBY FAV - ALL AGE CUP WINNER BALLYDUFF - ALL AGE CUP WINNER ABBEYFEALE.THIS LITTER ALSO CONTAINED - 2 top quality bitches - 'jeffys twinkle' & 'Jogon Jeanie - who both won trial stakes and all age cups.THEIR CAN BE NO IF'S OR BUT'S THESE PUPS COME FROM POSSIBLY ONE OF THE BEST DAM LINES IN COURSING TODAY.THEIR DAM LINE IS PROVEN IN WINNING CLASSICS AT POWERSTOWN PARK and producing some of the fastest coursing dogs seen in recent years - the sort money simply cannot buy.INSPECTION INVITED AND PREFERRED - Displaying 1 - 1 of 1 Greyhound Litters Ch Boughton Brigadier x Mistweave Miss Sunshine at Zoraden Zoraden Spalding Lincs 28th July 2016 Dam Health Tested 6 dogs and 3 bitches born on 28th July.Mum of the litter is Solar.
Sire is Riggs -Ch Boughton Brigadier.We chose this combination most importantly for the fantastic temperaments both these dogs have, being loving and friendly towards every dog and person they meet.Both are sound and unexaggerated in conformation and definitely fit for function.Both are successful in the ring with Riggs being a champion at young age and Solar winner of two RCC's.At home we also have Solar's father Roo (Ch Mistweave Mr Maghoo). �Both Riggs and Solar are neopathy .... Greyhound Puppies for sale in UKGreyhound Puppies for sale are listed in West Midlands, and other areasThe Italian Greyhound Rescue Charity is a registered charity that cares for the welfare of Italian Greyhounds and Italian Greyhound crosses throughout mainland UK; Scotland, England and Wales. (Please note we do not re-home IGs outside mainland United Kingdom) We provide advice and support on the welfare of Italian Greyhounds to owners all over the country, as well as emergency care and re-homing as part of our rescue activities.
To relieve the suffering of Italian Greyhounds in need of care and attention, including those who find themselves in difficulties due to a change in their owner’s circumstances; Throughout the UK we provide foster and adoption homes for pedigree and cross bred Italian Greyhounds, maintaining lifelong contact with every re-homed dog;Homes For Sale By Owner Natchitoches La To ensure that Italian Greyhounds in need of veterinary care and attention receive the appropriate care and treatment, prior to facilitating their re-homing;Drv Full House For Sale To educate the public as to breed requirements in order to promote responsible ownership and positive health of Italian Greyhounds;Ninja Blender Plastic Gears To promote the advancement of education and science by furthering research into diseases and health issues affecting Italian Greyhounds.
We are a non-profit making organisation staffed by a team of volunteers and funded by voluntary donations. Our network of friends includes home-checkers, foster homes and Italian Greyhound specialists all over the country which enables us to provide care for any Italian Greyhound in need wherever he/she is in the UK. If you would like to get in touch please feel free to contact us.  If you have read all our information and feel you would be suitable to re-home a rescued IG, please complete our on-line form, which can be found under the heading Looking for an IG,  Register with the Rescue, giving as much information as possible. Dogs and Puppies for Sale in UK Dog Food and Treats>EARLIER THIS MONTH The Telegraph asked readers to vote online for their favourite breed of dog, which they did in impressive numbers. More than 30,000 votes were cast during the four days the poll was open. Its results make fascinating reading, for in the number one slot wasn’t a breed at all, but two cross-breeds.
In third place was the spaniel The cockerpoo and Labradoodle shared first place, gaining 1,000 more votes than the greyhound, which surprisingly was placed second. In third place was the spaniel, with no differentiation made for springers and cockers, while the Labrador/retriever took fourth slot. The poll results failed to make it clear whether the Labrador was lumped with the golden retriever, but I expect so. In fifth place was the collie, followed by the beagle, German shepherd, setter, dachshund and pointer. It’s a rather curious mixture of breeds, and doesn’t reflect recent Kennel Club (KC) registrations. The KC’s most recent top 10 includes the pug (No. 4), French bulldog (No. 7), bulldog (No. 9) and Staffordshire bull terrier (No. 10). I’m agreeably surprised to see the first of these three breeds unplaced, as they all suffer from respiratory problems due to the demands of the show ring. As for the absence of the Staffie, well, it was a Telegraph poll. I’m sure one in The Sun or Daily Mirror would have come up with very different results.
Readers voted for favourite breed but not the breed they owned It’s also worth noting that the poll only asked readers to vote for their favourite breed, not the breed they owned. Many of those who voted for the greyhound, for example, may have simply been admirers of these elegant hounds, though I doubt if they were greyhound-racing enthusiasts. The high placing of the beagle probably comes from readers recalling dogs from their childhood. Fifty years ago beagles were popular pets, but they have a much smaller following these days. I always remember Peter Moxon telling me that he wouldn’t wish a beagle on his worst enemy. Peter knew beagles well, as he house a pack at his kennels at Redditch. I’m intrigued, too, whether the “pointer” in 10th position includes all dogs with pointer in the name, ranging from our native pointer to the more popular and numerous German shorthair. I can’t remember when I last saw a pet English pointer. Like beagles, pointers require lots of exercise and don’t generally make great pets.
However, while allowing for the biased nature of the poll, the result is an interesting one, for it’s another indication  that the cult of the pedigree dog is declining. The fact that poodle-gundog crosses came an emphatic first is a sign of the times. I’m not sure whether the start of the rot for the Kennel-Club pedigrees started with the screening of the BBC’s ground-breaking programme Pedigree Dogs Exposed in 2009, but I suspect that it played a major part. For years the working gundog world has been in the stranglehold of the Kennel Club. The latter holds the monopoly of all serious gundog competitions, and participation is impossible if your dog isn’t registered. I’ve no doubt that if you attempted to set up a rival spaniel championship, genuinely open to any varieties including sprockers, the KC would bar any handlers who were brave enough to take part from entering its own events. You can be equally confident that if any KC panel judges were misguided enough to officiate in such a competition they would be fined by the club’s disciplinary committee.
You can understand the KC’s reluctance to have anything to do with unregistered dogs. The club’s finances depend on dog registrations, of which it has the monopoly, and a very lucrative one, too. It currently costs £16 to register a puppy, though members of the Kennel Club Assured Breeders scheme get a modest discount, bringing the price down to £14. If the new owner wants to change a puppy’s kennel name within three months of the initial registration, then that’s another £30. The KC justifies these charges by explaining that the money goes to “research into illness and inherited conditions, providing grants to canine causes through the Kennel Club Charitable Trust, lobbying Government to prevent negative canine legislation and maintaining breed standards”. It also allows the club to have its headquarters in Clarges Street in Mayfair, one of the most expensive and exclusive parts of London. Every now and again someone suggests that BASC, rather than the KC, should take over running gundog trials and tests.