National Make a Difference Day

Today, Oct 27th, is National Make A Difference Day. It’s the biggest day of giving nationwide, and below are ten suggestions of how you can volunteer a little of your time to help make a difference for breeding dogs suffering in puppy mills. Not everything can be done in one day, but today is a perfect day to set the plan in place!

  1. Educate yourself! Learn all you can about puppy mills so you can educate your family and friends. Information can be found here.
  2. Distribute anti-puppy mill flyers/posters around your town (at veterinary offices, pet supply stores, grocery stores, libraries, anyplace with a community bulletin board). We provide free downloads: Pet Store PuppiesTruth About Pet StoresWhat is a Puppy Mill. Purchase low-cost brochures, rack cards, and other awareness items from our online store.
  3. Join Harley’s Puppy Mill Action and Awareness Project … become one of Harley’s Heroes and be part of Harley’s dream to bring an end to puppy mills.
  4. Contact your lawmakers! Beginning at the most local level of government, you have the ability to spread the message about puppy mills, and raise awareness with those who have the power to create laws. Learn how to contact them here.
  5. SHARE on Social Media! Help spread the word about puppy mills by sharing and posting on social media. Be sure to follow Harley on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Pinterest and share the posts.
  6. Request meetings with your local, district and state lawmakers. Educate them about puppy mills. Explain that their help is needed to bring about change.
  7. Sit in on a town hall or city council meeting and bring up the puppy mill issue. Let your town officials know that you want to establish a puppy mill-free community – encourage them to create a law banning the retail sale of puppies and kittens in pet stores.
  8. If there is a pet shop that sell puppies in your town, ask them to consider offering rescue dogs instead. Information about how to do this is available from the Humane Society of the United States here.
  9. Order a banner and hang it on your fence to spread the message about puppy mills. Our 3 foot banner is available to download here.
  10. Make a donation to Harley’s Dream and help us spread awareness about, and bring an end to puppy mills. Please click here to donate.

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” -Margaret Mead

Puppy Mill awareness flyers
Puppy Mill awareness flyers

What is a Puppy Mill?

A puppy mill is a large scale commercial dog breeding operation where dogs live in cages and are bred repeatedly, producing puppies to be sold in pet stores across the country – and online throughout the world.  There may be as few as 100 breeding dogs or as many as 800 breeding dogs housed at a single facility. It is estimated there are approximately 10,000 puppy mills in the USA, the majority being located in the Midwest.  About one-third of these mills are approved and licensed by the USDA, as dogs are legally classified as ‘agriculture’.

Most of the dogs live in wire cages in buildings, barns and sheds which often have no heating or cooling. The dogs are not socialized, they receive little or no veterinary care, they do not have beds or toys, and they never get to run and play in the grass – some dogs never even see the sunlight – and though they yearn for it, they never receive love.

Puppy mill dogs drink from “rabbit-type” water bottles and cannot lap water normally to flush their mouths. This allows bacteria to remain, leading to severe dental issues; the most extreme (but not uncommon) is loss of jaw bone. Long-haired breeds are never groomed and become painfully matted, causing horrible infections. The floors of the cages in which they live are wire and the dogs’ nails are seldom cut, resulting in deformities and painful sores. Life in a cage produces a list of other physical conditions far too long to elaborate on: missing eyes, broken tails, spinal injuries, unrepaired broken bones, heartworm disease, ticks and parasites … to name just a few.

The female dogs are bred at every heat cycle and their puppies are usually taken from them too young. When a dog is no longer productive, typically at 5-7 years old, standard procedure is to destroy it.

5 comments

  1. This has to be the biggest and best cause to get on board and support. It’s the vision we all want to see become reality. No stray animals and no puppy mills, so thst the viscous cycle is broken once end for all.

  2. This is a wonderful cause to support. Until laws are passed to outlaw all these organizations they will still exist and the poor animals will keep on suffering. Keep pressing our legislators to do something about these horrible places, it’s all done for money and greed, those people are pure evil with no heart!

  3. these are some great ideas – shared post on fb twitter and pinterest

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