it can vary from £100-£1000 depending on the breed. search-dogs for sale-in goole and see what turns up.
One can buy puppies that aren't from puppy mills from a number of places depending on where one lives. In the UK one can get them from the RSPCA or Pets4Homes.
Well it all depends. The older the cheaper. If the dog is older it won't live as long as a puppy would so it would definitely be more. I don't have an exact amount though.
kobe,lebron,zechariah,lucy,spikely,puppy,and aaron.
For example: In the training & selection of Police dogs in UK the German shepherd puppy will be lightly held with its back to the floor. The examiner is looking for the dog that resists this unnatural position aggressively. He needs an animal that will establish it's position with power. He does not need dogs which display passive submission, that accept being held down, however light the pressure.
£5
i think so
Yes a puppy can be shipped, but with a reliable pet shipping company.
The Stolen Puppy - 1904 was released on: UK: April 1904 USA: July 1904
Yeah, I bet Petz: My Puppy Family is the UK version of Petz Dogz Pack (US).
One can get travel insurance for a puppy in the UK by contacting E & L insurance. The pet must not be listed on their excluded breeds list and one must pay premiums before departure.
I looked on this site: http://www.goldenoaksnewfoundland.com/newfoundland_questions.html It tells you alot about them and it also says the average puppy will cost from about $800- $1500 as a puppy In the UK at the moment (30/05/09) the pedigree pups are between £1000-£1800. Anything cheaper should be looked ast with caution as it MAY (not definately) be a puppy farmer.
One can buy puppies that aren't from puppy mills from a number of places depending on where one lives. In the UK one can get them from the RSPCA or Pets4Homes.
This is a scam!! Just google "husky puppies Cameroon scam"
Look in the local newspaper advertisements, or on the web for breeders in your area.
In the UK, you can pay around £250.00 for a dog with no pedigree, and any thing up to £600.00 for a dog that has a pedigree and is KC registered.
2nd Answer: At 5 weeks, you can use a good name brand of dry puppy food and soften it first by letting it sit in some warm water. Then give to the puppy as a softened gruel. If you want to add some type of milk to it, use canned milk, mixed one part water to one part canned milk or use a regular puppy milk replacement such as Esbilac. Never use cow's milk as causes diarrhea. That is all that is needed to feed a 5 week old puppy. Offer food to the pup at least 4 times a day. The dry puppy food has more calories in it than canned puppy food. Just soften it up first and as the puppy gets older, then you can offer it just the dry puppy food, but be sure to use a good name brand, not some cheap grocery store puppy food. 1st Answer: you can feed your puppy tin puppy food , cooked chicken things that are soft to chew and puppy milk as well is needed with every meal , Don't feed them hard biscuits as their digestive system at this age can not handle it , sometimes it can lead to constipation and if they push to hard they can get a prolapsed bottom witch needs to be surgery fix if it comes out all the way around . so stick to easy to digest foods, if you are worried about your pup getting the right type of food just check their poo make sure its not to hard or too runny a in between is what you want to see. I have raised pups from two weeks old on a bottle then about four and half to five weeks soft food and puppy milk they did really well on this, when the puppy is about six and a half weeks old try giving the pup samples of raw meat like dog mince to try and other soft foods until about eight weeks old and then at that age you can give the puppy biscuits (only puppy biscuits) a little at first . hope this helps you with your little puppy. you should NOT be feeding dry food at five weeks they should still be drinking their mothers milk till about 9 weeks
James Wellbeloved is an excellent company that specialise in puppy nutrition. Other companies include Pets at Home, a national chain of pet stores that offer a wide range of foods, bedding and toys, as well as in-store experts.