Dog Auctions

These are undercover videos of auctions.

These poor dogs are crowded in cages - scared- mostly for hours with no food or water. They are sold to the highest bidder.

Some for puppymills- some for research.

 

The lucky ones are bought by undercover rescuers .

MOST ARE NOT!!!

 

 

Below are videos of dog auctions & facts.

It is NOT pleasent!!!

This goes on all the time & it's LEGAL!!!!!!!!!!!!

This has to stop!!

 

 

And another

 

Attending a MO dog auction with the intent of rescuing dogs is not for the
faint at heart, and one should be prepared for what they will encounter.
The first thing you will likely notice is the horrible smell of dogs that
have been living in their own feces and urine. It’s an indescribable odor
and it’s always the same. If the auction is being held at the actual puppy
mill where the dogs have lived, you need to prepare yourself to be faced
with the realization that these dogs have lived in these conditions for
their entire lives, except for the really unfortunate few who had at one
time known human love and then found themselves in this cruel, horrible
reality after being offered in the paper or craigslist as “free to a good
home.” You will see cage after cage of dogs living on wire. Many will have
injuries from cages with sharp edges or flooring that has such large
openings their feet are falling through the wire. The dogs are filthy, many
with dried feces stuck to their hair. I’ve had to cut chunks of dried poop
from between the pads of their feet of some of the puppy mill dogs I’ve
rescued only to expose red, raw, sore skin. The long coated dogs are often
severely matted. Most have overgrown nails, sometimes even curled and
growing into the pads. They have splayed feet from standing on wire their
whole lives. Some dogs will have obvious eye infections, some will have
cherry eye. You will see older dogs that are pregnant, and their bodies are
just plain worn out. The females will have large nipples from nursing
litter after litter after litter. I’ve heard of vets saying that when they
spay these females that have been bred every heat cycle year after year,
their uterus will literally fall apart in their hands. Many will have
mammary tumors. All will have horrible dental disease due to poor quality
food combined with their bodies being robbed of the little nutrition the
food provides from carrying and nursing puppies. As far as their emotional
condition, you will see dogs that are pleading with you to get them out of
there and others who are totally shut down emotionally just staring off into
the distance. Some will come to the front of the cage and ask for your
attention with tails wagging, others will cower in the back of the cage as
if to say “please don’t hurt me!” You might also see semi trailers filled
with dogs that have been trucked from some other mill, often hundreds of
miles away, to be consigned at this auction.

Once the auction starts, you will be faced with a whole new world as far as
how dogs are viewed by those in the dog breeding business vs. those of us
who consider dogs to be members of the family. As they bring the dogs to
the auction block, often several dogs at once, the first thing you’ll notice
is how they hold them like they’re carrying a sack of potatoes. Sometimes
there will be children holding the dogs, and then you might see a little bit
of petting. When they place the dogs on the auction table, many of them
won’t be able to stand up because their muscles are so weak from having no
exercise, not to mention most have never stood on a solid surface before.
The handler will often jerk the dog around trying to get them to stand up.
They might hold them up high so everyone can see. Many of the dogs will be
shaking with fear from the noise of the auctioneer and just the unknown of
what’s happening to them. Occasionally you’ll see a wagging tail, which
just breaks your heart because the dog is finally getting human “attention”
and is trying to say “please just love me!” Perhaps the most disturbing
thing you’ll experience as the dogs are being auctioned off is the way the
auctioneer talks about them. For the males, it’s all about how aggressive
of a breeder they are. They’ll make comments like “This one really knows
how to get the job done!” For the females, it’s all about how many puppies
she usually has, whether or not she’s coming in or out of heat, if she’s
been “running” with a male (meaning she may be bred but it’s too soon to
know). The all time worst is when they bring a visibly pregnant dog to the
auction table, hold her up to show her belly and say something like “Look at
that belly full of money.” They often proceed to say how much each puppy
sells for so that the greedy puppy millers in the audience can calculate how
much money they’ll make off of this poor girl’s suffering.

As you’re observing all of this, you’ll want to cry, you’ll want to scream,
you’ll want to stand up and just shout “What is wrong with you people? How
can you possibly think this is okay?” but you have to try to contain
yourself or you will be thrown out of the auction. The auctioneers make it
clear at the beginning of the auction that “animal rights activists” are not
welcome! They will talk about how they need to fight the HSUS and their
agenda to end animal ownership. Of course they exaggerate and try to make
everyone think that if laws go into effect to protect breeding dogs that no
one will be able to even own a pet, and oh my, the farmers better look out
because they’re coming after them next! Proposition B passed last fall, but
unfortunately is being gutted by the new MO state legislature. That’s a
whole other topic.

When the auction is over, everyone goes to pay for their dogs and load them
up. Those of us in rescue are thrilled that we were able to save a few from
further cruelty, but that excitement is soon dashed as we watch breeder
after breeder loading up their dogs to head to yet another prison down the
road or even in another state as millers come from far away to buy their
“breeding stock.” It’s especially disturbing watching the Amish load up
dogs in their buggies pulled by emaciated horses who also suffer at their
greedy hands. And then there are those with open trailers to haul their
“stock” in. Oh so disturbing. You want nothing more than to grab the dogs
you’ve saved and get the hell out of there!

On the way home, your car is filled with puppy mill fumes. Sometimes it’s
so bad you have to put perfume or something on your nose to try to cover the
odor. You could care less, though, because you know you have precious cargo
that has just been freed from a life as a sex slave! Sex slave may seem
like a strong term, but truly that’s what the females are. When they are in
heat, they are raped over and over again, often by several different males.
I’ve rescued dogs that were in heat that were very matted and filthy with
dried blood all over their bottoms, from being mounted over and over again.
It just makes you want to cry. And you do! You cry for the years of
suffering these dogs have endured. You cry for all the ones that you
couldn’t save that are going back into a different form of hell. You hope
that some will go to a “better mill,” one that’s a little cleaner, with
bigger cages, better food, and clean water. You cry for the ones who may be
going to a worse form of hell, if that’s even possible.

When you get back home after a long day of being drained emotionally and
exhausted physically, it’s time to unload the dogs and give them some much
needed food and water. Many haven’t eaten all day, or who knows when
they’ve had their last meal! You set up exercise pens in the grass so these
little angels can feel the soft grass under their feet for the first time.
Then it’s time to clean crates and put fresh blankets in for their overnight
stay. It’s too late to do any bathing and grooming, so you save that for
tomorrow. Tomorrow will be a long day as well, but you’re energized when
you wake up and go see the dogs you’ve saved and start thinking about their
future as a beloved pet instead of a puppy making machine.

There’s nothing more satisfying than knowing that you prevented a dog from
continuing in the breeding system. You’ve freed them from further abuse.
They have been through so much. Not only have them been living in filth
with little or no human contact producing litter after litter, but then to
be auctioned off like livestock? There is no dog more deserving of rescue,
in my opinion. There is much disagreement in the rescue world about whether
rescues should be attending these auctions or not. I personally believe
rescuing dogs from dog auctions is the ultimate rescue.

author unknown……