How can anyone take care of 1,100 dogs at one facility plus breed and sell 3,000 puppies per year? The stench must be amazing. The dogs probably never have had human hands on them, must be over bred and in very poor condition. A bag of decent dog food costs about $30 to $50 per 40 lb bag, how could the kennel afford to feed the dogs properly, give proper vet care or anything else. And to be honest, I think it is VERY wrong for the humane society to buy out his breeding program, they should have just come in and closed him down!!! They are just perpetuating the reason why puppy mills survive. For the money.
If people would not buy from pet stores, plus not buy from breedres on line who do not have web sites, or if they do, show that they breed more than perhaps two breeds, then perhaps the world would get a grip on this puppy mill horror.
I breed only one breed and have done so for over 30 years. I have anywhere from 8 to 10 breeding dogs at a time, and they are only 20 to 30 lb dogs, but still they cost me over $150 to $200 per month to feed. There there are the shots, proper socializing of the puppies, the exercise that the puppies need, the love etc. I only have about 3 litters a year and I consider it a lot of work. My females are not bred till they are 2 and only every other season, if that, and only till they are about 7 or 8 years old. I also take back any dog that an owner can no longer keep.(it is in my contract with the buyer) I do not get many back, but I have had them returned as old as 8 years old. And yes, I have found new homes for them.
As for designer dogs, it is just another way for puppy mills, either large or small, to make money on the backs of animals. There is no way that you can know what you are getting in a designer dog. Those that are bred to poodles, one hopes that the dog they get will be a non shedding, non allergetic dog. But too often that is not the case and the poor puppy ends up in the humane society.
It takes many, many gerations of breeding to produce a dog that will consistantly be the same with the same characteristics of all the others of that breed. My breed, the Tibetan Terrier is over 2000 years old. It takes years and years for AKC to accept a new breed, for instance, the Jack Russel. For years that breed was very inconsistant in the way it looked. Some had very short legs, some had long legs. Until they were able to get a consistant look and temperment to them, they could not be registered with AKC.
It was over 35 years ago that breeders first started the concept of designer dogs with the cockerpoo. I heard way back then that it would take no time at all to make it a breed that AKC would accept. Well, to this day, they do not accept the breed. Why? Because it is still too inconsistant. Some have coats and personlaities like poodles, some like cockers. How is one to know what they are getting when they purchase one?
We have enough breeds today that have a hard time finding homes without trying to create new ones.