How much would you pay for a dog?

The most I have paid was $800 for a very well bred, show quality dog from a very well known breeder. I think you need to just take a road trip somewhere outside of Massachusetts. My in-laws live there and I have always been just amazed at the price of dogs up there. The local shelter here has a special reduced adoption fee of $25 until the 23rd - includes spay/neuter and vaccinations.
 
When rescues charge that much you really gotta think what are they doing? Trying to find homes for dogs or hoarding them themselves?

Anyways...I would spend a grand or more for a good pointer! It had better be ready to hunt and know commands though! I bought a well bred lab...supposed to have been from pointing lines...he was an idiot! A fun idiot and my buddy for many years...but an idiot!
 
I would suggest, based on our experience, that you plan to get a puppy rather than an adult dog given the ages of your children. This might sound a little counterintuitive, but let me explain why. When our beloved smooth collie died suddenly, we waited a couple of years before getting another dog because our 2 kids were so little. Then we had another baby. When he was 18 mos. old we decided to get another dog, and since I had my hands full with 3 kids under age 5 I thought, "Let's get a young adult dog instead of a puppy so I don't have to deal with housebreaking and training!" Sounds good, right? Well, we found a wonderfully responsible collie breeder who listened carefully to our requirements, and had a gorgeous, sweet 1 1/2 year old female who didn't care for the show ring, liked kids, and needed a new home. I met the dog with my 5 year old first, and came again for a visit with my whole chaotic family while the breeder and I both watched like a hawk to see how she did with the littlest kids. She was fine, sweet and patient and tail-wagging. The third time we went to see her we brought her home. After a few days I began to wonder if the noise and chaos level of a house with so many little kids was starting to stress her out since she'd come from a quiet household with only occasional grandchild visits, but she never did anything wrong so I figured she was just adjusting to her new home. After two weeks, she was lying in the living room and my toddler walked up to her with his hand out to pet her. (Bear in mind that she had NEVER been left unattended with the kids and I know for a fact none of them had ever touched her in any way other than to gently pet her.) Then, suddenly, in front of both DH and me, she whirled around and snapped right in his face. She was giving him a warning, but if she had actually bitten we would've been looking at plastic surgery for my son for sure. It was horrifying moment. I called the breeder right away and she was equally horrified, shocked, and profoundly apologetic. The dog went back to the breeder that evening, and all of us cried because we'd loved her so much. I thought we did all the "right" things, but the fact is she did not grow up in a noisy, busy, kid-chaotic household, and while she was fine with bigger kids, somehow she saw the toddler as a threat. Now we have another toddler, and I plan to definitely get a puppy next time so it will be raised in the midst of the craziness and see it as normal rather than finding it as stressful as she did.

Sorry for the long post, just thought it might be useful. And no, I can't imagine paying that much for a mutt! I paid $400 for the adult collie, and plan to pay $500 for an Old Farm Collie pup in the next year or so.
 
When you say puppy- do you mean 8 week old puppy, or less than a year?
I've seen a couple of 6-7 month old labs on the lab rescue website. I'm sure there will be plenty of nice puppies available in the spring...
 
I just want to say, I have had free dogs in my life and I have paid as much as $1500 for a dog. I have loved them all. I understand some people wouldn't pay for a dog and that is fine. I personally wouldn't pay for a lot of things, because they simply are not that important to me, but I am a huge dog lover and they are important to me. That is not to say that those who only have free dogs don't love their dogs, please don't misunderstand or misconstrue my meaning. I appreciate dogs, I am passionate about them, they are my THING! I can look at a well put together dog of any breed and tell it can from a great line, even if I know nothing about that particular breed or dog. To me it is almost like art. Would I pay $100,000 for a fancy car, or a lot of money for fancy art, etc, no, because those things mean nothing to me. But I would pay even more than $1500 for a dog, if I had it, and I found the right dog, because it is important to me. That is what matters. I like to know my dog and his parents, grandparents, etc have had their hips, elbows, exrayed and OFA certified, hearts and eyes cerf'd, etc.

So, it is all relevant. Personally, I would never pay anywhere near what this person is asking for her mutt puppies. If I wanted something similar, I would buy a real labradoodle from Australia where they have been breeding them true for generations and have it shipped here. They breed true, come in a variety of colors and in all sizes that a poodle comes in. They don't shed, unlike their mutt cousins in the U.S. who are just two breeds crossed together. The real labradoodle was developed to be a non shedding guide dog.
 
We paid $35 each a few months ago for a couple of beautiful Australian Cattle Dog puppies (Blue Heelers.) We had looked at some other blue heeler puppies a couple weeks before, and they wanted $65 each and their conformation was not good, their parents were sloppy looking, etc. We passed on the $65 ones and then the $35 ones came up with someone else, a farmer who has been using the heelers on his farm for years, and breeding the best ones only. No registration or anything, but some of the most beautiful and well-behaved dogs you'll ever see. He has bred for over 20 years only the ones who don't bite or snap, as most heelers nip at heels as part of their makeup. These are way better than the $1200 ones we found online, registered and all, that didn't look anywhere near as good.

We got ours when they were just weaned. They're half-brothers, and they're beautiful, loving, and well-behaved, as well as extremely intelligent and easily trained. They have the perfect cattle dog form, too, which we were looking for. I had a blue heeler when I was a kid, and he was the best dog ever! Never ever went after any of us kids or our cows, but when the neighbor's doberman came up and started chasing our cows and us kids, he went after that doberman and literally ripped half it's jaw away. The doberman was more than twice his size! Then back to being a gentleman when the mean dog ran away. Very impressive dog, and that's why we wanted blue heelers now, but we also wanted to make sure they were excellent dogs from good lines, not poorly bred. We ended up with two amazing dogs!

I can't believe the shelters are charging so much for their rescues. I know it costs them to take care of them, but they end up euthanizing so many because no one can afford them. Having all kinds of requirements for people who get a dog there is also ridiculous. I understand they don't want the dogs going to a bad situation, and there's the silly to me argument that if the new owners can't afford $400 for a dog they can't afford a dog, but honestly, there are all kinds of wonderful loving homes for dogs with people who can't afford to pay that much for a dog but will feed it well, love it, and take it to the vet when it needs it. I know an actual vet who had his adopted dog from the shelter taken back by the shelter because he was housing it in his horse barn in a stall, rather than giving it its own room in the house! It had acres and acres to run around on, the best care, a cushy high end stall as its home, and it wasn't good enough. I think some of these shelters have got off-track in their desire to help animals. More humane to kill it than to let it go to a loving family cheaply?

Anyway, yeah, I don't think I'd pay more than about $50 for a dog, and that only if it was one I really really wanted. There are tons of good dogs being given away on craigslist and other places right now because people can't afford to feed them or they've lost their homes to foreclosure and are having to move into apartments or back in with family who can't or won't allow the dog. Keep looking and you'll find that perfect dog for you with the perfect price.
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Check craigslist for all the surrounding areas within reasonable driving distance. Check both the pets section and the farm section. We found our dogs in the farm section, since they're purely working farm dogs.
 
I'm planning to get a young puppy, 8-12 weeks old, to maximize the socialization period with my littlest kids. The breeder I'm planning to buy from also happens to have a big family and small children herself, but that might not always be possible to find.
 
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We paid $600 for my our beloved Sugerboo she was a Bishan Poodle , (R.I.P)
$25.OO for our beloved Shanee she was a Cockerspailnel poodle (R.I.P) Hubby knew the owner.
and we got our beloved Lala for free (R.I.P) She was a pomaranian terrier

And now we paid $288 for a Chug.
and $288. for a pure bred Yorkie.
 
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The best dog I ever had I brought back from Spain, a Dobie that cost upwards of $2000. Every dog in his family tree going back 5 generations had working titles. Frankly, I felt like I stole him for that price. He was, to me, priceless. I still miss him and I often dream about him even after all these years.

Some dogs are only worth $50. But maybe once in a lifetime--if you are REALLY lucky--you get to have one that is truly priceless.


Rusty
 
There are a couple ads in today's paper: One can get a purebred Rottie for $300, or a nonsense+Pekaneese for $500!
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Go figure! The most expensive dog (and the only one we ever paid for outright) was $50 for a GP. The other 5 were "free" rescues. Well, not really - I paid $20 for a sad, bloated Aussie cross from a transient - She needed a $1200 hip surgery at 4 mos old! Again,
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