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  • Report:  #1086257

Complaint Review: Candy Coated Doxie

Candy Coated Doxie Breeder selling Mixed Breed dogs as Registered Pedigree Mi-ki's Mooresville Missouri

  • Reported By:
    Nettie — Plano Texas
  • Submitted:
    Sat, September 21, 2013
  • Updated:
    Fri, September 27, 2013
  • Candy Coated Doxie
    5584 LIV 416
    Mooresville, Missouri
    USA
  • Phone:
    660-738-4424
  • Category:

I purchased a 2nd puppy from this breeder in April 2013. The puppy I received did not appear to look like any Mi-KI puppy I came across during my research of the breed and certainly did not look like the first puppy I purchased from this same breeder in January 2013. The breeder claims the 2nd puppy is a registered Mi-Ki pedigree puppy because she has it registered through three different registries not associated to AMRA or IMR. Since I seriously had doubts that the 2nd puppy I purchased could actually could have Mi-Ki ancestry in the bloodline, I had it DNA tested. The DNA results confirmed that the breeder cross bred a full blooded Yorshire Terrier with a Mixed Breed that had no genes or ancestry of Mi-Ki bloodlines that include Maltese, Japanese Chin and Papillon. The mixed breed ancestry including other Yorkshire Terrie and Dachsund genes present. This is quite concerning since this breeder also advertises and sells registered Yorkshire Terriers and Dachsunds. I notified the Candy Coated Doxie breeder immediately of the testing confirmation results and requested a full refund since I did not receive the advertised pedigree puppy of Mi-Ki heritage that I paid for. The breeder refuses to refund the money claiming that the scientific based study is inaccurate because her proof is that the dogs she used to produce the litter are registered Mi-Ki's. Because of the findings of the 2nd puppy's pedigree I had the first puppy I purchased DNA tested as well. The DNA results for that puppy show that the breeder cross bred a full blooded Miniature Poodle with a Mixed Breed (s**+ Tzu/Lhasa Apso mix) that once again did not include any genes or ancestry of the Maltese, Japanese Chin and Papillon pedigrees. Of course the breeder claims that the parents for my first puppy are all registered Mi-ki's and that she purchased them from another breeder as in the 2nd puppies case. How could this breeder not recognize that a Yorkshire Terrier (full blooded) and a Miniature Poodle (full blooded) do not look like Mi-Ki's before breeding the animals especially since she breeds YorkshireTerriers and sells them. I questioned the look of the mixed breed puppy I received immediately. Beware of this dishonest breeder and her desire to sell anything she can for financial gain.

2 Updates & Rebuttals


repairdiva

Plano,
Texas,

Always Read before Responding

#3Author of original report

Fri, September 27, 2013

Perhaps you read my post half hazardly. I had my puppies DNA tested against the Mi-Ki pedigree registries. There is no common ancestry of any kind to the Mi-Ki pedigree in either of my puppies. They just are mixed breed puppies with NO ANCESTRY to the MI-KI pedogree. The breeder just mated together whatever dogs she had available to produce puppies so she can post and sell as pedigreed pups to keep money rolling in. If DNA testing is for entertainment purposes why would you even suggest US Davis? Here I thought DNA testing was a scientific method in determining parentage and heredity and I am suprised to learn that it is nothing more than something to keep the public entertained. Another waste of my money and another scammer trying to pull a fast one on gullable people as myself.

 


TheOpinionatedGSD

Manteca,
California,

DNA tests unreliable

#3Consumer Comment

Thu, September 26, 2013

Those DNA tests that look for markers to similar breeds are not reliable, they are for entertainment purposes only. One must remember all dogs have common ancestors.. that doesn't make your dog a mix breed. 

If you want to really know, demand that both parents be DNA'ed and compare that to your dog's dna.. Usually breed registry’s have DNA databases. You can also go through UC Davis California. 

Maybe your new dog just isn't as nicely bred as your first one. 

 

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