The Georgia Shih Tzu
Sheralyn Milton 678-546-0186
~ WELCOME ~ Recommendations & Referrals About the Shih Tzu Education:
~ Meet My Kennel
~ Join Toto's Harem
~ Historic Puppies
~ Meet the Breeder ~
~ Puppy Nursery
~ Rescue & Adoptions
~ The Dog Hotel ~
~ Other Shih Tzu Breeders
~ Veterinarians & Hospitals
~ My Favorite Pet Sites ~
~ A Bonny Breed
~ In The Beginning
~ The Shih Tzu Standard
~ Shih Tzu & Children
~ Wealth of Color
~ Concerning Health ~
On Buying & Owning
~ Simple Questions; Simple Answers
~ Understanding Gibberish
~ Choosing Male or Female
~ Buying a Best Friend ~
~ The Joy of Rescue
~ Surviving Puppyhood
~ Potty Training
~ Grooming: Don't Panic ~
On Breeding & Raising
~ Breeding Unriddled
~ Studding Your Stud
~ Whelping Help ~
~ Orphaned & Ignored Pups
~ Litter Care
~ Finding Homes
~ Healthy Breeding ~
On Health
~ Allergies
~ Second Hand Smoke
~ Stressed Out
~ Anger Management
~ Relief From Pests
~ The Parvo Virus
~ Home Remedies ~
More about the Breeder
Last Modified: 9/11/08
Present & Future
My kitchen renovations are coming along nicely, but slowly. I am looking forward to a visit from my parents who are excited about helping me come up with the best kitchen cabinets and lighting. Since they have built two successful bed and breakfast inns together I value their opinion greatly. With scholl in session I have more time on my hands, but I am also spengin more time at the school, helping in the media center and accompanying students to take AR tests. This year has been slow for puppies, but with two litters at once, I am back to busy. I still find plenty of time for reading and enjoy taking AR tests with my children as an incentive for them to read.
My dogs are doing very well. Toto was so busy for awhile that I had to stop allowing for stud services since he fainted after the last mating. Hermione has belssed me with puppies and I am loving that it has not changed her personality. I love Sweetie, but she seems to delight in frustrating me in everyway she can! You should see Hermione and Sweetie running around the house with leashes attached to their colars so that I can teach them to obey me. It is funny to see them freak out about dragging the leashes, but it sure does work.
My children are growing and changing as children do. My oldest is improving at a rapid rate, thanks to a wonderful set of teachers and the Touretts foundation. My second child still needs medical help for concentration, but her exceptionally high grades have made this difficult. Her teachers struggle with her and she constantly disrupts the classroom, but they still love her and want so much to see her happy. Because of her behavior we are surprised, but delighted at her grades. The effort is tiring and challenging, but my children show tremendous possibilty, I just have to find the means. My youngest is a breath of fresh air when it comes to school. She is at the top of her class and is a constant joy to her teacher, as the many notes state! I could not have asked for a better place for my children in their youth. I have more support then I could ask for and my children are loved and encouraged away from home as much as they are at home. I have been blessed.
My History
I am a native born Arizonan in my early 30s. I think some probably figure me to be older (for some reason!) and funnily enough I still consider myself in my early 20s. My husband laughs at me when someone asks how old I am and I have to stop myself from answering with the age I think I am, then I have to count to find my real age! I was born in the southern part of the Phoenix metro area and moved a few times around the state before I was married in 1996. I lived in the same home for 7 yrs. and had three children. Our first pet is Amy, a persian, and we bought her just weeks after our marriage. She is, and will be until the day she dies, my most understanding companion. Just before the birth of our first child my husband surprised me with a pet store bought Poodle/Lhasa Ahpso mix named Winnie the Pooh. He was a sweet puppy that cost us a small fortune, but did not live very happily with our life style. I was in my 2nd trimester and my husband was working nights so we had a very backwards schedule. Needless, to say I had trouble training Winnie and within four months we had to find him a new home. It took us a year to pay him off.
I stayed happy with our cat until I started to feel lonely again after the birth of my second child and a hard surgery. Throughout this site I mention a wonderful woman named Rachel of whom I have known since elementary school. I knew she had adopted two very young Shih Tzu puppies, King Wickett Rakar & Dolly Madison, and raised them herself. Admittedly, I was very jealous. About a year or so after she brought them home she brought home an adult, Leeoshough Davge or Leesy. She told me that this new dog was not getting along well with her two babies and she would have to find her a new home. She was also very reluctant as she had decided to breed and this adult was considered a wonderful breeding dog. I spoke up very quickly, as I really wanted a dog, and asked her if I could take her with the understanding that Rachel could still breed her. She then offered to teach me and we would co- own her.
Thanks to that very wonderful friend of mine I have found an art, a breed, and a life that I love with all my heart. When I realized how much I loved breeding and how happy the new owners were with these sweet little puppies I started thinking about the future. I had figured that I could probably handle 10 dogs at once. Well, it turns out that 8 is a more realistic number, at least until my children are older. I knew I did not want to have to hire help, which would take away the closeness I had with my kennel and the home quality I was hoping to maintain. I also do not like groomers, for my own reasons, and I can only keep so many dogs clean and happy as well as loved. So what to do when my dogs can no longer breed? This was very hard for me. Every time a dog required spaying/neutering I would need to buy a puppy to breed in their place. I could either stop breeding altogether when all my dogs retired and keep them until they die or I can find them new homes among those who have so much love to offer and cannot have a puppy and continue to do what I love. I know, through experience, that finding purebred, healthy and happy Shih Tzu adults is extremely difficult if not impossible in many areas. I grew up on a farm so I know how to make difficult decisions and I know that I can do more good and be able to continue doing what I love if I found new homes for my dogs when they cannot breed. The four retired dogs that I have placed have brought tremendous blessings to their new homes and I cannot help, but be grateful that I had been brave and strong enough to let my dogs go so that others can have the same joy and experiences as my dogs have given me. It is still hard, but I am not sorry.
That was in 2000. Gratefully, my husband was also very much in love with Missy (I did not want to keep calling her Leesy) and for his birthday the next year I brought home Bambi (Princess Bambette), also an adult. I was really excited to have two females that would supply at least one litter a year. Unfortunately, Missy was not as healthy as we had originally thought and Rachel and I realized in March of 2001, with the birth of her last litter, that Missy should no longer be bred and that I would have to find her a new home. It was very difficult for me, but I had already made my decision.
Missy's last litter was already sold when I resigned myself to losing her, but someone else's misfortune was my blessing. The family who had originally purchased the pick of her litter could no longer have a puppy and I found the way to ease my suffering. I named my new puppy Missy Belle Kissimee, after her mother. Two months later I brought home Belle's half sister Annie Molasses. It was obvious to me that this would be more than a hobby and that I would eventually pay a fortune in stud fees so I went in search for a stud dog. I was pregnant with my third child.
At this time, the AKC announced it's new law for certifying frequent sires with DNA testing. I was determined to stay true to the breed and started hunting for a male puppy with a DNA certified sire. It was not easy as DNA was a very new idea. I brought home my first male in June of 2001, and named him Toto Nostradamous. A word of caution to any ladies who breed currently or are planning to breed; never buy a dog when you are pregnant and impatient. I knew he was what is referred to as an Imperial Shih Tzu when I bought him and I brought him home at 12 weeks, weighing less than a pound. Imperials were a fairly new concept and no one had really had anything to say in their defense or against them. Two weeks later he was outside playing with my other dogs in the mud. As most puppies generally do when bathed, he struggled with me. I managed to keep him from getting water in his face and from hurting himself but as I was drying him he started to breathe funny and then went limp. A few minutes more and blood came out of his nose. I begged a neighbor to help me get to my vet, down the street. He was dead before we got there. I could not afford to have an autopsy, at the time, but the vet was pretty sure that one of his ribs had punctured a lung during his bath. I am sure many of you know how I felt at the time. I went back to the breeder, but without a contract I could not get my money back.
It only took a few weeks for my grieving to turn to anger and I set out to find a puppy whose parents fit the exact AKC standard.
In late October of 2001, I brought home Toto Happiness. I had really suffered over the first Toto but in my anger I wanted to prove something, I don't know what at the time, and so I kept the name Toto and changed the last name. Toto Happiness has turned out to be everything his name says he is and he is a treasure to have in my home.
Soon we started suffering under the massive layoffs of the many power houses that controlled the Arizonan economy in 2002, and 2003. By September of 2003, my husband had been out of work for three months and we realized it was time to move. We were blessed with a job offer in New Mexico and, two days after the offer was accepted, we were packed up and on our way. We lived in Farmington for one year and in that time I was, again, planning with Rachel. She had wanted a red female as much as I had wanted a black female. At the age of two, Annie was turning strawberry and in heat. I had the brilliant idea to find a red stud whom I could mate her to in the hopes of having a red litter and traveled back to Arizona to mate her with a red stud located in Phoenix. She had three puppies, two female and one male. Rachel fell in love with the little solid and named her Brown Sugar and, after the loss of Missy, I knew that one day I would have to say goodbye to Annie so I kept the other female, naming her Annie Autumn Melody after her mother. At the same time, another friend of mine had teamed up with Rachel to breed a black female for me. I brought home Hermione Brilliance in September 2004.
In July 2004, my husband learned that his company was being sold and we started to worry about finding ourselves out of work again. As great a place as Farmington is, it is not the greatest job market so my husband sent out resumes for any state that would allow him room to grow in the market and we moved to Walton County, Georgia in September 2004. Hopefully this will be our last state to state move. All my life I have dreamed of living in the east. I am always proud to be from Arizona but I am Georgian at heart.
Since the move, my dogs have adjusted well as have my children. Autumn and Hermione have grown and are sweet dogs though I have had to find a new home for Hermione. In, I think, July 2005, I learned that Hermione's sire had been siring puppies with a defect. The one who owned the sire had sold him shortly after the birth of Hermione because she felt she did not have the time and energy to care for all her dogs. A year later she was calling breeders to find a stud when she happened on the gentleman who had bought Hermione's sire. While talking he revealed to her that many of the litters, sired by this stud, had brought one puppy with a missing eye into the world and each litter coming from a different dam. She called me immediately, before Hermione went into heat, and I was faced with losing another beloved pet. It helped enormously that her new family loves her dearly and she has been a joy in their household. Autumn is still with me and has been a wonderful dog and loves every puppy that is born in this house. She seems to have more interest in playing with the puppies than any of my other dogs and to watch them play is a definite pleasure.
In July 2006, I purchased My Sweet Chamonix and in January 2007, I brought home Hermione Paddington. As with Toto, I could not part with a name that I love and so renamed my new baby since my other Hermione has been renamed by her new family. The beginning of 2007, found a new home for Annie. Her last litter was a near disaster and I realized that if this kept up I would be putting her health in danger. Not an option with me. Gratefully, I knew two years previously that I would not be able to breed Annie for long and I had Autumn to fall back on when I said goodbye to Annie. She has a wonderful home with a young woman who has a yorkie with a personality to suit Annie. The minute this woman walked in the door Annie loved her and I knew that I had found a good home for her.
Time, obviously, passes and though I have dealt with an over-amount of bad decisions and loss, I am not sorry to have gained the knowledge I am now blessed with. I plan to keep breeding as long as I am able and I am sure my kennel willl continue to change as each year fades and a new one replaces it. I have posted my history so that you have the chance to know what kind of person has the opinions I have spent many years developing and what would cause me to say "no" to some and "yes" to many others. I never presume myself to be perfect, nor do I ever expect to be. I have been called an expert in my field; to those I say "thank you for your compliment", but I also want you to know that knowledge has endless possibilities and I doubt that the next 20 years will be enough to learn everything I could ever need to know about my dogs, their breed and caring for them. Should I ever become so vain as to think I know everything and am always right, I hope someone will be around to slap me back into reality! For now, if you don't agree with me, I am pleased you have taken the time to create an informed opinion and I hope you strive to always follow your heart.
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*For questions or comments, please email me at The Georgia Shih Tzu