The Manitoba Ferret Association & No Kill Shelter - Breeder Code of Ethics
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Breeder Code of Ethics



A pet store is NOT the place to buy a ferret if you can help it.

This list has been put together to help you in your search for your new companion. It has been adapted from an article on responsible dog breeders, but lets face it - responsible breeders, regardless of the type of animal they are breeding, should all be following the same guidelines.

Contact the MFA plus any local ferret clubs and ask for their roster of breeders that belong to their clubs.

Learn all you can about ferrets before you look to buy one. Read the standard, find out about grooming requirements, typical health problems, type of temperaments that are common, etc. Irresponsible breeders hate educated buyers!

Older Ferrets make Great Pets! Look into your local shelter!



Animals have done us no harm and they have no power of resistance.… There is something so very dreadful… in tormenting those who have never harmed us, who cannot defend themselves, who are utterly in our power. - Cardinal John Henry Newman



Responsible breeders DO:

Belong to their regional, state or local club as well as the national organization.
Are familiar with the "Code of Ethics" of their organization.
Breed in order to improve the breed and produce the best ferrets they possibly can, and usually plan to keep at least one of them.
Ask as many questions of you as you do of them.
Show at least two or three years of serious interest in their breed, i.e. ferret club memberships, show ribbons and Championship titles.
Breed only ferrets that closely match the breed standard and are free of serious health and temperament problems.
Tell you if they think you would be better off with another type of companion or no companion at all.
Provide referrals to other breeders if they don't have anything available.
Use a written contract and guarantee when selling a ferret with clear terms you can live with.
Provide a registration slip, a pedigree, and up-to-date shot/health records with every ferret they sell.
Honestly discuss any special problems, requirements associated with the ferret you are about to buy.
Offers FREE assistance and advice for the life of the ferret.
If, for any reason and at any time, you cannot keep the ferret, will take it back.
Normally limit breeding to only one litter per jill per year.
Have ferrets that are clean, healthy, happy and humanely cared for.


Responsible breeders DO NOT:

Appear overly eager to sell or "get rid of" a kit.
Breed simply to produce kits to sell.
Breed every jill they have, every time she is in season.
Claim that all of their kits are "show/breeding quality".
Claim that they have NEVER had any problems.
Sell kits that are less than eight to ten weeks old.
Sell kits without papers (pedigree, registration slip, health information) or charge extra for the papers.



What is man without the beasts? If all the beasts were gone, men would die from loneliness of spirit. For whatever happens to the beasts happens to man. All things are connected. - Chief Seattle




Phrases to be cautious of in breeder's ads:

"Rare" - This is often because the breeder is using the wrong term for a common trait (i.e. "miniature" for small size) or, the ferrets in question have a trait that no responsible breeder would deliberately produce, either because it is not allowed or is considered a serious fault in the breed standard, and/or is associated with health problems in the breed (e.g. roman nose or an extremely short muzzle). It could in fact mean that the color or trait is not widely recognized, or seen. It does almost always mean that the breeder expects you to pay megabucks for the privilege of owning one.
"Champion kits" - Ferrets cannot be shown until they are four months old. Ferret shows are not that numerous. It takes a long time to become a champion. Maybe the breeder means that the parents are champions. Maybe it means you'd better understand exactly what the breeder is saying before you plunk down any money.
"Show quality" - What does the breeder mean by this? Expected to finish a championship fairly easily? No disqualifying faults? Has "perfect markings and is really cute"? Make sure you understand exactly what this means before you buy. By the way, unless you are serious about breeding and showing there is absolutely nothing wrong with a ferret that is "pet quality".
"Registered" - There are several registries which will register ferrets for a fee. Registration alone is no guarantee of a ferret's quality, or of a breeder's integrity. There is only one registry which has breeders who are willing to sign and live by a "Breeder Code of Ethics".



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