Blue skies Shepherds & Pomeranians

Blue skies Shepherds & Pomeranians our goal is too produce the very best German shepherds and Pomeranian's

I keep seeing people say that if a breeder asks for a deposit, it’s a scam.That’s not accurate and honestly, it shows a ...
04/03/2026

I keep seeing people say that if a breeder asks for a deposit, it’s a scam.
That’s not accurate and honestly, it shows a misunderstanding of how responsible programs operate.

A deposit isn’t just “sending money.”
It’s you saying: this is the puppy I’m committing to.

And on our end, it’s us saying: okay, we’re committing this puppy to you.

That means we stop advertising that puppy.
We stop taking other applications for that spot.
We turn away other families who were ready.

Now let me give a real scenario-

Let’s say a family places a deposit on a puppy. We mark that puppy as reserved, update our listings, and tell other interested homes that he’s no longer available.

A two weeks later, that family changes their mind.

In those two weeks, we could have placed that puppy with another ready, qualified home but we didn’t, because he was spoken for.

Now we’re starting over.

That’s exactly why deposits are non-refundable.

Not because we’re trying to make money off someone changing their mind
but because time, opportunity, and serious homes were already invested into that reservation.

Deposits aren’t a red flag.
They’re what keep things fair, organized, and intentional for both the breeder and the families on our waitlist.

Any ethical breeder should have this clearly explained and written out before you ever send anything.

If you’re unsure, ask questions. You should.

But calling deposits a scam across the board just isn’t accurate and it discredits breeders who are doing things the right way.

This isn’t like buying something you can put back on a shelf.

These are real puppies, real time, and real planning that goes into every placement.

If you’re not ready to commit
you’re not ready for a puppy.

02/10/2026

They are massively hungry

02/10/2026
02/04/2026

Again blue kids at 3 week's old

02/04/2026

Blue kids at 2-3 week's old

I refuse to become the kind of breeder who loses her heart in the process.I’ve seen it happen.People start out loving th...
12/07/2025

I refuse to become the kind of breeder who loses her heart in the process.

I’ve seen it happen.

People start out loving the dogs… and somewhere along the way, the love the income more.

The spark fades.
The calling turns into convenience.
The dogs become numbers.
The litters become paychecks.

And I promised myself a long time ago
that would never be me.

I refuse to be the kind of breeder who looks at a heat cycle and sees dollar signs instead of responsibility.

Who treats dogs like inventory instead of souls.

I refuse to chase trends, colors, patterns, viral looks at the cost of health, temperament, and stability.

Because these are not accessories.
These are living, breathing little hearts who will grow into someone’s family member.

And I refuse to forget the families waiting on the other side of these puppies.
The kids who’ve prayed for a dog.

The mama who needs companionship.
The couple starting their little life together.

I will never be the breeder who takes the payment, hands over the puppy and emotionally clocks out.

To me, placing a puppy isn’t a sale
it’s an extension of my heart walking out the door.

I refuse to breed for attention.
For likes.
For clout.
For bragging rights.
For the approval of the internet.

I refuse to be the breeder who stops learning.
Who gets comfortable.
Who stops asking questions because “I’ve been doing this long enough.”

The moment I stop growing is the moment I stop deserving these dogs.

Instead, I choose to be the breeder who still feels everything.

Who still gets butterflies every time a mama goes into labor.

Who panics a little at every quiet puppy.
Who sets alarms through the night “just to check one more time.”

Who celebrates every tiny milestone like it’s the first time I’ve ever seen it.

I choose to be the breeder who prays over her dogs,
before breeding, during pregnancy, during whelping, and long after the puppies leave.

I choose to carry the emotional weight of every life I help bring into this world.
The hard decisions.
The sleepless nights.
The fear.
The joy.
The heartbreak.
All of it.

When a puppy is born here, they take a piece of me with them.
And that doesn’t fade after eight weeks…
not ever.

I choose to be the breeder who would rather have one exceptional litter
than ten rushed, careless, poorly planned ones.

Because at the end of the day, anyone can put two dogs together.
Anyone can post pictures.
Anyone can sell puppies.

But not everyone is willing to carry the emotional, physical, and moral weight that comes with truly ethical breeding.

Not everyone is willing to say “no” when money is on the table.
Not everyone is willing to do things the right way when no one is looking.
Not everyone is willing to put their heart on the line again and again and again.

But I am.

As long as I am doing this,
this is the standard I will hold myself to.
Whether it’s easy or not.
Whether people understand or not.
Whether anyone ever sees the behind-the-scenes or not.

Because these dogs deserve it.
The families deserve it.
And my heart… could never live with anything less. 🤍

11/28/2025

People see the cute photos, the wagging tails, the joy of puppies but they rarely see the other side of breeding.

A Breeder is someone who sacrifices sleep, weekends, vacations, personal plans, and so much more. Tiny lives depend on us. There are nights spent sitting on a cold floor next to a whelping box, hands shaking with fear and hope, blowing life into a gasping newborn. There are thousands of dollars poured into doing things the right way, health testing, medical care, nutrition. Often with no guarantee there will ever be a financial return.

We are nurses, midwives, photographers, cleaners, geneticists, and counselors. We make decisions that keep us awake long after the sun comes up. We walk into heartbreak willingly, because we love them that much.

We endure rejection, criticism, jealousy, and loss… and still get up every single day ready to fight for the next one. Our shoulders may be heavy, our eyes tired, our hearts forever cracked, but they beat with hope, always. Because this isn’t just a “hobby.” It isn’t about money or producing puppies for fun.

It’s about life. It’s about improving the breed. It’s about finding families who will treasure them as we do. It’s about love... Pure, unconditional love.

When you’re a breeder, grief doesn’t get to come on its own schedule. It has to wait behind vet visits, puppy pickups, client messages, feeding schedules, and all the invisible responsibilities no one else sees.

We don't get to fall apart in the moment.
We have to smile, answer questions, hand over puppies we raised with exhausted hands and a shattered heart… all while holding back a tidal wave inside.

And that’s okay.
We allowed to melt down. We allowed to cry until our chest hurts.
We allowed to feel the full weight of what we lost.

This is what real breeders go through.
This is the part that no one applauds.
But this is also the part that proves just how deeply we love our animals.

If you know a passionate, responsible breeder… please remember: Behind every adorable puppy is someone who gives everything, even when no one sees it. 🖤🐾

11/07/2025

This litter girl will be our last Pomeranian litter until she is 2 year's old, Josette her mom had a massively difficult birth, so we decided for her health and safety to do an emergency c section and spay, I will NOT loose any of my dog's because of puppies, I am sorry that sound's harsh but it's reality, no puppy is worth my adult's and there safety, but Josette has healed nicely back to herself and her precious little girl is absolutely perfect even at the holy terror of being 5 weeks old, so our next Pomeranian litter won't be until 2027

11/06/2025

Registration papers ordered, they now have there collar's on, now to get everything started next week on puppy packets, so I'm not rushed when they are ready to leave

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