Dalin Kennels

Dalin Kennels A full service boarding and training facility for all pointing breeds. Dale trained Linda’s Pretty Heidi behind subdivisions in Hermitage, Tennessee.

Dale and Linda acquired their first German Shorthair as a Christmas present and personal hunting dog in December of 1994. She was such a good birddog that after her second season, they decided she was worthy of producing off-spring. While searching for a suitable mate, they met Brenda Roe and Snip’s Ticked Off (Rip). The results of the breeding were outstanding and produced both field and show cha

mpions. They entered the competitive arena with one of those off-spring, Heidi’s Olympiad Greta, in 1997. Greta retired due to health issues as a 3XNSTRA Champion with 69 points. In 2002 Linda began entering NSTRA field trials with another dog from that same litter and finished in first place at her first trial. She competed at the local, regional, and national levels with her dog Heidi’s Here-N-There (Droopy). Droopy retired from competition with 17 points. In 2005, Dale retired from his remodeling business and Linda retired from teaching. They moved to Wheeler, Texas and established Dalin Kennels for breeding, training, and boarding birddogs. They also provided accommodations and guide services for quail, turkey, deer, and wild hog hunts. In 2013 Dale and Linda moved their kennel to Shannon, Mississippi in order to be closer to family. Dalin Kennels continues to provide training and boarding. To book training or boarding contact:
Dale or Linda Garner
Dalin Kennels
134 Drive 32
Shannon, MS 38868
662-767-8851
Email: [email protected]

Please stop producing SHETER DOGS
12/26/2025

Please stop producing SHETER DOGS

Let’s get one thing straight:
We NEED ethical dog breeders.
Not backyard breeders.
Not puppy mills.
Not “oops litters.”
Ethical. Responsible. Passionate. Breeders.

Because the truth is this:

Good breeders don’t just produce puppies — they protect entire breeds.
They’re the reason we still have healthy working dogs, therapy dogs, sport dogs, and family companions with predictable temperaments and solid genetics.

Good breeders raise puppies like they’re staying forever.
Socialization, early exposure, enrichment, confidence-building…
None of that is “extra.” It’s STANDARD.

Good breeders take dogs back, every time.
For life.
No questions. No judgment.
Because their puppies NEVER end up in shelters, ever.

Good breeders breed for preservation, for improvement, and for LOVE.

And here’s the part people don’t want to admit:
Without ethical breeders, we’d lose the breeds we depend on and adore.
Service dog lines.
Duty-driven working breeds.
Family-safe temperaments.
Sound structure.
Predictability.
Purpose.
History.

Shelters are full because of irresponsible breeding —
not ethical breeding.

So next time someone says,
“Just adopt,”
remind them:
You can support shelters
AND still value ethical breeders.

Both matter.
Both play crucial roles.
Both are needed.
Because the breeders doing it right?
They’re the ones keeping dogs healthy, stable, and loved for generations to come.

- copied from unknown author-








12/25/2025

Linda and I would like to say to our friends and family MERRY CHRISTMAS!

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Know GOD'S word is to be lived.
12/24/2025

Know GOD'S word is to be lived.

True test
12/19/2025

True test

People say it all the time:

“I promise, they’ll have a good home.”
But what that means to me, as a breeder, goes so far beyond what most people think.

A “good home” isn’t just a nice house.
It isn’t square footage or a fenced yard or matching dog bowls.

It’s a feeling.
A standard.
A commitment.
A heart-space where a dog is truly seen, deeply loved, and intentionally cared for.

A good home is someone who understands this isn’t “just a dog.”
This is a piece of my heart.
A life I stayed up with at 2 AM.
A life I prayed over when they were the size of a lemon.
A life whose first breath I celebrated… and whose first latch I protected.

A good home is someone who shows up for that dog, not just the cute moments.

Someone who:
• rearranges their schedule without complaining.
• gets on the floor and comforts them through fear stages.
• trims nails even when the dog wiggles.
• shows patience through the puppy chaos.
• doesn’t quit when it gets inconvenient.

A good home is someone who asks questions, not someone who pretends they already know.

Someone who chooses growth.
Consistency over shortcuts.
Love over frustration.

A good home is someone who sends updates not because they HAVE to, but because they WANT to.

Those messages mean more to me than people realize.
When I see your puppy smiling in your arms.
When I see them with your kids.
When I see them sleeping in their new bed.

My heart exhales.

Because that’s when I know they’re safe.
That’s when I know I made the right choice.

A good home is someone who honors the contract not because it’s a rule, but because it protects the dog.

Someone who understands:
“If life ever falls apart, this puppy comes back to me.”

Not Craigslist.
Not a shelter.
Not a stranger.
Me.

A good home is someone who remembers that behind every puppy is a breeder who cared so deeply it hurt sometimes.

Who cried over the weak ones.
Who weighed them through the night.
Who kept mama comfortable.
Who didn’t travel because babies needed her.
Who poured time, money, emotion, prayer, and intention into every moment of their beginning.

A good home values that.
Respects that.
And cherishes the puppy because of it.

A good home isn’t perfect.
It’s present.
It’s committed.
It’s willing.
It’s loving.

A good home is someone who looks at this dog and thinks:
“You’re not here to make my life cuter, you’re here to be part of my family.”

That’s what I look for.
That’s what matters to me.
Not perfection.
Not aesthetics.
Not status.

But heart.
Real, patient, everyday love.

Because when I send a puppy home, I’m not “selling a dog.”
I’m trusting a stranger with a life I’ve carried in my hands.
A life I’ve already loved deeply.

And a good home is the kind of home where that love continues for the whole lifetime of the dog.

🤍

I pray GOD and common sense will aid in changing current practices.
12/16/2025

I pray GOD and common sense will aid in changing current practices.

Let’s get one thing straight:
We NEED ethical dog breeders.
Not backyard breeders.
Not puppy mills.
Not “oops litters.”
Ethical. Responsible. Passionate. Breeders.

Because the truth is this:

Good breeders don’t just produce puppies — they protect entire breeds.
They’re the reason we still have healthy working dogs, therapy dogs, sport dogs, and family companions with predictable temperaments and solid genetics.

Good breeders raise puppies like they’re staying forever.
Socialization, early exposure, enrichment, confidence-building…
None of that is “extra.” It’s STANDARD.

Good breeders take dogs back, every time.
For life.
No questions. No judgment.
Because their puppies NEVER end up in shelters, ever.

Good breeders breed for preservation, for improvement, and for LOVE.

And here’s the part people don’t want to admit:
Without ethical breeders, we’d lose the breeds we depend on and adore.
Service dog lines.
Duty-driven working breeds.
Family-safe temperaments.
Sound structure.
Predictability.
Purpose.
History.

Shelters are full because of irresponsible breeding —
not ethical breeding.

So next time someone says,
“Just adopt,”
remind them:
You can support shelters
AND still value ethical breeders.

Both matter.
Both play crucial roles.
Both are needed.
Because the breeders doing it right?
They’re the ones keeping dogs healthy, stable, and loved for generations to come.

- copied from unknown author-

The end of a generation that should scare us all.
11/26/2025

The end of a generation that should scare us all.

My name is Jack Miller, and on Saturday at ten o’clock I’ll be standing in my own driveway watching my life get sold by the piece.

They call it an estate sale, but it feels more like a yard sale for a dead man who just hasn’t had the decency to lie down yet.

I’m seventy-four. My boots are cracked, my flannel is soft from a thousand washings, and the Nebraska wind still smells the same as it did when I was six years old riding on my daddy’s shoulders to check the cows.

This ground has had a Miller on it since 1924. My granddad turned the first sod with a team of mules. My dad kept it alive through the eighties when the bank tried to eat us. I thought I’d be the last one to leave it, but I figured I’d leave feet first in a pine box, not watching strangers load my combine onto a lowboy trailer headed for Kansas.

The sign at the road doesn’t say Miller Farm anymore. It says ABSOLUTE AUCTION – NO RESERVES – EVERYTHING GOES.

All week people have been poking around like crows in a cornfield. A woman in yoga pants held up Grandma’s butter churn and asked if it was “real” or “just for looks.” A guy with a man-bun tried to talk me down on the price of my hay rake because he only wanted the wheels to make a chandelier.

Yesterday a young couple stopped at the old wooden gate my dad built the year I was born. The paint’s mostly gone, but you can still read MILLER in faded green letters.

“Oh my gosh,” the wife said, snapping pictures. “This is perfect for our entryway. So rustic.”

Rustic.
That gate held back stampeding cattle the night lightning hit the barn. It’s got hoof marks and blood stains and a patch from the time I backed the pickup into it at sixteen. But sure, honey, hang it over your subway tile and call it rustic.

I stood there with my coffee getting cold and didn’t say a word.

It wasn’t one big thing that killed this place. It was a million little cuts.

The elevator started paying thirty cents less a bushel because “the world market.”
The seed corn went up forty dollars a bag because “research and development.”
The fertilizer plant shut down, so now it comes from Morocco and costs twice what it did in 2010.
The grocery store sells sweet corn flown in from Peru cheaper than I can grow it thirty miles away.

Two years ago I had the prettiest stand of corn you ever saw. Ears filled clear to the tip. I ran the numbers and it would cost me more to harvest it than I’d get paid. So I fired up the shredder and turned a hundred and sixty acres of gold back into dirt. Sat in the tractor cab and cried like a baby while the stalks fell.

My granddaughter Lily is sixteen. She helped me sticker everything with lot numbers last week. She stopped at the old John Deere and ran her hand across the seat worn smooth from three generations of Miller backsides.

“Why sell it, Papaw?”

“Nobody needs what it does anymore, darlin’. It’s made for growing food. The world don’t want food grown this way now. It wants food grown cheaper, farther away, by somebody else.”

She didn’t get it. How could she? She’s never seen a grocery store shelf empty. She thinks food just appears.

That’s the joke, really. Shelves are full, but the people who filled them are disappearing.

Saturday they’ll sell the tractor, the tools, the gate, the butter churn. They’ll sell the kitchen table where my wife and I paid bills and held hands and raised two kids. Some of it will end up in landfills. Some will end up as “farmhouse décor” in houses that have never smelled silage or heard a rooster.

I don’t hate the buyers. They’re just folks wanting a piece of something solid. I hate that the only piece they can still afford is the memory of it.

When the last item is gone and the auctioneer says “Sold,” I’ll still be standing here. The barn will be empty. The fields will already belong to an investment group in Omaha that’s never felt this soil between their fingers.

But the wind will still blow. The red-winged blackbirds will still call from the cattails. And somewhere under all this black dirt, my granddad’s sweat and my dad’s blood and my own broken heart will still be feeding next year’s crop—only it won’t be mine anymore.

If you ever bite into an apple and it tastes like sunshine, or pour milk on your kid’s cereal without a second thought, just remember: somebody loved you enough to get up before dawn for fifty years so you wouldn’t have to.

Most of us are almost gone now.

When the last small farm disappears, don’t be surprised if the food gets a little less sweet.

Because love was the secret ingredient, and nobody’s figured out how to import that yet.

They are only babies Give them a chance
11/19/2025

They are only babies Give them a chance

07/21/2023

dale garner face bppk

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LIFE
06/09/2023

LIFE

01/23/2023

sleep well...

Address

134 Drive 32
Shannon, MS
38868

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 8am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 8am - 5:30am
Thursday 8am - 5:30pm
Friday 8am - 5:30pm
Saturday 8am - 5:30am
Sunday 12:30pm - 5pm

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