Mandala Dogs
Mandala Dogs is a modern companion dog program, centered on exceptional health, temperament & support
07/07/2026
The Juniors opened their eyes!!
This litter was bred for breeding partners within the project, and aren't available, but we had to share the cuteness!
07/05/2026
We are so in love!
07/05/2026
The dual-sired Stuffed with Love litter is here!
Please welcome:
Manicotti: masked sable boy
Samosa: sable merle boy
Empanada: tan point black merle boy
Ravioli: white marked merle boy
Bizmark: black (white chin) boy
Pierogi: yellow boy
Dumpling: yellow boy
Stromboli: yellow boy
Totino: black boy (white toes)
PopTart: yellow girl
Rangoon: yellow boy
Marcie welcomed ELEVEN puppies for her retirement litter. The five yellow puppies and the tan point merle are definitely Rustle's, the two sable puppies are definitely Skippyjon's, and the merle with white spotting likely is a well. DNA shall reveal the father of the two black puppies.
Rustle pups will be about 40% spaniel (cocker, Cavalier) and 25% labrador, making them more than half of that gun dog temperament that we love. The remainder is made up of mini, toy, and standard poodle, on both sides of the pedigree.
Skippyjon puppies will be roughly 25% Italian greyhound, 25% sheltie, 25% labrador, 25% moyen poodle.
We will DEFINITELY HAVE PUPPIES AVAILABLE, because holy cow, eleven. There will likely be long hair, shorthair, wire hair, and furnished (doodle coat) in this litter. Rusty and Marcie both carry low shedding genes, but that isn't a guarantee- these coats are not considered hypoallergenic.
If you're interested in a spot, or would like to review parents health testing, you can view details and apply through the Companion Dog Project. https://app.companiondogproject.org/litter-detail.html?id=18b6bfc1-99fe-4a51-b13b-e5e7df33823b
These are half siblings to the Tea Time litter and/or the Muppet litter, depending on their dad, and, of course, all are half siblings to Marcie's Buns and Marsupials.
Stuffed with Love Summer 2026 — Companion Dog Registry Mandala Spaniel · Marcie × Rustle · Mandala Dogs · Now accepting inquiries
05/12/2026
Some sweet shots from family movie night and family tea time. I just love these gentle spirits.
05/08/2026
Join us in welcoming Sarah Stremming to Michigan for a two- day workshop! We are so excited to be hosting her, and SkippyJon can't WAIT to work his worked-up self through all the fun things we're going to learn!
Worked Up 2026 A two-day workshop with Sarah Stremming, CDBC on the big feelings of dogs and what it takes to help them find adaptable responses. Workshops in Massachusetts June 6-7 and Michigan June 13-14.
05/07/2026
Wake up, wake up, you guys! Your hips and elbows are AMAZING!
What a fun field trip today to meet up with our buddies from Old Mission Retrievers for Penn hip measurements and elbow rads. Charlotte, Olaf, and Rustle were being adorable with each other, and Carolyn and I got to hang out together and support each other through the anticipation that always goes along with checking your work.
Everyone's joints are lovely. Official measurements are incoming!
Our sleepy pups waking up from the sedation needed for orthopedic radiographs always make for some hilarious photos.
04/12/2026
Breed is a social construct.
Social construct does not mean “imaginary thing” Money is a social construct. And marriage. And national borders. These things are real and have consequences.
But they are not natural phenomenon.
Sometimes a social construct is so engrained in a culture that it feels like part of nature. Like gravity. Immovable.
For a long time people believed marriage could only happen between two people of the same race. In most of the west, this thinking has changed. Our social construct of marriage has evolved.
Humans invent social constructs and humans can change them. In fact, sometimes the need to change them is a moral imperative.
Dog breeds are a social construct. The boundaries between them, and the rules that maintain those boundaries, are human decisions. With big consequences for dogs.
For the vast majority of the 15,000+ years dogs have lived with humans, there were no breeds. There were types. There were regional populations now called land races, shaped by geography, climate, and function.
Village dogs across Asia, Africa, and the Americas lived alongside humans, bred freely, and were loosely selected by the humans who kept them. The dogs that were good at guarding, guarded. The dogs that were good at herding, herded. Nobody checked papers.
Mixing happened organically and with minimal human involvement. Dogs moved with people.
This is how roughly 75% of the world’s dogs still live today outside of the US and Europe.
Then came the Victorians.
In the mid 1800s, primarily in England, dog fanciers began doing something new. They took these loose, overlapping populations and carved them into rigid categories and closed the registries.
There was a real practical reason for closed registries. Dr. Alison Skipper, a veterinarian and historian at the Royal Veterinary College in London, has traced this history in detail. A good summary of her work is available on her episode of the Functional Breeding Podcast.
Before DNA testing existed, the only way breeders could identify carriers of recessive genetic diseases was through test breeding - mating a dog to a known carrier and seeing what the puppies looked like. If you bred your dog to a carrier and none of the puppies were affected, your dog was probably clear. This was slow, expensive, and wildly unethical by today’s standard, but it was all they had.
Within a closed population, this system worked. Breeders could gradually map which lines carried which problems and breed away from them. The Irish Setter community used exactly this approach to eliminate progressive retinal atrophy over several decades.
But the system had a critical vulnerability: outcrossing. If you brought in a dog from outside the breed, you had no idea what recessive mutations it carried. You’d potentially be reintroducing diseases that had taken generations to eliminate, and the only way to find out was to produce sick puppies.
So the opposition to outcrossing was rational. It was a strategy that made sense given the available technology.
The problem is that the technology changed and the culture didn’t.
We now have DNA tests that can identify hundreds of disease causing mutations from a cheek swab. We don’t need to produce affected puppies to find carriers. We can screen before we breed. The entire practical foundation for closed registries has been removed, but the emotional and cultural commitment to them remains fully intact.
Here’s where it gets uncomfortable.
Generations of breeders have organized their entire lives around the closed registry system. They’ve spent decades learning pedigrees, tracking lines, building relationships within their breed community, campaigning dogs at shows, and policing the boundaries of who’s in and who’s out.
The whole structure of purebred dog culture from the shows, to the titles, to the breed clubs, to the mentorship chains, to the language of “reputable” vs. “backyard” is built on the premise that the closed stud book is sacred.
If breed is a social construct, if the line between “purebred” and “mixed” is a human decision rather than a biological fact then a lot of that investment feels threatened.
Not because it was wasted, but because it rests on a foundation that turns out to be a choice, not a law of nature.
That’s a hard thing to sit with. And when something feels threatening, people look for reasons to defend it.
Someone recently posted a detailed argument in the field trial world claiming that crossing breeds , even closely related ones like Brittanys, Pointers, and Setters risks creating “Dobzhansky-Muller incompatibilities” and “mismatched regulatory interactions.”
These are real concepts in evolutionary biology. They describe what happens when populations have evolved independently for so long that their genomes become incompatible. They’re documented in fruit fly species that diverged millions of years ago. They are a cornerstone of speciation science.
They have absolutely nothing to do with dog breeds.
Dog breeds diverged 150 to 300 years ago. The breeds being discussed — Brittany, Pointer, Setter were literally created from each other in the 1800s. They share identical chromosome numbers, the same ecological niche, and massive amounts of common ancestry.
The largest genomic studies of dog health consistently show the same thing: inbreeding is the problem, not outcrossing.
None of this means purebred dogs are bad or that breed standards are meaningless. It also doesn’t mean that mixed breed dogs are always healthier or that COI is all that matters.
It means that closed gene pools have genetic consequences, and pretending those consequences don’t exist because the system feels important is not a scientific position. It’s a cultural one.
Saying breed is a social construct isn’t an attack. It’s a description.
Breed standards, bans on outcrossing, and taboos on mixing breeds are human rules that are based on our current social construct of dog breeds.
They all need to be evaluated, questioned, and updated. We need to evolve.
Dogs deserve better thinking.
Photo for interest of a black retriever mix puppy bred by a service dog school.
04/08/2026
Spring has us day-dreaming about future litters. The possible pairings for later this year and next year make me giddy. And in a few more years... what fun! I absolutely adore the dogs we've produced so far, and watching them grow up has given such valuable information for how to move forward.
Here are some ideas we have, pending repeat/annual eye exams going well, and health testing being completed on younger dogs:
Jemma x Rustle (Tea Time litter aunt and father- should be incredibly similar) almost definitely our next litter. The Tea Time litter is absolutely amazing! Late 2026
Skippy x lurcher (happening elsewhere, details to come!!) 2026
Marcie x Rustle, Cuba, Fievel or Skippy (which boy to pick???) 2026
Abby x Rusty or an outside stud 2027
Prairie x Rustle or Lasso from the Vulpine Spitz Project 2027
Selkie x Skippy, Rustle, or Fievel 2026 or 7
Monroe x Olaf or Rustle 2027
Owl x Violet 2027 or 8
Figment x retriever AND x lurcher 2027 or 8
Zeke (Buns) x lurcher 2027
Figment x Selkie 2027
Rogue x someone SO TINY 2028
Old Mission Retrievers x Mandala dog (dogs tbd, but definitely love combining these families!!) Hopefully soon and again in the future!
Which are you most excited about?
Mandala Families- if you are the guardian of one of the above mentioned dogs, please share a recent pic!
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