Leashed and Gasping: Is This How Dogs Are Treated During Handling at Balihara Ranch?

by | Jan 23, 2025

Dog shows are meant to showcase the beauty and elegance of animals, celebrating the bond between humans and dogs. Yet, photos of dogs the owner of Balihara Ranch, raise serious concerns about how they are treated in pursuit of perfection.

The photographs reveal dogs being led with thin collars digging tightly into their necks, forcing their heads unnaturally high. Some dogs show visible signs of distress—mouths open as they struggle for air, with red, bulging eyes that suggest restricted oxygen flow. This method of handling is not just outdated; it is widely condemned for being unethical and is even banned in many competitive settings.

We would like to thank a reader of our blog, for bringing these troubling practices at Balihara Ranch kennel to our attention. When we examined the photos, we were struck by how visibly distressed these dogs appeared. It was impossible not to feel deeply unsettled by what we saw.

source: skssp.eu

What makes this situation even more troubling is that the breeder is an international dog show judge. Someone in such a position should be a model for humane and ethical practices. Yet, these photographs raise difficult questions: If this is how the animals are treated in public, what happens behind closed doors? And why are such harmful methods still being used when they clearly compromise the welfare of the dogs?

source: skssp.eu

Handlers claim this is necessary to achieve a “perfect posture.” But at what cost? Thin collars that dig into the trachea can cause physical harm, including long-term breathing issues, chronic pain, and emotional distress. No animal deserves to suffer like this, especially in a setting that should celebrate their natural beauty and grace.

source: skssp.eu

Modern standards in animal welfare demand better. Humane handling methods exist and are widely encouraged, prioritizing a dog’s comfort and dignity. Practices that harm animals—whether intentional or not—have no place in any competition or facility claiming to care for animals.

As you look at these images, ask yourself: Is this how we should treat animals we claim to love? Should trophies and titles come at the cost of an animal’s well-being?

This is not just a call for reflection but for accountability. Let’s demand humane treatment in all areas of animal care, from dog shows to everyday handling. The animals who trust us deserve better.

source: skssp.eu

Share this:

Send a comment

* name and email address are optional, you can send the comment anonymously

CONTINUE READING

When the Same Pairings Are Repeated to Exhaustion: What the Numbers Reveal About Breeding at Balihara Ranch

Publicly available records through 2023 show that at Balihara Ranch, identical parental combinations were repeated as many as four, six, or even eight times, producing dozens of puppies from a single pairing. Such a degree of repetition is not standard in conventional breeding practice and raises questions about where selective breeding ends and systematic multiplication begins.

read more

When the System Stops Protecting Dogs: The Blind Spots in the FCI System and Breed Clubs That Enable Extreme-Scale Breeding (Part II)

In the first part, we showed where the system fails in the field — in limits, inspections, and exports. This second part uncovers something even more serious: club-level exceptions, conflicts of interest, and lax oversight by the Slovak Cynological Union (SKJ), all of which have allowed kennels like Balihara Ranch to grow to a scale that today’s mechanisms can no longer effectively regulate.

read more

When the System Stops Protecting Dogs:The Blind Spots in the FCI System and Breed Clubs That Enable Extreme-Scale Breeding (Part I)

Current rules of the FCI and breed clubs contain fundamental blind spots: no limits on litters, no meaningful welfare inspections and weak oversight of exports. These gaps create the conditions in which extreme-scale kennels can thrive. And the only way to stop them is to change the system itself — not to address individual cases, such as the Balihara Ranch kennel, only after they grow beyond what today’s club and legislative mechanisms are capable of handling.

read more

When One Breeder Needs Two Breeding Advisors: An Unusual Decision of the Slovak Club of Swiss Mountain Dogs That Reveals More Than It First Appears

The Slovak Club of Swiss Mountain Dogs has published an exceptional detail: two breeding advisors assigned to the owner of the Balihara Ranch kennel — the only such case in the entire system. This rare exception signals that behind the polished façade of the kennel may conceal a far greater scale of breeding activity and administrative workload than the public typically imagines.

read more

When Facts Move Behind Closed Doors: How the Slovak Club of Swiss Mountain Dogs Locked Its Breeding Records After One Member’s Complaint

The Slovak Club of Swiss Mountain Dogs (SKSSP) has moved its breeding data behind closed doors after a complaint from the owner of Balihara Ranch Kennel. The data didn’t vanish — they were simply moved out of sight. Transparency has turned into a privilege, leaving honest breeders in the shadow of those who found facts inconvenient.

read more