The website BaliharaRanch.review is not about hate. It’s about facts.

by | Jul 10, 2025

Since launching the website BaliharaRanch.review, we’ve received a flood of responses. Many messages came from buyers who, instead of the joy of welcoming a puppy, were met with frustration, concern—and often deep disappointment. Others came from responsible breeders—those who follow ethical practices—who couldn’t understand why no one was speaking up.

On rare occasions, we’ve also heard from critics who accuse us of running a “hate site,” launching “personal attacks,” or engaging in “competitive sabotage.”

So it’s time to be absolutely clear:

This website is not about hate. It’s about facts.

Where Does Our Information Come From?

Every single claim published on this site is based on verifiable, documented sources, including:

  • Publicly accessible pedigree registries and stud books,
  • International export and registration databases,
  • Archived and current public advertisements,
  • Public statements made by the owner of Balihara Ranch herself,
  • And dozens of first-hand accounts from puppy buyers and fellow breeders.

We keep detailed records of all documentation and are prepared to present it upon request.
We do not publish anonymous gossip—only traceable facts, specific dates, registration records, and documented numbers.

What We’ve Never Done:

  • We have never published private photos.
  • We have never disclosed private or sensitive personal information. All data cited is publicly available.
  • We have never accused anyone without evidence.
  • We provide a fair, uncensored right of reply to all parties.

We’re not here to launch attacks.
We’re here to open a conversation.

That’s why we’ve decided to reach out to the owner of Balihara Ranch with a public invitation to respond. Anyone who claims this is a lie will have the chance to prove us wrong. That’s what fairness looks like. That’s not what a “hater” does. That’s what someone does when they’ve got the facts—and nothing to fear.

Why Are We Doing This?

Because no other platform connects these dots.
Because no club or regulatory body is stepping in.
And because dogs deserve the truth—even when it hurts.

Let us ask you this:

Do you think it’s acceptable

  • for a single kennel to “produce” 100 to 150 Swiss Mountain Dog puppies each year?
  • for female dogs to be bred 5 to 8 times in their lifetime, with minimal recovery between litters?
  • for puppies to be sold without proper screening of new owners?
  • for puppies to vanish abroad through intermediaries, with zero post-sale oversight?
  • for FCI rules and ethical breeding standards to be systematically sidestepped?
  • for a kennel with official FCI papers to operate like a high-end puppy mill—just with a more polished presentation?

If your answer is no—then that’s why this blog exists.

We didn’t create this site out of hatred.
We created it out of love for dogs—because they can’t speak for themselves.

We love dogs. And we’re doing what they can’t:
Speaking up when they suffer.

They can’t tell you they’re exhausted, scared, or broken.
That’s why we won’t stay silent.

This Isn’t About a Person. It’s About the Dogs.

We hold no personal vendetta against the owner of Balihara Ranch.
Our efforts are a response to long-documented practices that we believe are unethical and harmful to animals.

The goal of this blog is to bring these facts to light—because silence only protects those who don’t want to be seen.

We’re not shouting.
We’re pointing to patterns.
We’re not slandering.
We’re presenting evidence.

Truth cannot be silenced.

You can call us haters.
But the numbers speak for themselves.
And as long as others stay silent, we’ll keep speaking up.
Not out of hate. Out of love—for the dogs. 

If you agree with us, share this site.

If you don’t—check the facts for yourself.

The Slovak Club of Swiss Mountain Dogs – skssp.eu has already confirmed the records in a public statement. You can contact the club directly to verify them.

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CONTINUE READING

When Numbers Start Calling the Shots: The Economics Turning Breeding Into a Production Model (Part I)

When breeding is driven by numbers, its underlying logic shifts. Available data on Balihara Ranch indicate repeated use of the same sire–dam combinations, yielding dozens of puppies from the same pair. This article examines where responsible breeding selection ends and a production model begins—and why, without firm guardrails, the system naturally steers breeders toward volume over thoughtful selection.

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A New Year’s Wish – If Dogs Could Speak

As we enter the New Year, our wish is not for more, but for less. Fewer litters and fewer dogs where breeding has become an industry. Less silence around large commercial breeding operations. Because not everything that is legal is also right—and dogs have no way to say so out loud.

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The Cost of a Career Built on Dogs

When dog breeding becomes the primary source of income and identity, stepping back without losses becomes impossible. A large commercial breeding operation like Balihara Ranch requires constant escalation, the concealment of reality, and the defense of a system that can no longer be acknowledged as problematic. This is not an individual failure, but the logical outcome of a career built exclusively on dogs.

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The Qaiser van’t Stokerybos Case: Paper Exports as an Illusion of Oversight Part II: How a System Can Appear Lawful While Being Circumvented in Practice

The Qaiser van’t Stokerybos case shows how easily exports in dog breeding can be used not for cooperation between breeders, but to bypass the rules. A dog may be officially registered abroad while being physically used to breed females elsewhere—without the system addressing that contradiction.

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