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WE WILL HAVE KARAKACHAN PUPPIES AVAILABLE SOON & HAVE A WAITING LIST ALREADY STARTED.  CONTACT US FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION OR TO BE PUT ON OUR WAITING LIST.
























Sebastian - our male karakachan



Ella & Reese on duty.

9 months old



Ella keeping a close eye on her goats & everything else around her.





Reese -- she's our alpha dog & doesn't let anything get near "her" goat fence unless she wants them there.


On July 11, 2009 we were excited to add 2 livestock guardian puppies to our farm - karakachans - Reese & Ella.  We researched the other livestock guardian breeds and were really impressed with the Karakachan breed.  We are fortunate to have a breeder not far from us, Mary & Keith Sullivan of M K Farm, and they had a litter of puppies born May 11, 2009. 

Left - Reese

Right -
Ella

The pups are settling in, having fun playing in any water they find & getting to know the goats in their herd.



ABOUT THE KARAKACHAN BREED:  

The Karakachan Dog is one of Europe's oldest breeds.   Its ancestors started forming as early as the third millennium BC.   A typical Mollos, created for guarding its owner's flock and property, it does not hesitate to fight wolves or bears or coyotes to defend its owner and his family in case of danger.   

The dog is named after the Karakachans - nomadic shepherds of Thracian origin and the oldest inhabitants of the Balkans.   Due to their conservative stock-breeding traditions, they managed to preserve some of the oldest breeds of domestic animals in Europe--the Karakachan sheep, the Karakachan horse, and, of course, the Karakachan Dog. 

The breed flourished for centuries until, in the 1940s, the Bulgarian Communist Government nationalized the farming industry.  All livestock were placed in communal farms and the Communist regime ordered extermination of the Karakachan dogs, whose services were deemed unnecessary on the collective farms.   It was at this point in their history that the Karakachan dog became dangerously close to extinction.

Since then, through the dedicated efforts of a few special people in Bulgaria and around the world, the population of the Karakachan dog has grown steadily.  Today, there are between 100 and 200 Karakachan dogs serving as livestock guardians in the United States

{From the Karakachan Dog Association Website - http://www.karakachandog.com/index.html }




Parents of our puppies





Carly {M K Farm}






Reagan {M K Farm}