Scorpion Kennels Home About Scorpion Kennels Breedings Produced Puppies Males Females Gallery Links Contact Scorpion Kennels


 Scorpion Kennels - American Pitbull Terriers - About
 

Welcome to Scorpion Kennels, owned and operated by Oscar and Naomi Tamayo.

We are a small kennel based out of Northern California, located in Woodland. We are breeding OG Grayline, Gaff, Gotti and Razors Edge bloodlines in hopes of finding the perfect American Pit bull.

We are dog lovers that only want the breed to thrive in truth. The media has portrayed a very negative impression of the breed, which in turn gives them the notorious reputation. We have been pit bull owners for more than 5 years but lovers of the breed as long as we can remember.

We are here to let everyone know that this breed that is so hated and feared by many is misunderstood. Our hope is that everyone will realize that APBT’s are loveable and family dogs. It is our main goal that each of our dogs goes to homes where they will be treated as family. Our dogs are not game bred, and have wonderful temperaments. Each is handled from birth in a family environment and well socialized.
 

We are proud to say that each of our dogs are UKC/ADBA, UKC, or ADBA registered.

Thank you for visiting our website. No dogs bred or sold for illegal purposes.
 

 History of the Pitbull Terrier - Scorpion Kennels - Specializing in American Pitbull Terriers
 

In 1835 the British Parliament outlawed bull baiting, a sadistic gambling game in which bulldogs were used to attack and harass bulls brought to market with the dubious intention of tenderizing the meat. The dog would assault the bull, avoid the stomping hooves and slashing horns, grab a tender nose or ear, and hang on until the bull collapsed. Commoners and royalty alike sought diversion from the violence and diseases of their day by attending these bloody spectacles until a public outcry forced Parliament to take a stand.
 

Once bull baiting was banned, dog breeders who appreciated the fierceness, courage, and tenacity of the bull dogs turned their attentions to breeding dogs for dog fighting. They began with the bull dog, mixed in some terrier blood, and produced the Bull and Terrier, a dog that met all of their expectations. The Bull and Terrier was bred for aggression to other dogs, unrelenting bravery, a high pain threshold, a willingness to fight to the end, and an affection for people.
 

Bull and Terrier dogs came to the US in the early 1800s as all-around farm dogs and frontier guardians. Samuel Clemons featured a pup of this breed in his short book The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.
 

The United Kennel Club recognized the Bull and Terrier Dog as the American Pit Bull Terrier in 1898. Buster Brown shoes put its mascot in every shoe with the image of Tige, an American Pit Bull Terrier, to enhance its image as a sturdy, dependable shoe. RCA used Nipper, a pit bull of unknown ancestry, to illustrate the clarity of sound emanating from its phonograph -- after all, it could fool the loyal pit bull into thinking he heard "his master's voice" in person. The breed was used to illustrate American neutrality without fear in 1914, the toughness of Levi jeans, and as a"defender of Old Glory."
 

The AKC eschewed breeds called "pit bulls" until 1936, when it recognized the American Pit Bull Terrier under the alias Staffordshire Terrier, named after the miners of Staffordshire, England, who had a hand in developing the breed for the fighting pit. The name was changed in 1972 to the American Staffordshire Terrier to distinguish the breed from the Staffordshire Bull Terrier of England, the ancestor of the American dogs, which was recognized by AKC in 1974. The British version of the dog is 14-16 inches tall and weighs up to 45 pounds. The American cousin is 18-19 inches tall and weighs up to 80 pounds. UKC's American Pit Bull Terrier is preferred to range from 30-60 pounds with females generally, but not necessarily, smaller than males.
 

Staffs, AmStaffs, and APBTs produced by responsible breeders are bred for temperament. Many dogs of these breeds are therapy dogs; some do quite well in obedience, and one -- Bandog Dread HIC, VB, SchH 1, CD -- even has a herding title. Another, Solomon J. Grundy, is a service dog for quadriplegic owner Arvid Kuhnle of Saskatoon, Canada, and Bullitt, was shown on the 1985 Easter Seals poster with his owner, Gordy Ranberg of Genesee, Michigan.

(source: Dog Owner's Guide)
  
 
Home | About Us | Breedings | Produced | Puppies | Males | Females | Pedigrees | Gallery | Links | Contact

Copyright 2007-2008 Scorpion Kennels