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Find Your New Best Friend
♡ Family Bred · Ethically Raised ♡
Our puppies are raised right in our home, surrounded by everyday family life. We carefully focus on good genetics, balanced temperaments, and loving personalities so our puppies grow into confident, affectionate family dogs. From the very beginning they’re handled, socialized, and raised to become someone’s lifelong best friend.
Our Current Litter
Our current F1B Goldendoodle litter was born 23 February 2026 and will be ready to go home 23 May 2026. These puppies come from champion bloodlines and are being raised in our home with lots of love and daily family interaction. Their mother is Kolisi “Chicken Nugget” Doodle and their father is Jar-Jar.
How to Pay...
We accept Cash, Venmo, Direct Deposit, Money Orders, most cards, and payments through this website using Wix’s secure payment system. We will not take checks due to past scamming attempts.
If you choose to pay through the website, we will open the puppy listing for you so the purchase can be completed. We keep puppies marked as “out of stock” until we confirm that the pup is still available. This helps make sure no one accidentally sends payment for a puppy that has already been reserved.
Before any adoption is finalized, we ask that you have either a video call or an in-person visit at our home so you can meet the puppy first.
Frequently Asked Questions...
Q: Will you dock the pup's tail for us?
A: We do not have our pups' tails docked unless it is for a medical reason. If you plan to have your pup trained to be a hunting or ratting dog, it is something we can discuss with you and the vet. However, most of the time, no, we do not dock tails.
Q: What does the Health Guarantee cover?
A: Our health guarantee covers any medical conditions that are determined to be genetic. We offer this guarantee because we are confident in the health and genetics of our puppies. If a genetic condition appears within the first two years, we will refund the full adoption fee. You may choose to keep your pup, or we will gladly welcome them back and ensure they are properly cared for.
Q: Are Athena and Penelope Kolisi's daughters?
A: Yes! Both of our girls were born as part of Kolisi and Jar-Jar’s first litter in 2025.
Q: Can I change my puppy’s name when I get them home?
A: Yes! Puppies’ brains at this age are little sponges. All you have to do is start using their new name and they will pick it up quickly. Most people who adopt our pups choose a new name, and your puppy will have no trouble learning it.
Q: Who takes the pictures and handles haircuts?
A: We do. While we are not as good as the perfessional we find it to be a good bonding experance with both our furry family members and your future pup.
Q: When do we need to take our pup to the vet?
A: About a week after you bring your pup home, they will need their first booster shot.

♡ Bringing Your Puppy Home ♡
Each pup is $1500 total.
A $500 deposit is required to move from the waiting list and reserve the puppy you have fallen for.
$1000 is due at pickup of the pup.
If you choose to have a nanny or someone else pick up your pup for you, you will be responsible for paying them. You will also need to video call with us at the time of handoff. In addition, you will need to sign the adoption paperwork before pickup.
Are you military, a reservist, a first responder, or a police officer? We proudly offer a 10% discount.
How to Pay...
We accept Cash, Venmo, Direct Deposit, Money Orders, most cards, and payments through this website using Wix’s secure payment system. We will not take Check due to past scamming attempts.
If you choose to pay through the website, we will open the puppy listing for you so the purchase can be completed. We keep puppies marked as “out of stock” until we confirm that the pup is still available. This helps make sure no one accidentally sends payment for a puppy that has already been reserved.
Before any adoption is finalized, we ask that you have either a video call or an in-person visit at our home so you can meet the puppy first.
At pickup you will get...
♡ A Squirmy Puppy
♡ A Simple Collar and Leash
♡ A Blanket Shared by the Litter and Mom
♡ A Small Bag of Food
♡ United All Breed Registration Paperwork
♡ Non-Breeding Agreement Paperwork (Unless discussed beforehand)
♡ Non-Shelter Agreement Paperwork
♡ Breeder’s Phone Number and Email
We encourage everyone to keep in mind that the adoption cost is just the start. Dogs are a long-term financial commitment. Below are some rough estimates to look into...
♡ You can expect $700–$1200 in vet costs the first year.
♡ You can expect to spend $300–$1200 the first year on food.
♡ You can expect to pay $200–$400 for basic supplies.
♡ You can expect to pay $400–$800 for professional grooming.
This doesn’t even cover training, as that varies so much that it’s hard to give a good estimate.
Why Families Choose Us...
We are a small, family-run program deeply committed to raising puppies the right way. No puppy mills, no corners cut. Just love, care, and responsibility from our home to yours.
Home Raised — Every puppy lives in our home with our family. They are raised in the house, not in a garage or outside. They get frequent time outdoors and lots of interaction with children and loving caregivers. We breed because we love dogs and believe a healthy, happy start makes healthy, happy family pups.
Health First — All puppies are vet-checked, vaccinated, and backed by a full 2-year health guarantee. We work hard to maintain strong genetics in our litters and take great care in planning every pairing.
Lifelong Commitment — If you ever cannot keep your pup, we will take them back. No questions. No shelters. Ever. Life happens and we understand that. Family loss, natural disasters, or financial hardship can sometimes lead loving companions to end up in shelters, and far too many dogs lose their lives there. Any pup adopted from us can return to our care at any time if something happens and you can no longer provide for them.
Your Puppy’s First Weeks...
Week 1-2
At this point you future pup is just a squirming potato. They can't see or hear and all they do is eat, sleep and whine about not eating or sleeping. They learn and navigate threw smell and bumping into things.
We monitor weight, temperature and insure there whelping box remains clean. We provide daily holding and baths with wet whips. If needed we provide additional supplementary feeding with formula from a bottle, insure all pups are getting most of there meal from mama to insure they get the needed anti-bodies she provides.
Week 3
At this point your future pup has graduated from squirming potato to little puppy. There eyes are mostly open and so are there ears. There are starting to develop clear personality's, play together and learning to use there voices.
We continue to monitor the weight but out focus starts to shift to more hand holding time and snuggles. The pups get more time in children's arms and start to eat the most 'delicious gruel' in addition to just milk.
Desensitization to soft noises, care rides, new smells and even basic potty training start know.
Week 4-5
Now the puppies really start turning into little dogs. They’re walking around much better, playing more, and getting curious about everything. They go from waddling to running in this time and learn the joy of toys.
They spend more time exploring, chewing on toys, and wrestling with their siblings. Puppy mush becomes a regular meal and they slowly start relying less on mom. Social time with people continues every day so they stay comfortable being handled and loved on. Potty training continues and basic obeyance training starts.
They continue to be around children frequently, go on short care rides get slowly incresing desensitization to louder noised and stronger smells.
Week 6-7
At this stage the puppies are basically tiny chaos machines. They spend most of their time playing, wrestling, exploring, and figuring out how the world works. With not sense of self preservation they will eat anything and squirm into anything
We introduce more toys, surfaces, and everyday experiences so they grow into confident family dogs. They spend a good amount of time outside, learning to the sounds and scent of the world. We insure to play storm sound inside along with neighborhood noises like motorcycles, fireworks and baby cries. This is when we start separating the puppies for s short amount of time to give them a chance to see what its like with out there siblings, they also start sleeping in two groups away from each other so they get used to not having the whole litter around. They will go from eatening slightly sofened kibble to dry kibble.
Week 8
At this point your future pup is certified a chaos gremlin. They will get there 2 month puppy shot and there microchip.
After this, they will be ready to meet you and go home
Meet Our Dams...
Our dams are first and foremost beloved members of our family. They live in our home, sleep in our beds, and are treated as the adored pets they are. They are all registered with United All Breed.
They eat a homemade diet that is monitored by their veterinarian and formulated to meet AAFCO standards. We also handle their training and grooming ourselves. While we may not always match the skills of a professional groomer, we’re improving with every training session and haircut — and the girls get all of our patience, love, and attention along the way.
In our homes they are surrounded by there breeders other pets. Including other dogs, cats, fish and small mammals.
Past Litters — Greatest Hits
Kolisi and Jar Jar 2025
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Happy Tail — What It Is & How to Prevent It
Happy Tail is a real and painful condition that many Goldendoodle owners have never heard of — until it happens to them.
What Is Happy Tail?
Happy Tail happens when a dog wags their tail so enthusiastically and repeatedly that the tip makes contact with hard surfaces — walls, furniture, door frames, kennels — and splits open. Because the tail tip has little soft tissue and a strong blood supply, even a small wound can bleed significantly and is very slow to heal. Each time the wound starts to close, another wag reopens it.
How to Spot It
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Blood on walls, floors, furniture, or the dog's fur near the tail tip
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A raw, red, or scabbed area at the very end of the tail
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Your dog yelping or flinching when their tail is touched
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Repeated reopening of a wound that seems to almost heal but never fully does
How to Prevent & Manage It
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Be mindful of your home environment — hard walls and tight spaces are the main culprits. Adding padding to corners or keeping certain rooms off limits can help. Be very careful with kennels.
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If a wound develops, wrap it with a bandage (a pool noodle cut to size works well) to cushion the tail tip and allow healing.
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See your vet promptly — Happy Tail wounds that are left untreated can become infected or require surgical intervention.
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Never punish a dog for wagging their tail. Management of the environment is the solution, not discouraging the behavior.
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Some severe or chronic cases may require tail docking as a last resort — your vet will advise if it comes to that. This is what happen to poor Athena and her owner misses her tail but is just happy she is ok.








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