Find your perfect puppy
Search by breed, location, size, and more. Use our Puppy Match Quiz or call our puppy concierge for personalized assistance.
Reserve your puppy
Found the one? Fill out the reservation form and complete your payment to secure your puppy.
Welcome your puppy
We will reach out to arrange the delivery or pickup of your puppy. Get ready to welcome your new furry friend into your home!
We’re here Mon-Sat, 9AM - 9PM ET!
We pride ourselves on bringing healthy puppies from trusted breeders to loving forever homes.
The Eskland, also known as Sheltie Eskimo, is a mixture of two loving dog breeds: Shetland Sheepdogs and American Eskimos. This mixed breed tends to be loving and playful, borrowing these traits from its parents. These dogs make ideal companions for families, as they get along well with children and other pets. Esklands are a high-energy breed, and love to spend time outdoors and in nature. So if you are thinking of bringing an Eskland puppy home, make sure that you have the right time to dedicate to its mental and physical stimulation. Given this breed’s intelligence, you can easily train it with a variety of tricks, and so we recommend early socialization and training!
Temperament
Friendly, active, intelligent
Breed Fast Facts
16 - 30 lbs
Small
High
High
Very
12 to 15 years
Ontario is a largely pet-friendly place where it’s easy to have fun with your dog outdoors and away from home. Dog-friendly beaches, parks, hiking trails, campgrounds, hotels, restaurants and even tour groups abound in Canada’s second-largest province. The history of dogs in Ontario and throughout Canada is a long one, as Native people were the first to domesticate them in this part of the world thousands of years ago. The Canadian Kennel Club recognizes five pure Canadian breeds: the Tahltan bear dog, the Canadian Inuit dog, the Nova Scotia duck-tolling retriever, the Newfoundland dog and the Labrador Retriever.
Ontarians favourite breed of dog is the Labrador Retriever.
The City of Toronto puts out Green Bins in dog parks especially for compostable, nutrient-rich dog poo!
There are 7.7 million pet dogs in Canada, and about 230,000 of them live in Toronto.