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Tell us about your family and your home. About five minutes, and there's no deposit to apply.

Chickamauga, Georgia · Family-Raised Dobermans
A few carefully planned litters a year — raised in our home and placed with people we trust.
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Our dogs
Niko — the sire. IGP1 protection title, a BH, a hundred pounds of black and rust, and zero respect for whose couch it is.

Envy — Envy is his opposite. She's got her CGC and the patience of a saint, and she raises a litter like she's done it a hundred times.

Nala — Nala's red and rust. She hears a car in the driveway before you do, and she's already at the door to meet whoever it is.


Why the cross
Most people don't realize there are two kinds of Doberman. The European line was bred for the work — bigger, more driven, more presence. The American line was bred lighter and softer, easy in a house full of kids.
We cross the two on purpose. You get the bone and confidence of one with the family manners of the other — and better genetic diversity than either line gives you on its own. Niko's titles are the working half. The way he snores on the couch is the rest of it.
We pair for health and diversity, not convenience. Our lines tend to live around ten and a half years.




Meet Brittany
We’re a family in Chickamauga, about twenty minutes south of Chattanooga, and these dogs live in our house. The puppies are born in our bedroom and spend their first weeks underfoot in the kitchen — hearing the dishwasher, the vacuum, the kids arguing over the remote, getting held by small hands.
That head start has a name: Early Neurological Stimulation from day three, and Puppy Culture after that. It’s why your puppy shows up curious instead of spooked by ordinary life. I plan only a few litters a year so I can do all of it myself, and every puppy leaves with my phone number — I mean for you to use it.
Ethical isn’t a badge here; it’s just cheaper than the alternative. Family is the literal setup. And devoted is for the whole life of the dog, not the eight weeks you’re shopping.
Health, shown — not claimed
Every parent runs a full Embark panel — 250+ conditions, and we show you all of it.
OFA hips Good, thyroid normal, von Willebrand's clear.
Hearts screened for DCM1 and DCM2.
Niko carries one copy of DCM1. We tell you that up front, because a breeder who won’t show you the hard stuff is telling you everything you need to know. He’s only ever paired with DCM1-clear dams, so puppies come out clear or carriers — never affected.


Every puppy goes home with a written, signed two-year health guarantee against life-threatening genetic conditions.
Your path home
We're not in a hurry to fill a spot. We'd rather wait for the right home than rush the wrong one.
Tell us about your family and your home. About five minutes, and there's no deposit to apply.
We'll talk. You ask your questions, we ask ours. Sometimes we'll ask for a vet reference.
A $500 Stripe deposit holds your place in line and comes off your final balance. No gift cards, no wire transfers, ever. Refundable terms, in writing.
Photos and video as they develop. You'll know your puppy's personality before pick day.
At eight weeks: AKC papers, health records, microchip, your written guarantee, and a Puppy Culture starter kit.
Text us at 11pm. And if life ever changes, we take a High Point dog back — none of ours ends up in a shelter.
When you're ready, the first step is just hello.

Our families
“Our boy is fourteen months now and won't leave our side. Brittany answered a Sunday-night text about a limp six months after we brought him home.”
“We'd never had a Doberman and were nervous about it. She walked us through everything and never made us feel dumb for asking.”
When you bring home a High Point Doberman, you become part of our family.
The application takes about ten minutes, and there's no commitment yet — it's just the start of a conversation.
No deposit to apply · Stripe only — never gift cards or wire transfers