I'm Janice W., the breeder behind Wild Clover Yorkshire Terriers located in Columbiaville, MI. Wild Clover puppies are raised in our home ensuring happy and healthy puppies. We are focused on both maintaining the breed standard and quality as well as ensuring our program focuses on health.
Q. & A. with Janice
Why did you start breeding?
I began showing a fellow breeders dog in UKC in 2024. I fell in love with the breed immediately.
Since then I have decided to grow my own program to include puppies who continue to improve the breed and to ensure quality breedings continue.
What makes your program special?
We focus of not only puppy culture, but on the health of our puppies by testing our parents through embark for genetics and through OFA to ensure we have healthy mommas and daddies.
What are the different breed coat colors in your program?
Our puppies include black and gold and black and tan. Colors will vary depending on the parent dogs.
Where do your breeding dogs live?
They live in my home.
Getting a puppy from Janice
Janice has been certified by Good Dog’s screening team for responsible and trusted breeding practices. When you’re ready to reach out, feel free to ask any questions about the breed, their program, or specific puppies.
Together, you’ll choose the puppy that’s right for you, stay in touch with regular updates, and plan how to bring your new puppy home.
Price
Puppy prices include a $500 non-refundable deposit and between $3,000 - $4,500 final payment, before taxes & fees.
Pay over time with Klarna.
“AKC Registered
UKC Registered. Includes limited registration, vet check, shots, microchipped.”
Contract & health guarantee
Janice may provide a written contract or
health guarantee when you purchase a puppy. This helps
protect both you and your breeder, ensuring that you
both have a clear understanding of the terms of your
puppy purchase. If Janice offers a contract
or guarantee, the details will be personalized by them.
If you have any questions or want to know more,
don’t hesitate to reach out to Janice directly.
Wild Clover Yorkshire Terriers meets or exceeds our community standards in these areas:
Responsible breeding practices
Health of breeding dogs and puppies
Puppy environment and enrichment
Buyer education and policies
Parent dogs
Maia, mom
Yorkshire Terrier
About Maia
Maia is a female Yorkshire Terrier. Carefully selected as a great representative of her breed, Janice decided to make her part of their program. Janice has passed Good Dog’s screening process, which involved a review of their breeding practices, environment, and the mental and physical health of their dogs.
Excellent health testing
Patellar Luxation, Cardiac Evaluation (registered with OFA), +1 more.
Kodi, dad
Yorkshire Terrier
About Kodi
Kodi is the sweetest boy. He loves to cuddle and give kisses.
His sweet disposition makes him a great addition to our family.
Parent health testing
Breeder-Reported Testing
Excellent level
Wild Clover Yorkshire Terriers reports to performing the health tests below on their breeding dogs. Ask your breeder about the tests performed on the parents of your litter. Learn more about health testing for Yorkshire Terriers.
Eye Certification (CAER, registered with OFA)
Eye testing reduces the chance of passing down a wide range of hereditary eye illnesses including retinal dysplasia, lens luxation, and glaucoma, which can cause impared vision or blindness.
Cardiac Evaluation (rDVM, not registered with OFA)
Heart testing reduces the chance of passing down congenital heart disease, which can cause a range of symptoms ranging from trouble exercising to heart failure.
Patellar Luxation
Knee testing reduces the chance of passing down Patellar Luxation, which results in the kneecap becoming displaced or dislocated and can cause mild to severe joint pain.
Vet Wellness Exam
A breeder may perform additional tests on their dogs that do not fall into these general categories. These tests may be more uncommon or very specific to a particular breed.
Health testing is one key piece of responsible breeding and is performed on breeding dogs to prevent the presence of heritable conditions in their puppies.