In September 2025, Northwest Battle Buddies (NWBB) lost one of the dogs who helped shape its mission. Caliber, a yellow English Lab and longtime companion to NWBB founder Shannon Walker, died suddenly at age seven. He was the sire of more than 300 puppies, and at least 150 of those went on to become professionally trained PTSD service dogs for Veterans across the country.
Caliber's story is, in many ways, the story of NWBB's English Lab program. But for Shannon, this story is also something far more personal.
Caliber was selected for Shannon by a reputable breeder who helped launch NWBB's English Lab breeding program. From the beginning, Caliber stood out for the qualities NWBB looks for in its service dogs: a calm, "bomb-proof" temperament, confidence in every setting, and the kind of joy that filled a room.
Before becoming the stud for NWBB's English Lab line, Caliber passed every required health clearance, a process that typically takes place between 15 months and two years of age. He was chosen for his beauty and conformation, but also for the steady, courageous nature he would go on to pass down to hundreds of puppies.
Caliber’s temperament became the foundation of a breeding program that has touched the lives of American Heroes across the country by helping reduce PTSD symptoms, improve social connection, support Veterans in the workplace, and more!
In his seven years, Caliber sired more than 300 puppies, with at least 150 of those going on to be trained as PTSD service dogs for American Heroes. His offspring inherited the traits that made him special: trainability, faithfulness, courage, and the kind of unshakable calm that allows a service dog to do its job in any environment.
"Caliber lives on in all of these service dogs," Shannon said. "His service to Veterans lives on."
Every NWBB Veteran working with one of Caliber's descendants carries a piece of him forward. The dog who slides quietly under a restaurant table, who anchors a Veteran during a panic attack, who provides steadiness on a hard day often shares Caliber's bloodline. His role as a sire was a form of lifelong service.
Sustaining a breeding program of this level, from prenatal care for the mothers to lifetime support for the dogs that come from it, takes resources. Join Operation Never Quit (ONQ) with a monthly gift and help NWBB continue providing professionally trained PTSD service dogs to Veterans at no cost, while upholding the standard of care that produced dogs like Caliber. Every contribution helps carry his legacy forward.
For Shannon, Caliber's title as "father to many service dogs" only tells part of the story. At home, he was her constant.
A single mother of two, Shannon often turned to Caliber during the hardest stretches of her life. He went with her to visit her father's grave. He sat beside her as she worked through personal and professional challenges. He was, in her words, her "safe place."
"He was the most joyful and squishy dog," Shannon recalled. "He would run with reckless abandon and slide down the stairs every morning, just for fun. I would work like crazy during the day, and finally, in the evening, I would sit in my recliner with my blanket, and Caliber would lay on me. He was my comfort, and that's what I miss."
She remembers how he would climb up behind her head in the recliner and drape himself across her shoulders like a scarf, snuggling his face right up next to hers. Even at full grown-Labrador size, he had no concept of personal space, and Shannon never wanted him to.
Caliber's loss was sudden, and Shannon felt it deeply, especially as someone who has spent her career building an organization defined by its commitment to dogs.
Shannon has spoken often about NWBB's responsibility to its service dogs from birth through retirement, and Caliber was the embodiment of that promise on both sides. He was a working sire, but he was also a deeply loved companion.
"Dogs make their humans’ lives better," Shannon said. "And they always die too soon, and they always break your heart when they do."
Caliber is survived, in a way that few dogs are, by hundreds of his own. Some of them are puppies still being raised by NWBB's foster families. Some are deep into the five months of professional training that will prepare them for placement. And many are already working alongside Veterans, giving back exactly what their father gave Shannon: comfort, presence, and a safe place to land.
Caliber's story is a reminder that every NWBB service dog carries a lineage of love, intention, and care that stretches back to the breeders, the fosters, and the sires who came before. Continuing that legacy takes a community of supporters willing to invest in the next generation.
If Caliber's story has moved you, consider becoming a puppy foster and helping raise one of his descendants during their most formative months, or join Pledge-A-Pup to directly support a puppy's journey from birth through training.
Either way, you are helping carry forward what Caliber started: a life of service, on both ends of the leash.