Day 11 A.M. & P.M.

Everything is well here this morning.

In spite of his unfortunate misadventure yesterday, Sage has moved into the top position in the Puppy Heavyweight division — he weighed in 36.85 ounces this morning. Clarkia is in second place at 35.05 ounces with Clover in third at 34.8.

This is a look at the shaved spot on Sage where the abscess was lanced so it could drain.

WD D11 Sage abscess.jpg

It is much improved this morning.

This is Sage reflecting a very cooperative nature and resting the lanced spot — as requested — on the warm pack.

WD D11 Sage on warm pack.jpg

I love cooperators — it makes things so much easier!

Eyes continue to crack open. Can you imagine the flood of sensory experiences puppies have in their early weeks?!

This is Buttercup and Paintbrush.

WD D11 Buttercup and Paintbrush.jpg

The puppies are walking/staggering/falling in this fun stage I think of as The Age of the Drunken Dinosaurs. Their heads and bodies are so big relative to their legs — they all struggle to get belly clearance when they do their version of walking.

This is Lupine. I love her eyelashes.

WD D11 Lupine.jpg

I continue to wonder why people think they need to do extra stuff to puppies — like add additional external stressors. I think they must not be paying attention to what puppies naturally experience, and must not understand the impact on the developing brain of setting off floods of stress hormones.

Clover demonstrating the skill of rolling

Clover demonstrating the skill of rolling

Resilience is built — not by flooding — but by mastery of developmentally appropriate challenges.

One of my goals is to create Learner Puppies — puppies who know how to learn and are confident in their ability to try/learn new things. To do this, they must have positive experiences as they master challenges.

WF D11 Mariposa and Lupine.jpg

It is not unlike training an older dog (or human) — we should work on one thing at a time. “Clumping” makes learning stressful and tough.

If the puppy is going to have a challenge, everything else should be supportive. This happens naturally in the whelping box.

For example, when Daisy enters the whelping box the puppies air scent and want to find her — their challenge is locating her. This is mildly stressful — they are hungry, cannot see or hear, and if other puppies get there first they have to take a number.

And so they are challenged — but they work it out in in a familiar and comfortable context — the whelping box. When they find her, they are reinforced for success by food — a primary reinforcer.

WD D11 Daisy and pups.jpg

We have a whelping box that is 60 x 72 inches — marching across it is indeed a challenge for a tiny puppy.

If I took the puppies outside for a picnic I would not ask them to march — blind and deaf — four feet to find their mom because the new environment would be the challenge.

Rather, I would take one of their familiar-smelling fleeces to have under them on the ground and put them directly next to Daisy, allowing them to experience and master the newness while being well supported.

WD D11 Larkspur.jpg

Puppies need challenges that grow with them. This requires constant assessment of the puppies, the environment, and so on.

Clover

Clover

I love this kind of stuff — can you tell?

Updated: A movie! Click HERE.

Evening: Photos from the Day

WF D11 Daisy and pups.jpg
Mariposa and Sage

Mariposa and Sage

Mariposa, Mallow and Clarkia

Mariposa, Mallow and Clarkia

Mariposa and Clarkia

Mariposa and Clarkia

Clarkia

Clarkia

Mallow

Mallow

Larkspur

Larkspur

Day 11 Puppy Pile

Day 11 Puppy Pile

Good night!

Day Ten: A.M.

Formula is — no question — inferior nutrition for babies of all species, including puppies.

A puppy line-up

A puppy line-up

Before anyone gets their knickers-in-a-knot — yes, I know that sometimes babies are formula-fed for good reasons. Let’s not, however, pretend formula represents equivalent or optimal nutrition for a baby — it typically does not.

Sage rolling

Sage rolling

Fraga et al. (2014) note that “a considerable body of literature, both in humans and in animal models — including the one used in the present study, demonstrates that an adequate breastfeeding period has both short- and long-term beneficial health effects, particularly when considering the metabolic and endocrine profiles of the developing and adult offspring” (p. 104).

Clarkia

Clarkia

We will take up “adequate breastfeeding period” on another day — that is a fascinating and emotional topic all by itself.

Lupine

Lupine

Lactation works on supply and demand — more demand means more milk. Supplementing with formula not only substitutes inferior nutrition but it also interferes with the system that allows mothers to have the right amount of milk for their babies.

Supplementing, after all, reduces demand and that means reduced supply. It can quickly become a vicious cycle.

This is our eleventh litter; I have never supplemented a puppy, even with these bigger litters.

I certainly would if there was need — but with good understanding and management of lactation, “need” should be a rare exception and I have not come across it yet.

Mariposa - look closely to see eyeball!

Mariposa - look closely to see eyeball!

It probably helps that lactation is not mysterious to me — I understand and trust the process.

What I do not trust is those who benefit from selling formula. They have long created lactation insecurity in order to make money substituting inferior nutrition for babies — with lifelong effects.

WF D10 pile.jpg

When I announced to my mother that I would be breast feeding my baby, she noted that bottle feeding had been good enough for all of her children — and the many foster babies who shared our lives.

This is a typical response when someone hints that maybe the way we did something wasn’t optimal: defensiveness. And isn’t it interesting that just making a different choice can cause people to feel as if we have invalidated them in some way?

Sage

Sage

There is no shame in allowing knowledge to shape new ways of doing things — in fact, a willingness to drop the ego and incorporate new information should be viewed as a strength.

Exclusively breastfeeding babies is optimal — this means no supplementing and delayed weaning.

I think if we create life, those lives deserve optimal insomuch as is possible. I am happy to report that when it comes to nutrition, we have optimal covered with the Wildflowers.

Late Afternoon Update & Photos

Suzanne came over to visit the Wildflowers. She held puppies so I could take individual photos. Mariposa was too wiggly and so her photo did not turn out but I substituted another one of her I took today. And Sage — well, there is a story to his but first here they are — The Wildflowers at Ten Days.

Paintbrush.

WF D10 Paintbrush.jpg

Mallow

WF D10 Mallow.jpg

Clarkia

WF D10 Clarkia close.jpg

Sage — note right ear.

WF D10 Sage (1).jpg

Mariposa

WF D10 Mariposa (2).jpg

Lupine

WF D10 Lupine (1).jpg

Buttercup

WF D10 Buttercup.jpg

Larkspur

WF D10 Larkspur.jpg

Clover

WF D10  Clover close (1).jpg

So I looked at Sage’s ear after Suzanne left because it looked off — and it was because there was a big lump under it! It was my veterinarian’s day off BUT she met me at the clinic — I love her.

Yep — I loaded up nine puppies and Daisy and hyperventilated all the way to Missoula because I hate traveling with little puppies, even safely crated.

Once there, Daisy and the puppies had a tailgate party in the parking lot (aka the puppies nursed in the back of the van) while Sage went to have his lump checked out.

AN ABSCESS!!!!!! Under his ear. How the heck would that even happen?!

He got a little shave and it was lanced — all my efforts to have a stress-free life for the Wildflowers and Sage had to ensure THAT! He was nursing again quickly and seems fine, if a bit goopy. We will warm-pack it when he nurses and he has antibiotics — sigh.

Best intentions and all that…

Here is Sage showing off his Drunken Dinosaur imitation…

WF D10 Sage walking.jpg

The official Day Ten Puppy Pile

WF D10 Puppy Pile.jpg

Good night!

WF D10 Larkspur upside down.jpg




Work Cited

Fraga, M., De Moura, E., Da Silva Lima, N., Lisboa, P., De Oliveira, E., Silva, J., . . . Manhães, A. (2014). Anxiety-like, novelty-seeking and memory/learning behavioral traits in male Wistar rats submitted to early weaning. Physiology & Behavior, 124, 100-106.

Day Nine A.M. & P.M.

All is well here at Puppy Central. Three puppies have doubled their birth weight: Buttercup, Mallow, and Paintbrush.

This is Paintbrush doing his Yoda imitation.

WF D9 Paintbrush (1).jpg

Don’t worry — he will have normal ears for a Berner!

This is Clover — she is in second place in the Heavyweight division, which is rather surprising as she was not one of the bigger puppies at birth. She started off at 16.55 ounces and is now at 31.15.

WF D9 Clover (1).jpg

A look down at the Milk Bar crowd.

WF D9 Nursing babies (1).jpg

Mariposa is posing for those of you who love tummy pics.

WF D9 Mariposa (1).jpg

Clarkia (pictured here with Paintbrush) retains the heavyweight crown — for now. She weighed in at 31.3 ounces this morning — just barely ahead of Clover.

WF D9 Paintbrush and Clarkia (1).jpg

This is Sage and he is demanding a recount — apparently he is confused about how things work. He was just one-half ounce behind Clover this morning.

WF D9 Sage on Lupine (1).jpg

Mallow, pretending to be a bug below, remains the smallest puppy at 24.35 ounces. Given that he started off at 12.15 ounces, I think he is doing just fine.

WF D9 Mallow and Paintbrush (1).jpg

You will note some new whelping box decor. Yesterday I braved the Great Viral Unknown — once Dear Husband was awake to watch puppies, of course — to do the monthly shopping and so I treated the puppies to new fleeces.

WF D9 Day 9 puppy pile (2).jpg

We love a fun whelping box — and good thing because the puppies got flocked!

WF D9 Flocked (1).jpg

Nine KaiBobs showed up yesterday.

For those who are new to the blog, that won’t be as funny as it is to those of us who have seen KaiBobs show up for multiple generations of Kaibab puppies.

Their sender is a mystery but we think we know exactly who that generous person is — and we love and thank you for your support and always being so darn FUN.

And speaking fun — click HERE to watch a morning meal with the Wildflowers and to see why we do quite a few shift feedings during the day (and night). It is a bit of a rodeo, as you will see.

A shift feeding just means we let 4 - 5 puppies nurse at a time while the others continue their naps. This helps ensure weight gain is even — bigger puppies easily push smaller puppies off nipples if we always allow everyone all at once.

In addition to shift feedings, we also make sure Daisy nurses puppies on both rows of nipples by having her down on alternating sides for meals. Like with humans, lactation in dogs requires some thought and strategy to make sure it works well for all concerned.

NEWS FLASH and evening photos

Eyes are starting to open!

The eyes open very gradually over a period of days and vision is not clear at first. Ears typically are a week or so behind the eyes — but this means that the Wildflowers are getting ready to take in more of their new world.

Here is a better mouthing photo — as I said, they are not very good at it just yet. This is Lupine.

WF D9 Mouthing.jpg

Buttercup and Paintbrush — both of Buttercup’s eyes are opening.

WF D9 Buttercup and Paintbrush.jpg

Larkspur

WF D9 Larspur.jpg

I love this photo and am not 100% sure who it is — who do you think it is?

WF D9  ??.jpg

Paintbrush

WF D9 Paintbrush (2).jpg

Clover

WF D9  Clover.jpg

Lupine again

WF D9 Lupine.jpg

A good night kiss from Mariposa!

WF D9 Mariposa and Daisy.jpg