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