Day 45 A.M. & P.M.

The Wildflowers are conspiring to make the farewells slightly less awful. They are doing this by collectively demanding a change to my morning routine, which I find highly objectionable. There are, however, more of them than me — and the Montana Puppy Choir is LOUD.

Paintbrush and Sage

Paintbrush and Sage

And so their breakfast has been moved to precede my morning coffee. This is sorely testing my cheerful morning demeanor but luckily, they are cute and I know it is not forever.

On days like this when their meals are raw food, they need to eat individually to reduce the chances of making a mess and having raw food all over their heads. Gross. This individual meal service takes more time, further delaying the morning coffee.

After eating, the puppies head for the playroom (aka Living Room) — and I basically become a Bathroom Attendant at this point in the proceedings, which is not conducive to coffee drinking, FYI.

Eventually they settle down to play and I can feed the big dogs — and finally, make coffee.

WF D45 Clarkia.jpg

It is hard to overstate how all-consuming it is raise a litter of puppies well.

My Fitbit tells me I average only about 6 1/2 hours of sleep per night and I get over 10k steps in a day just moving puppies around. I forget to answer emails (or worse — think I have answered them) and find it hard to concentrate on non-puppy things that need doing.

Paintbrush

Paintbrush

I am not actually complaining — I knew all this going in, after all.

One of my goals in blogging about this litter is to educate. Not only do I want to share information but I also want people to understand there is a big difference between a breeder who has the litter out in the barn or kennel, and one that pours her/his life into these eight weeks.

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I hope it is also clear that it matters. Puppies are not blank slates when they arrive at their new homes — they are complex living creatures whose brains have been developing and getting “wired” for eight weeks.

Larkspur

Larkspur

It hurts my heart to imagine the stressed and/or deprived lives experienced by so many puppies and their mothers. Every puppy deserves to be raised as the Wildflowers have, but I know this is the exception because yes — it is hard and time-consuming.

You — the person looking for a puppy — can help change things.

Please insist on getting a puppy from parents who have ALL the recommended health testing/screening, and require the breeder show evidence of raising litters in intelligent, thoughtful, enriched ways.

Creating life should be done with integrity — and so should acquiring a puppy.

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Please have a terrific — and ethical — day!

THIS is a morning video.

THIS is a lunchtime video.

EVENING: PHOTOS and Thoughts from the Day

Every time a puppy has a successful new experience, something marvelous happens in their developing brains.

Buttercup

Buttercup

Therefore, they need constant new experiences to master — not scary and new but doable and new.

As I have said before — what we want when something novel shows up (sprinkler moved to disk) is this…

WF D45 Explorers.jpg

And that happens when the new experience is appropriate AND the puppy has experience mastering new things.

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Daisy has started to play with her babies, and I am reminded that it is normal for dog play to include their mouths…

WF D45 Daisy and Buttercup.jpg

We cannot really expect a puppy to NOT use her mouth — what we can expect is that she learn to do it gently…

Clarkia and Lupine — ganging up on mom.

Clarkia and Lupine — ganging up on mom.

Tonight each puppy had an individual training session. My specific goals were to take them to a new place and reinforce following.

I took each to two new places, put them down and walked away 5 - 6 steps. When they caught up, I gave them a treat (cooked egg) and went the other direction — repeat. If the puppy stayed with me, I reached down and rewarded every 3 - 4 steps.

Sage

Sage

I made sure to give the treat when the puppy had four feet on the ground — we do not want to inadvertently teach a puppy to jump up, which is what we do when we give treats when their front paws are up on us.

I also did not lure puppies to follow me — the treats were not to create the behavior but rather to reinforce the behavior.

All of the puppies did a great job following, and had no issue with the new places.

Sage and Lupine

Sage and Lupine

Definitely no social distancing at the Milk Bar!

WF D45 Nursing.jpg

Good Night, Friends!

Day 44 A.M. & P.M.

Our day is starting extra early and so the main post/pics for today will happen later — but here are some sleepy puppies getting ready for yet another busy morning…

WF D44 Clover.jpg
WF D44 Four Puppies.jpg

Please have a wonderful day!

Also, Galen thinks he fixed the comments so that they are easier for people to post as a Guest — in case anyone wants to try and report :)

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

Thank you for testing the Comments— it works! So fun to have comments again!

Eden was here again this morning before she headed back home (North Carolina) and so there were more puppy evaluations — this is Larkspur…

Larkspur 6 weeks (1).jpg

Suzanne also stopped by and there was some draft practice and a walk in the Lupines…

WF D44 Lupine.jpg

It was lovely and cool in the morning…

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We switched from the splash pad to a sprinkler today — that was fun.

WF D44 Sprinkler.jpg
WF D44 Nikon.jpg

The evaluations help inform puppy placement but six weeks is still a bit early for everything to be finalized. Rather, it is a snapshot — and we will keep watching and learning about who and what each Wildflower is meant to become.

When it gets warm, we migrate inside but because of Covid, we only do visits in the outside area. Therefore, visiting hours are done once it warms up — usually by 12 or 1. You have to be a Morning Person to visit the Wildflowers :)

The inside area is in the living room — this is Larkspur again…

WF D44 Larkspur.jpg

Clarkia — the slide was a big hit all of a sudden…

WF D44 Clarkia.jpg
WF D44 three on slide.jpg

Paintbrush…

WF D44 Paintbrush.jpg

Good Night, Friends!

Day 43 A.M. & P.M.

The Wildflowers will not be vaccinated for anything before they leave for their new homes.

Am I an Anti-Vaxxer? Absolutely Not!

They won’t be vaccinated because a vaccine would not work and it would create a 2 - 3 weeks window of risk for the puppies.

Let me explain.

A single vaccination is all that is needed to provide protection to a puppy. We typically do a series simply because we are not certain when the vaccination will “work” — and that is because puppies arrive with their mother’s antibodies, which both protect puppies from the disease(s) but also “block” the vaccination.

We checked Daisy’s antibodies before the puppies were born using the Canine Nomograph. The results showed that the earliest the puppies would respond to a Distemper vaccine is nine weeks and the soonest they will respond to a Parvo vaccine is 15 weeks.

A vaccination at eight weeks, therefore, would would be ineffective because of high levels of maternal antibodies.

But starting at about nine weeks, the puppies won’t have maternal antibodies against Distemper and the window of disease risk is wide open.

If we vaccinated at eight weeks, the puppy would not have a second vaccination — one that would work for Distemper — until 11 or 12 weeks. Therefore, from about nine weeks until 11 - 12 weeks, the puppy would be unprotected from Distemper.

A typical vaccination schedule is 8, 12, and 16 weeks. If such a schedule were utilized with the Wildflowers, the first one would be useless and represent an unnecessary vaccine burden, the second one would be effective against Distemper but useless for Parvo, and the third one should protect for Parvo and would be unnecessary for Distemper.

Extra or unnecessary vaccinations are not a good plan — we should minimize as we can. That will be a conversation for another day — the Wildflowers have a busy day of visiting and we need to get started.

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EVENING: Photos from the day and VIDEO (click the word video).

This is the Wildflowers’ outside play area…

WF D43 set up.jpg
Mariposa

Mariposa

How many visitors do you see?

WF D43  puppies.jpg

Sit-down nursing is now a thing…

WF D43  nursing.jpg

Paintbrush and Mallow…

WF D43  Paintbrush and Mallow.jpg

Lupine…

WF D43  Lupine.jpg

Eden Jonas is here and we spent the day evaluating puppies and visiting — Suzanne joined us for some of the time. The stacking practice paid off — this is Paintbrush…

WF D43  Paintbrush.jpg

Good Night, Friends!