Day 48 A.M. & P.M.

The end of my time with a litter always sneaks up on me — in just a week the puppies will have their pre-farewell veterinary exams and then they will be eight weeks and starting to leave us.

Paintbrush

Paintbrush

All of us.

As with previous litters, new families will be asked to provide an update/photos every week or so for a while so these can be shared on the blog to help with our collective Wildflower Withdrawal; blog analytics tell me that the Wildflowers have a Fan Club.

Larkspur and KaiBob

Larkspur and KaiBob

Today I want to invite the creation of another collaborative document — New Puppy Home Instructions. Based on your experience and knowledge what should new homes know about raising a Berner puppy? What advice did you receive that was great, dumb, impractical or invaluable?

This is a collaborative effort so you do not need to have a complete list — just email what comes to your mind as important (or not important) when raising a Berner puppy (sontag.bowman@gmail.com).

Send multiple emails if you continue to think of things over the week. I will plan to summarize our collaboration next weekend, and it will be a new page on our website.

Thank you for helping to support and foster community and collective wisdom around these puppies and their new families. They all deserve it.

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One thing that will be on the list is the importance of considering and monitoring toys. I added those plastic things (from the play structure) back and they are a big hit BUT I am watching closely to make sure nobody gets obsessive about the cord.

Puppies can and do swallow all kinds of dangerous things. In general, rope toys are not a great idea and especially if they have stringy ends. Cloth toys need to be heavy duty fabric. If a piece can come off — or be chewed off — it is dangerous to a puppy.

And so I sit here and watch as I write/work/attempt to drink coffee before it gets cold. If I could not have this level of oversight, I would remove all toys — including the fabric tunnel — except kongs and the adult-sized nylabones.

See the “strings” on the tunnel? I watch it closely. With multiple puppies playing, the tunnel moves too much for any one puppy to start gnawing on the string but s/he likely would if alone with it.

Sage

Sage

I recently read an interesting study comparing dog age and human age — seven human years for every dog year is a myth. An eight-week-old puppy is roughly equivalent to a nine-month-old human.

This is helpful — consider the level of oversight you would provide to a nine-month-old infant who explores by putting everything in her mouth. With a human baby, we remove dangerous things, redirect, provide safe things to chew on, get bitten a few times, and understand it is a rare child who heads off to preschool still putting everything in her mouth.

The nature of development is that things change. Just as we do not need to teach human infants to stop putting everything in their mouths, so too does normal growth and development (and appropriate redirection) take care of puppy mouthing and biting.

Mallow

Mallow

Human infants who mouth and bite their parents do not grow up to be cannibals. Likewise, puppies who mouth and bite their humans do not grow up to be vicious. Our job is all about understanding what is normal, managing our expectations, and redirecting to safe and less painful options — with human infants and dog infants.

And they are out…

And they are out…

Please have a wonderfully amazing day with well-managed expectations of self and others.

EVENING: PHOTOS AND VIDEO (Click HERE for video)

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Clover

Clover

More time with our wonderful visitors — this is Sparkle delivering Berner Love.

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Mallow

Mallow

Sage

Sage

Mariposa

Mariposa

Clarkia

Clarkia

Good Night, Friends!

Day 47 A.M. & P.M.

The internet continues to be problematic, taking almost four hours (so far!) to upload a nine-minute video to YouTube. I hope it will be worth the wait.

In the meantime…

The kongs are now interesting to some of the puppies — this is Sage with a kong stuffed with banana…

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In general, I do not use dog treats with puppies. Puppies can and do have TINY pieces of healthy “human” foods — like string cheese, pasta, banana, toddler meat sticks, pieces of an omelette, Puffs, and so on. When they are older, kibble or goldfish crackers can also be used as treats — or you can make your puppy treats.

If you do decide to buy treats, look for healthy and soft and small for the puppies.

While we are on the subject of food — I will share the BalanceIt-generated recipes for the puppies privately and closer to when they go home but I wanted to let you know what you will need:

  • Rice, brown, long-grain, cooked

  • Chicken breast, skinless, boneless, roasted (or turkey breast)

  • Oil, canola

  • Nordic Naturals Omega-3 Pet Liquid

  • Morton Iodized Salt

  • Balance IT® Canine

The bully sticks I am using are not the usual ones because most of those do not pass muster. What I have are Nature Gnaws Bully Sticks 12 inch (Premium Natural Free-Range Beef Chew Treats for Dogs) and I get them from Amazon.

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The puppies only get them under supervision and they have to share — this means nobody is gnawing too much on one. When the stick gets small and swallowable, I will throw it away — we do not want puppies swallowing pieces of a bully stick.

Outside time was Big Fun…

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…as evidenced in THIS VIDEO, which finally uploaded.

As you watch the video, pay attention to the interaction between Daisy and the puppy at about six minutes. The puppy was pulling Daisy’s tail — hard. Watch what she does — and what she doesn’t — and remember this when anyone tries to tell you mother dogs roll their babies or scruff shake them or any other aggressive nonsense.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

The puppies had special visitors today — all the way from Iowa! How do the puppies respond to new people? See for yourself…

Outside, social distancing, zoom lens on the camera, masks on hand

Outside, social distancing, zoom lens on the camera, masks on hand

And what does Daisy think about new friends with her puppies?

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No problem.

Sparkle also visited the Wildflowers today…

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Mr. Congeniality (aka Mallow) was there to show her around.

Paintbrush — and yes, he managed to jump out of the wading pool with this!

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Clover — still an adventurer…

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Mallow…

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Smart and engaged — Clarkia…

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All that fun was exhausting so they practiced sleeping in the crate. Cozy.

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Good Night, Friends!

Day 46 A.M. & P.M.

I prefer my working dogs to be smart and stable enough to work, and so I take puppy enrichment very, very seriously — as you likely have figured out by now.

The Wildflowers sleep in the dining room and after breakfast they move to the inside play area in the living room — this is all well before 6:30 a.m., mind you!

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Things change constantly for the puppies because mastering SAFE novel experiences are what matters when we are talking puppy enrichment.

And so there is one less yoga mat today and the slide is in a different spot and there are new toys and a new surface — and so on.

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The outlets still speak to the puppies!

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This toy is stuffed with toys and they have yet to figure out how to unstuff.

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After a while, it is time to migrate to the outside play area. Again, there are constant changes to this area — this is today’s version…

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The RV is parked on the driveway and serves as one side of the puppy yard — very handy since I stay outside with them.

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Daisy hangs out with us for a bit, of course.

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All I do is configure things, take photos and make sure they stay alive — the puppy antics are their own ideas.

When puppies are used to mastering constantly changing new experiences, they are good at it — and bold.

This is a series from a tunnel war…

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The tunnel collapse and noise is just not a big deal to them — stuff like this happens all the time and it is always okay — hence, confidence.

Here is Mallow…

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And now a series from Lupine — she starts at one end before going through the tunnel…

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…to emerge at this end, where she goes across the entire series of “stuff” I created for today…

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This is Clover — look at what she does…

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Larkspur joined the fun…

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Confidence comes from mastery — and there is no chance for mastery when things are the boring same stuff every day.

This is a bed that is very light and pops up on one end — like this…

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When puppies walk on it, they can ride it down — just like a lightweight teeter! It lands high enough not to hurt the ones underneath.

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No problem — nobody is worried or scared because they are used to stuff like this, and they expect it to be just fine.

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Today’s water is just a sprinkler but turned up a bit higher — this is Mariposa…

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One way to make thing novels is to switch them out for a few days and then bring them back — the structure is back today and it was quite interesting to the puppies. This is Paintbrush.

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I think it is a lot of fun to consider how to create safe novel experiences for the Wildflowers to master, and as they enjoy my creations I just imagine all the excellent “wiring” being laid down in their developing brains.

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Life with Dogs — a chance to do something REALLY well.

Or not, I suppose.

But I love my puppies and so they get my best.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

It got pretty hot here today and so we were inside for the afternoon. The puppies are NOT fans of heat.

Sleeping on the slide is a thing…

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Lupine

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Paintbrush

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One of the things puppies did today for the first time is eat while wearing this little harness. A small harness is a safe way to travel with a puppy as it is harder to slip out of than a collar.

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Our internet must also be heat intolerant because it is too slow to post anymore tonight.

Good Night, Friends!