Day 51 A.M.

Observations and reflections from Puppy Central this morning…

The slide is a way to put some distance between siblings and the bully sticks — it rarely works as intended.

The slide is a way to put some distance between siblings and the bully sticks — it rarely works as intended.

Bully sticks (or similar high value chew things but let’s just say bully sticks) are like screen time and kids: they get obsessed and zone out on that thing to the exclusion of other things.

Good info.

Use bully sticks to your advantage.

Need a break — bully stick. Need your coffee — bully stick. Wild and crazy puppy — bully stick.

Like screen time for kids, bully stick time is a good thing when used in moderation. But we also want puppies to engage with us and their environment, and so just be mindful of all that.

WF D51 slide.jpg

And speaking of paying attention — please pay attention to your puppy.

Ignoring a puppy’s attempts to engage and connect is a perfect way to teach them to just ignore you.

Paintbrush made it clear this morning that he needed some attention — he did this by standing on the x-pen and whining at me as other puppies were engaged with bully sticks.

One might say we should ignore the puppy who does this because acting on it would reinforce undesired behavior. Who wants a puppy that is climbing the x-pen or jumping up, One might say.

Sigh.

I see that behavior as a desire to connect and I WANT that in a puppy. I reinforce engagement all the time because we need a dog who is engaged with their humans.

You can see at the end of THIS video that I stop recording when I see what Paintbrush needs. I put the phone down, reached in and shaped/lured his little body into four feet on the floor and picked him up.

OF COURSE.

The behavior I reinforced was his bid for connection or engagement; I also let the puppy know that a human will meet his need.

This is REALLY important.

When we ignore behavior, it will go away/be suppressed — but consider carefully the behavior we are extinguishing by ignoring it. People spend months ignoring their puppy’s bids for connection — and then are puzzled as to why their dog ignores them.

Ahem — you taught that lack of engagement by ignoring the puppy’s attempts to connect.

I do not want to teach a puppy to jump up BUT I won’t ignore that bid for connection.

Instead, I will quickly lure the puppy into a sit (or at first — just four feet on the floor) and then pick her up or otherwise engage with her. In addition, I will look for opportunities to reinforce that sit (or four feet on the floor) BEFORE the puppy has a chance to jump.

In this way, I will be reinforcing the bid for connection and teaching the puppy how to make it — just sit/stand and look adorable. Works every time when you are a puppy; not so much in an adult human, FYI.

Paintbrush — needs met, of course.

Paintbrush — needs met, of course.

What if the puppy is crying in the crate in her new home? If she might need to potty — take her out.

If she was just out and it is minor whining — ignore for a bit to see if she settles down.

Hysterical and upset? Take her out, soothe her for a few minutes, and put her back with a stuffed Kong or something like that — and/or just have yourself close and try to keep her calm by petting/talking.

Remember — these are not little dogs. They are BABIES and as Lori says, they are babies longer than they are small.

WF D51 donut toy (1).jpg

One last thing — because I am with puppies all day, I decided to collect some data. They always potty when they wake up so remember that — but how often do small puppies pee when playing? So far, it looks like just under 30 minutes but I will continue data collection for a couple of days.

WF D51 two pups.jpg

Have a fun and engaged day — we sure will! New — video evidence of this HERE.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

CLARKIA

CLARKIA

CLOVER

CLOVER

Mariposa

Mariposa

BUTTERCUP

BUTTERCUP

Mallow on my latest creation.

Mallow on my latest creation.

LUPINE

LUPINE

LARKSPUR

LARKSPUR

WF D51  platform.jpg

Good Night, Friends.

Day 50: A.M. & P.M.

A puppy was crying at 4 a.m.

I can tell the difference between “HELP! My mouth is stuck on the x-pen” and “I want breakfast.”

WF D50 Through fence.jpg

I do not leap up for complaints about the late hour of breakfast (which is about 5:15 a.m. FYI) but it is hard to sleep once the Montana Puppy Choir starts morning rehearsals.

Sage and Clarkia

Sage and Clarkia

This explains why I got even less sleep than normal last night.

This is a tender time in the life of a breeder. Exhaustion and impending losses with associated anticipatory grieving on top of so many things to do in preparation for sending puppies to new homes — it is just a lot.

DSC_7612.jpg

If my goal is to educate and inform about the Life and Times of Puppy Central — and it is — then I need to also share that kind of stuff. I am not complaining — these puppies are worth every downed Little Soldier and this is temporary, after all.

But yes, this is one of the peak challenging times here at Puppy Central.

My water cup…

WF D50 cups.jpg

The puppies’ water bowl…

WF D50 water bowl.jpg

Both are true — for all of us.

Renee sent along this great resource/product for bully sticks, and the company appears to have good quality products. I have ordered a medium Starter Kit for the puppy who will be staying here with us. Thanks, Renee!!!

Heart Rock.jpg

We have such a fabulous community around these puppies — so much gratitude to every single one of you.

Morning video HERE — it includes seeing the puppies react to new people.

EVENING: A FEW PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

The puppies continued to demonstrate excellent people skills today — they met five new people.

WF D50 Clover and friend.jpg

They did not, however, appreciate the giant UPS truck and all ran for cover when that came noisily up the driveway. Understandable and good info. Beware of noisy trucks.

The storytelling dragon was a gift from Grandma Toby — it is beyond fun and adorable. Thank you, Toby!

WF D50.jpg

It is a warm evening and so I moved the splash pad and added a few things to it — and turned it up.

WF D50 (1).jpg

Buttercup stayed nice and cool.

WF D50 Wet Buttercup.jpg

Carol calls those freckles Zimmer Spots — those who know Zimmer will understand.

As I previously mentioned (see the post for Day 30), my veterinarian supported a plan to avoid worming puppies without evidence of need.

Step One was a stool sample from Daisy at four weeks — it was negative, and so we did not worm the puppies.

Step Two was stool samples from five random puppies checked both in-house and sent out to another lab as well. All five tested puppies share these negative results…

worming results (1).jpg

We are confident the results represent the entire litter. Step Three will be a follow-up puppy stool sample at 15 - 16 weeks.

Yes, all this is more expensive than just worming them every three weeks — but why would I unnecessarily treat for a problem a puppy doesn’t actually have? That make no sense to me.

I hope you have had a wonderful day and I wish for ALL of us a good night’s sleep — including and especially the Montana Puppy Choir.

Good Night, Friends.

Day 49: A.M. & P.M.

Puppy placement decisions are coming down to the wire as we see personalities emerge — puppies and humans.

I have had incredibly gracious and kind responses to my emails telling people I won’t have a puppy for them; I am actively trying to find puppies for these people.

I have also had a response that confirmed my decision to not place a puppy with the person — OUCH but I appreciate the information that my assessment was correct.

This is hard stuff for a person with an empathic heart, I assure you.

WF D49 Paintbrush.jpg

Busy morning — I need to deliver puppy stool samples to the veterinarian and also put the Wildflower Veterinary Recommendations under her nose to get her input. I promise to make up for the lack of morning photos this evening.

In the meantime, I invite all of us to consider the need to be gracious and kind, even and especially when we do not get what we want.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

Seven weeks old today — amazing.

Clarkia — she weighs 8.7 pounds.

Clarkia — she weighs 8.7 pounds.

Lupine — she weighs 8.5 pounds.

Lupine — she weighs 8.5 pounds.

Sage — 9.3 pounds

Sage — 9.3 pounds

Paintbrush — 8.1 pounds.

Paintbrush — 8.1 pounds.

WF D49 Water play again.jpg
WF D49 Water play.jpg
WF D49 Tummy.jpg
WF D49 Tug with pants (1).jpg
Mallow — 8 pounds

Mallow — 8 pounds

Mariposa — 8.5 pounds

Mariposa — 8.5 pounds

WF D49 Three ay puppy pile.jpg
Larkspur — 8.7 pounds.

Larkspur — 8.7 pounds.

Clover — 9.6 pounds.

Clover — 9.6 pounds.

Buttercup — 8.8 pounds.

Buttercup — 8.8 pounds.

Good Night, Friends!