Fall 2001 litter
+ Group activities and sexual play will begin
+ Dominance order starts
+ Rapid growth/development
I will let Gabby
decide when she has had enough of them. Since the pups can get out of the whelping box now, I have a separate X-pen set up that only Gabby can get into. This
gives her a place to go if she does want a break from them. The pups have sharp little teeth just erupting. They are starting to play with the toys in the box.
Chewing on each other and the softer rubber toys. They will learn from each other how sharp those teeth are and not to bite too hard.
Someone mentioned how clean the toys look. :-) I have three sets of toys, almost identical. (I buy in bulk!) the rubber toys go in the dishwasher with the food pans, the cloth and fuzzy ones go in the laundry with the whelping box pad. That way I have a set in the box, a set in the wash and a set drying.
The pups weigh between 3 3/4 lbs and 5 1/4 lbs. It is Interesting that the smallest pup is a liver girl, and the largest pup is a liver girl! The majority of pups are just
about 4 1/2 lbs.
We clipped nails again today. I don't know many adult curlies who tolerate nail cutting without a fuss. Already the pups find effective ways to squirm and make it
difficult! While clipping nails, the liver yellow female climbed out of the box, went potty, then climbed back in the box. What a smart girl to not want to mess in her
bedding..... of course, she went potty in Gabby's food dish.... but its a start!
11/7/2001 Meet the whole gang. Individual pictures of all the pups.
(some of them didn't cooperate real well!)
Your Curlies General Health (ears/eyes/teeth,etc)
Puppies born 10/8/2001 ~ 10/9/2001
4 black girls, 3 liver girls, 2 black boys, 2 liver boys.
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Breeding: What We're Taught There are many platitudes in the dog world, such as "A fast maturing puppy will fade" and "Only breed when you'll keep one for yourself." This last maxim is even used to chastise breeders who do not keep a puppy from every litter. The idea is that in every litter there will be a star puppy who should be grown out by the breeder. The fact is that not all litters produce show puppies. Keeping even the best puppy from a mediocre litter will not achieve the breeder's objectives. It would be best to place these puppies in permanent companion homes and try something different the next time around, but this is not often done in our breed. Instead, the breeder keeps the best in a particular litter, grows out the pick puppy, and takes her to dog shows. Dog shows are unforgiving and soon identify mediocrity. A determined person will put many shows on an average dog in an attempt to "prove" her breeding program. It would be better to make a more critical evaluation of puppies at 8 weeks and come to more realistic conclusions about their future prospects. Another example of conventional wisdom involves litter frequency. This is carried to extremes when people start judging breeders by numbers: "Did you know she had (three, four) litters last year?" As if this were something shameful. In our breed, which has fallen from 36th in AKC registrations to 100th in a decade, this so-called wisdom is hardly wise. We need dedicated people who are willing to study, spend the time, and do the work necessary to breed dogs. Having one litter every few years does not make one a breeder, nor does it provide a person with the experience required to whelp and raise puppies or to develop a consistent line of dogs. When you have questions and problems with a litter, who do you call? I call someone who has been breeding dogs for 50 years and, at one time that I remember, had three litters at once. He is in another breed, and has never been criticized for the excellent job he did with his puppies. Spring always found him whelping at least one litter for himself, and perhaps a few more for other people. We need these master breeders desperately: They have a wealth of knowledge to share about breeding dogs and raising puppies. We also need more ways to record their knowledge, share it with others and preserve it for the future. We need dedicated people in our breed and, in fact, in every breed to continue the lines and to work to breed the best dogs possible. As baby boomers retire from breeding dogs over the next two decades, we will have to recruit new breeders to carry on. Holding people back with worn-out phrases will not work. There is room for everyone, for those who can breed only occasionally and for those who will become the master breeders of the future. We need to encourage and learn from those who have the time, resources, and dedication to spend shaping the future of our breeds. Reprinted from the June 2006 AKC Gazette breed Keeshonden breed column. Written by Deborah A. Lynch. Deborah A. Lynch is the Executive Vice-President of the AKC Canine Health Foundation. She has been a breeder and exhibitor of Keeshonden since 1971 under the Foxfair prefix. She is a member of the Keeshond Club of America and is past President of the Buckeye Keeshond Club. Deborah has also been a member of the Dog Writers Association of America and has judged her breed both in the USA and England.
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