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Old 08-19-2014, 02:37 PM   #9
Yorkiemom1
Rosehill Yorkies
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Houston Texas
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[QUOTE=yorkietalkjilly;4478570]What if you should lose her due to septicemia or some other quirk of whelping as we did out Doberman bitch when we bred her. We'd gone through an apprenticeship with her breeder at her ranch on weekends and myself during the week, we'd studied all about genetics, pregnancy, whelping, helped in whelpings, used the breeder's highly-esteemed vet of choice and still everything went wrong as she whelped early, and we lost a pup stillborn, almost lost another she'd pushed aside & was cold in its sack but was revived, 3 died on the 3rd day of life as their momma also did from what the vet said was an infection/septicemia of her blood from her milk/mammary glands which had quickly flared into a full-body infection w/in 18 hours or so at the vet hospital and then my beautiful girl was was gone. I had to hand raise the rest of the litter 24/7 from Day 3 after my girl died and it was sheer hell. I got no sleep for 2 - 3 weeks except for a few cat naps. You have to stimulate the pups to poop, pee, feed them every 3-4 hours day and night, keep them warm enough, carry them back and forth to the vet for blood tests and check-ups if anything goes wrong with the litter, give them medicine during the day and night, deal with colic from the formula, nurture them and fill in in every way for mom right up through weaning, teaching them about all the things she normally imprints on their brains, should you lose her.

It cost us a fortune in money for all the ER fees, hospital costs for her & the pups and in exhaustion, constant work but that was nothing compared to the pain and tragedy of losing our beautiful Dobie girl, Cobra, who was gone forever. I'll always miss her. She was so smart and elegant.

Unless you are fully prepared to face a potential life-threatening emergency at home, know everything to do in a sudden pregnancy/whelping/puppy-crash emergency, have all the equipment, drugs & know how to use them until you can stabilize her/pups for safe transport to the vet, and fully understand genetics and she and her stud are cleared as free from all health defects going back generations so as not to pass any genetic medical or serious temperament issues along to the pups, I would not breed my girl, knowing what I know now.[/QUOTE]

Here we have someone that had gone through a mentorship with an experienced breeder, had done all the prep work, had an experienced breeder close at hand, and excellent vet on standby, and what should have been a wonderful, snuggle, loving experience, tuned into a horrific, tragic, heartbreaking mishap that ended up costing the life of puppies, the life of their beautiful momma, and and enormous amount of money. We breeders always ask ourselves before each breeding, "Is this the litter that is going to produce a spectacular, beautiful pup that could easily be paid for with the life of my bitch?" These are breeding pairs who's pedigrees have been researched for generations back, so you KNOW what the breeding of these two dogs is MOST likely to produce.....in MY opinion, it is never even a fleeting thought, to just blindly breed two dogs, and hope like hail everything turns out great.....end up with live babies, momma survives, no emergencies ....but you are just starting the game at that part. If you have managed to produce babies with genetic health issues, liver, heart, kidney, eyes, hips, weak or failing or compromised immune system, YOU are responsible for doing that. How you stand up to THAT, determines your worth as a breeder. You need to think very long and hard before you step off into the deep end of this pool......you may come out lucky and just sacrifice your momma's life, in order to.......???

Last edited by Yorkiemom1; 08-19-2014 at 02:40 PM.
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