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I offer during and immediately after whelp, when all has settled down. 1. Can of Goats Milk 2. Equal Parts of Distilled Water 3. Egg Yolk well beaten 4. 1 Tablespoon of Light Karo Syrup. During the Nursing Time 1. 12 oz of distilled water, warmed in microwave 2. 1 envelope of unflavored geletin - disolve in warmed water. 3. 2 well beaten egg yolks 4. 2 tablespoons of Karo Syrup 5. 2 Tablespoons of Vanilla Yogurt (low-fat). I spoon out a tablespoon a couple of times a day and offer it to mom in addition to her food. I put mom's on a high quality puppy kibble and canned food, steamed boneless, skinless chicken breast......Offer nothing that has soy in it.....it is a calcium depleter. Even treats are all natural......Also, on any litter that is larger than 2....A scrambled egg a day with calcium.....lots of sunshine...need that vitamin D to absorb that calcium properly. |
Thank you for clarifying this. A lot of people believe, and I know I had been told by a past mentor, that a female should be bred with a smaller male to ensure that the puppies in utero are not too big for you female. I have always questioned this with Vets and mentors and I have been told the same as you have just said by most. Again, this comes down to the reasoning for most breeders line-breeding, correct? The only reason to be concerned about a male being larger than your female is that he could hurt the female during the mating, but this also comes down to the importance of holding the dogs until they are untied to prevent this. Please correct me if I am wrong. Quote:
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I'd be more concerned with the female hurting the male.......That is unless you're attempting to breed a larger different breed to a yorkie. Puppy size in utero is controlled by the mother...... |
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Somewhat it is true... if you know your female is 5 pounds why would you breed her to a 7 pound male? makes not much sense as it is clear he has the genes for bigger. But no doubt you need to know the lines very very well ! I learned my lesson. And so did many other breeders. I know a few people that got disappointed with the lines of the breeders that championed this male i am talking about. Apparently they have some bigger and heavier traits on their lines. It may work well for their females but i know at least another 4 good breeders that encountered the same i did. We are holding back a male from our family and he is not going to be a tiny boy, but we know very well all of his generations, health, size, temperament and traits. Although he is not the smallest male, he has nice lines. And to be honest a nice sized male breeds so much easier than a very little one. I would say.... do not breed a 7 pound male to a 5 pound female... but also do not trust a 3.5 /4 pound male as it can just be the runt ! Also it is 50 % 50% ... get to know your females well too.... and specially the family whelping history ... does she come from free whelpers??? I read a post from mardelin about it a long time ago and she mentioned that. Again, i am learning a lot, and my family breeds dogs for soooo long... my Great grandma was a breeder already and she did not have the studies and resources we have today, but the word of wisdom was always passed down and todays researches are only confirming what they had found out through experience years ago. XOXO |
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I have a very fined boned male.....wasn't the runt a Johnnie Handsome Grandson. 99% of the time he produces his sire, who was around 7 pounds and medium boned.....I've put him with my females who always range in the 6 to 7 pound range......they always produce pups in the 4 to 6 oz range..... |
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Yes i get it on the use of the sire... the main reason we are keeping in our family a male from our actual sire, who is actually very little but that is not the reason we like him. But being little he has such a hard time breeding ... kkkk ... some days i think he will die in the middle of so much "looooviiing"...kkkk "99% of the time he produces his sire, who was around 7 pounds " That is the part i did not understand??? What do you mean? Thanks as always ... XOXO |
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It's a gift when you find a stud that reproduces himself. My boy has done it twice....the rest he's produced his sire's size. Now there are his attributes that have been passed down to him via Pastoral, This Time and Firacres (all lthese lines are pretty much intertwined) Lines......such as showmanship, head carriage, movement, temperament, health, intelligence and topline as well as that gorgeous head.....that he does pass down to his offspring. |
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