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Shes still too small. She needs to be a minimum of 5 lbs |
I wouldn't risk the life of my baby at only 3lbs. As othes mentioned there are a lot of tests that need to be done before you make a decision, and believe me they aren't cheap. |
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I definitely respect all the responses I have received, and definitely DONT want anything bad to happy to my beautiful Penelope. |
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I hardly see her hitting 5 lbs being 8 months already. My girl was 5 lbs at 9 months and she is a year now and still about 5-5.5 lbs. |
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WHy don't you go read in the breeders section. theres TWO people in there who just had to get c-sections for their babies and there babies were bigger then 5 lbs. Its not that cute and dandy as you may think. |
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Yorkies don't tend to gain much past 8 months. From 3.5 to 5 lbs that is ALOT for a yorkie! Don't get your hopes up. Even at 5 lbs that is a risk. Go read about it. My girl is 5-5.5 lbs and I wouldn't imagine her having babies. I would never consider breeding her. Maybe if I had a female that was 7 lbs like my moms I would feel comfortable. Just enjoy your tiny baby as a pet. |
From my own experience - she is going to be way too small to breed. She is just not going to be big enough when grown to be able to breed safely. The others are so right. I know you are still young (20s) and have high hopes and wants, but the reality is she is too small. You have to remember that you would not be able to go to work or go to school when she is due and at least a few days after she whelps. I do not think you may have known about this. Also the pet insureance covers certain things - things they need and usually do not cover things that you made happen by choice - like breeding. I am not completly sure, but from what I heard. So it will be some things for you also to consider. I had an experience just a month ago where my champion female (5.5 pounds)went into labor early and we had to do a c-section (reason - a pup was in both horns blocking things up). At least it was during the workday, so it was only 700.00. She had 3 pups and the next day we lost one pup, the next day another one died, and then the 3rd day the last pup went. We tried everything and still nothing worked, their lungs were just not developed enough. We even built an oxygen tent and paid for oxygen - not cheap. I was up the whole time, so no sleep for 4 days. Also the mom had a really hard time coming off the anthesia - took 10 hours and I had to sit with her the whole time, so she would not do anything crazy and to make sure she came out of it okay. It was kinda scary for the first 7 hours, the way she looked and just not acting right. I was really afraid that I was going to loose her too. So take my word of advice for the safety of your girl - don't even hope to breed your girl. |
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I would suggest that in the meantime, while you are researching and waiting for her to grow up, you find an experienced breed mentor to work with. Get some hands on experience and advice from someone who's been breeding for a while. |
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Also, in regards to CH bloodlines...that could mean a multitude of things. It could mean that there are numerous CH on each side of her pedigree in recent generations, or it could mean there are one or two CH several generations back. It makes a big difference when it comes to how much of the "Champion" genes you mention are being passed down. I say this just to point out that saying she comes from "champion lines" doesn't really give enough info to other members that they can base an opinion on. (Does that make sense?) |
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