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ceeby's wife has been born!!!!!!!!!!! Dilemia!!!! The breeder I got Ceeby from just called today and told me she has my female. There were females in the litter and I can take my pick. They are two weeks old and i won't get to pick until they are five or six weeks old. My problem is this; I took Ceeby in to be weighed this morning and he weighs 3lbs. at five months old. The vet said he might not gain much more. The breeder said he would be around three to four pounds grown and the weight chart on here said 2.89lbs when grown. Course I know that no one really knows how big they will be but i thought I was purchasing a smaller yorkie. Don't care tho, how big he gets as long as he doesn't get too big for my girl The question is how will I be able to at least halfway guess how big my girl will be? I am purchasing her to breed. I know her mom weights five pounds or a little over and her dad is less. Should I go for the biggest girl in the litter? |
I would pick the largest female and hope for the best. I will tell you though My female weighed 5 lbs at 6 months and weighs 6 lbs now so they do sometimes still gain weight untill about 12 months so Ceeby might still gain some weight. Hopefully he will still stay small enough though. |
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Ive never heard that it is unsafe if the male is the same size only if the male is larger so you probably will be okay. |
That is sooo exciting that you are getting a new baby! :hug: I think I would pick the biggest one too since you want to breed it! Good luck! Can't wait to see pics! |
How exiting!!:) I would choose the bigger female too,if you want to breed her she should be at least 6lbs+ to do so,so bigger is better in this case:) Your male could still put on another lb (or maybe not),but even so he is still very little so dont worry about that.There is really no real way of knowing what they will weigh as full grown adults.Lady stopped growing at about 4 months old and at 2 years old she is under 2lbs and has been that way ever since then.The rule of thumb didnt work with her although it did with my other yorkie Jess. Congrats on your new adition:) |
Of course, there is a good possibility that even the biggest female won't be big enough to breed. |
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When you are looking for a mate you need to consider a lot of different things. We had our females first and then got our male. I had the pick of the litter. I looked at them at 6 weeks and the smallest one looked like it would have an overbite (no teeth yet, but gums on top stuck out further). I went back at 9 weeks and picked the pup I thought I would like. then when I went at 12 weeks to pick him up I changed my mind and got a different pup that had a totally different personality from his brothers. Even though pups are from the same litter everything about them can be different even their coat types. so make sure to take all of that into mind when picking your pup. Also if you are curious about the females full grown size ask the breeder how much she weighed when she was born. Generally a 4 oz baby will make a dog that is a little over 4 lb when it is full grown. you will want your female to be atleast 4lb so don't get a pup that was less than 4oz when born. Best of luck. |
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