Puppy Grand Central Report (Updated)

Sometimes people ask me about what stimulation we do with baby puppies. I wrote extensively about this based on a review of professional literature with our last litter in May but here are the Cliff Notes:

  1. ENS (Early Neurological Stimulation) is not an evidence-based intervention with puppies.

  2. Forcing puppies into distress floods the developing brain with DANGER hormones (BAD) and in some unknown “dose” of distress, WILL teach Learned Helplessness (BAD) .

  3. Mastery is key to confidence — not distress.

  4. Life is hard for a tiny puppy — why add extra Bad Stuff?!

Moonshadows: Kale (purple), Portia (lavender), and Neil (orange)

Moonshadows: Kale (purple), Portia (lavender), and Neil (orange)

Because I am here with the babies, I see the ways they master developmentally appropriate challenges all day long.

They cannot see or hear, and so —for example — they use their tiny sniffers to find the Milk Bar, and they do this from greater and greater distances as they get older. Finding the Milk Bar is the perfect challenge for a tiny puppy: it is not super scary, it is do-able, and task mastery is well-reinforced.

These three started on the wrong side but quickly made their way around Claire and found their target.

Getting to the Milk Bar!

Getting to the Milk Bar!

The goal with tiny puppies should be to minimize distress — not add to it. We want to protect developing brains from getting activated by events perceived by the baby as trauma. Whether we think it is traumatic is unimportant — what matters is how the event is perceived.

Bright Star: Perseus

Bright Star: Perseus

Yesterday I trimmed tiny toenails — there are a lot of them around here! I waited until the puppies were sleepy and relaxed, and if one objected I just put him/her back in the whelping box and moved on to another, circling back later until all the nails were trimmed. Even puppies get to have opinions.

Moonshadows

Moonshadows

That is how we roll around here — we pay attention to this kind of stuff.

They are not just puppies — each of the ten plus ten are invitations to do something really well. They invite us to bring our best to an endeavor, and challenge us to honor the responsibility of intentionally creating life by being diligent, careful, and thoughtful.

Bright Stars

Bright Stars

Game On.

And speaking of opinions, Zaniah has one! It is so charming to hear puppies — and small humans — find their voices…

And I just looked out the window to see that the newest ten got a special message…

Taken from our deck!

Taken from our deck!

The Moonshadows are watched and loved, near and far.

Have a lovely day!

EVENING PHOTOS

Moonshadow Ariel

Moonshadow Ariel

Moonshadow Andy

Moonshadow Andy

Moonshadow Hunter

Moonshadow Hunter

Moonshadow Puppy Posse

Moonshadow Puppy Posse

Daisy’s milk was very slow to come in well and this little guy — the smallest — was losing too much weight. His name is Titan and he is a feisty little fighter. Claire nursed him last night to help him hold his ground until Daisy was producing enough.

Titan 1-31.jpg

Daisy’s Dairy seems to be fully online now and Little Titan gained over an ounce today — yippee!

All of the Moonshadows are doing well — they won’t fit in the basket for too much longer.

Moonshadows in a basket 1-31.jpg

The Bright Stars are dealing with a plague of loose stools. Probiotics are on board and so hopefully that will take care of it.

Bright Star Sirius

Bright Star Sirius

Bright Star Capella

Bright Star Capella

Bright Star Nova

Bright Star Nova

Puppy Grand Central! (Updated)

Welcome to Puppy Grand Central, and thanks to Stephen F. for the name. LOVE it!

Since we typically have litters far apart — and have never had two at once — I am not exactly sure what how this blog thing is going to work but I shall just give it my best, sharing photos and info about both Bright Stars and Moonshadows each day.

Daisy had a planned c-section due to litter size and etc. at 3 pm yesterday. Suzanne helped in person and we had Toby on Zoom to watch as each puppy arrived. It was Toby who kept count — TEN!

Almighty Heidi summed it up well in a text this morning:

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FYI — we prefer to say ten plus ten because twenty puppies just seems really excessive.

The puppies arrived vigorous and there were no issues.

New Moonshadow.jpg

Sandhano, who lives close to the clinic, stopped by to meet all of us and was a great help. It was fun to have Toby on Zoom, one of the tech’s daughters stopped in to meet puppies…

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…and basically it was a fun and easy puppy party. Much gratitude to Suzanne for all of her help and support.

The Moonshadows are normal-sized puppies but look tiny when compared to the Bright Stars. Here is the first Moonshadow Puppy Pile photo…

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The Bright Stars Puppy Pile — a week makes such a difference!

Bright Stars Puppy pile 8 days.jpg

Claire is tough because she is not eating happily and there is her knee. Daisy eats like a champ and is super easy going about everything…

This would not happen in Claire’s whelping box!

This would not happen in Claire’s whelping box!

BUT Daisy’s milk supply is slow. Here are the weights for the Moonshadows — note the weight loss. This is normal…

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…but that doesn’t mean we aren’t paying attention.

Puppies are nursing constantly in one-hour shifts of five, and we have Daisy switch sides with each group. This should help with lactation. Non-nursers are close by on a warming pad…

Non-nursers MS 1-29.jpg

I will weigh the Moonshadows again this afternoon to ensure that they are at least holding steady, and if anyone has lost more weight they will visit Claire’s Milk Bar and Puppy Wash.

Claire and Capella.jpg

And speaking of the Bright Stars, we have their one-week photos to share. I confess we took them this morning but since they are not officially eight days old until noon, I consider this acceptable.

The amount of mouth action was amazing (this is developmental) and the Squirm Factor was high as is the Human Exhaustion factor and so the photos are imperfect — but the Bright Stars are perfection indeed…

Orion

Orion

Perseus

Perseus

Heze

Heze

Sun

Sun

Mirak

Mirak

Sirius

Sirius

Zaniah

Zaniah

Nova

Nova

Capella

Capella

Lyra

Lyra

Suzanne was kind enough to let us use her whelping box — she and Jay even delivered it. Besties, indeed. So the Bright Stars have been upgraded to the deluxe whelping box…

Perseus 1-28.jpg

…but only because Claire did not appreciate being moved to the living room and was anxious in the new spot. And so at 11 pm I moved Claire and her babies back to their original spot in the new whelping box, and Daisy and her babies to the new location in our whelping box.

The Puppy Grand Central Mantra…

Puppy Grand Central mantra.jpg

Thank you for your comments, good wishes, and laughter! Yes, this is crazy.

Have a Sane Day — but if that is not possible, see above.

Evening Report and Pics

We made it through the day - yay! Daisy’s milk is coming in — more yays!!

Waiting their turn

Waiting their turn

Neil

Neil

Hunter

Hunter

Claire and Nova

Claire and Nova

Sun

Sun

And for your entertainment…

Day Seven

Orion retains his Heavyweight title, weighing in at 2.54 pounds this morning. Here he is adventuring through Claire’s front legs…

Orion 1-28.jpg

Sparkle likes to come and check the babies when Claire is outside. Grandmas are like that, right? We just want everything to be okay.

Sparkle and Zaniah 1-28.jpg

This is Sun — he also has that black on/off button. Coleen says that comes from the Ferguson side of the family. Adorable!

Sun 1-28.jpg

Sirius…

Sirius 1-28.jpg

Claire drunk on Oxytocin…

Claire stoned 1-28.jpg

Mirak drunk on milk — and love.

Claire and Mirak 1-28.jpg

This morning Dear Husband stays up a bit later so that I can run Daisy in to get a progesterone done to see if today is the Big Day. A Field Trip! How exciting!!

Also exciting and on the agenda for today — official one-week photos.