Warning: Poop and Worms Ahead

As most probably know, in real life I am a professor at the University of Montana. But Life with Dogs is also my real life, and there is much overlap. Next month, for example, a chapter I co-authored will be published in a book about college students and dogs.

Harper B for Bethany — when Bethany was one of my students and not my daughter-in-law; hanging out in my office is how she met my son. CUTE!

Harper B for Bethany — when Bethany was one of my students and not my daughter-in-law; hanging out in my office is how she met my son. CUTE!

In one of my classes (via Zoom) I educate students about the impact of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs); my knowledge of what bad experiences do to the developing brain informs how I raise puppies. I also know what an adult considers an unfortunate experience is insignificant — what matters is how the puppy (or child) perceives an experience.

Moonshadows Metis and Hunter

Moonshadows Metis and Hunter

Did you know that one way baby lab rats are stressed in experiments is simply restraint? Consider how many trainers have taught people to restrain their puppies until the puppy stops struggling. That restraint can result in a puppy brain being flooded with stress hormones — not cool. When we know better, we do better.

Note — no claws (they are trimmed anyway) and Ariel initiated the play.

Note — no claws (they are trimmed anyway) and Ariel initiated the play.

The job of a human raising puppies is to know, learn, and assess constantly. When you are a professor raising puppies you add to that: Be a thoughtful skeptic and do your own research. Life with Dogs is filled with crazy ideas, recommendations, suggestions, and misinformation.

Miss Piggy visits the Moonshadows

Miss Piggy visits the Moonshadows

And to be clear — some of those ill-informed ideas are from professionals. Remember — professionals are just human beings, and that means they are wonderful, well-intentioned, and imperfect.

The imperfection of humans is why the best care — medical and veterinary — happens when we use a team approach.

A team of Bright Stars

A team of Bright Stars

I wrote last June about worming puppies, and this post is based on the literature review I did at that time.

Some will tell you, “all puppies have worms” and so routine worming of very young puppies is done.

Bright Star Sun

Bright Star Sun

The professional literature does not support the idea that all puppies have worms. SOME puppies are born with worms and last I checked, some does not equal all.

SOME Bright Stars does not equal ALL Bright Stars

SOME Bright Stars does not equal ALL Bright Stars

Why would I give wormer to puppies who do not need it?! That makes no sense to me.

So, my vet and I worked out a plan. We do stool samples on the mom when the puppies are about four weeks old. If there is any evidence mom has worms, the puppies get wormed.

If there is no evidence of worms in the mom, the puppies are not wormed and we plan/do follow-up stool samples on puppies at 7 - 8 weeks.

Moonshadows watching the Bright Star channel

Moonshadows watching the Bright Star channel

There are two ways to check stool samples — veterinary clinics can do an in-house test, and samples can also be sent off to an outside lab. I like validated results — our samples are processed both by the veterinary clinic and the outside lab.

Bright Stars

Bright Stars

None of this seems like rocket science to me but yes, when the puppies head off to new homes there will be veterinarians who will be put off by this blasphemy and tell the new owners, “All puppies have worms” and imply that I am a terrible breeder — clearly a Montana puppy mill. #truestory

Bright Star Zaniah balancing at our Montana Puppy Mill, located in our home and run by a person with a UC Berkeley Ph.D. (insert eye roll)

Bright Star Zaniah balancing at our Montana Puppy Mill, located in our home and run by a person with a UC Berkeley Ph.D. (insert eye roll)

My response is to get a better-educated (or at least more curious and open-minded) veterinarian — it is THEIR professional literature that contradicts the assertion that all puppies have worms, after all.

A Moonshadow and a Bright Star

A Moonshadow and a Bright Star

And again — this process was guided by our veterinarian, who is very experienced and wicked smart, and the professional veterinary literature; I am not going rogue on this stuff.

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Claire’s stool sample, processed in two ways, showed no evidence of internal parasites; her puppies will not, therefore, be burdened by a medication they do not need.

If a veterinarian were to say — and some likely will — that clear stool samples do not matter and all puppies have worms, one could reasonably respond: Why, then, do you ever conduct and charge for stool sample testing (for internal parasites) if the results cannot be trusted?

Riddle me that, Batman.

Bright Star Sirius

Bright Star Sirius

Life with Dogs allows us to practice important skills in teaming, critical thinking, and advocacy that I promise will come in handy in other life situations.

And that concludes our conversation about poop and worms — please continue with your meal now and have a grand day.

Evening Photos

Moonshadow Hunter

Moonshadow Hunter

hmmmm….

hmmmm….

Bright Star Zaniah

Bright Star Zaniah

Bright Star Heze

Bright Star Heze

Bright Star Sun

Bright Star Sun

A Moonshadow and a Bright Star, companionably side-by-side…

A Moonshadow and a Bright Star, companionably side-by-side…

Five Weeks and Four Weeks

The Moonshadows are four weeks old!

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I really need to be better at quickly identifying puppies in photos but everything happens quickly around here, as I bet you can imagine — and so this is a really cute Moonshadow.

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Their noses darkened up quickly and so that makes it harder — I cannot go back and use noseprints to identify them. If I had to guess — based on the right foot, I would say that is Neil.

Below — hmmm and Arche (see the green collar?)

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Titan and Daisy…

Titan and Daisy 2-25.jpg

With both litters, I regularly do shift nursing — five on and five off. I have a system for remembering the two “teams” from each litter so that things can be fair.

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In the Moonshadows, five puppies have swiss kisses — perfect! One team consists of the “kissed” puppies and the other team consists of the unkissed, so to speak (but trust me — they all get kisses!).

The Bright Stars — now five weeks old! — were not so obvious. What I did was make a team of the four girls and the smallest boy, which was Perseus at the time I formed the teams. So all girls plus him — and that is why Perseus is now called James.

James 2-25.jpg

If you understand why that is, post in the comments and I will send you a prize :)

The girls plus James always get to eat first during shift nursing because when it is everyone at once, I know those Baby Boy Hippos push their way to the best seats at the Milk Bar.

Think linebacker puppies — and here they are protesting this arrangement…

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This is Claire nursing some and kissing another…

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This is Sirius — I keep a close eye on what they are chewing because puppies can and will chew off pieces of things and swallow them, and that can go badly…

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Since the puppies were familiar with the new playroom, it was time for new stuff today…

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I made a video so you could observe puppy reactions to new things. Note — puppies are not forced into new things — we let them decide to explore…

Claire will see her vet today to confirm the diagnosis and start making a plan; I also scheduled a teleconsult with Dr. Sherman Canapp for next week. One cannot make good decisions without information, and Claire deserves a good decision.

Have a colorful day!

Evening

We all feel like this tonight so we are calling it a day…

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Novel and Fun (not scary!)

As I mentioned yesterday, we made some changes around here.

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We created a large puppy playroom out of our living room. In one corner is a Moonshadow bedroom that is collapsed in the daytime to give more space.

Daisy and a very clean Moonshadow

Daisy and a very clean Moonshadow

The Bright Stars will keep their bedroom (aka the dining room) but during the daytime, the Moonshadows will move into it as their play area. It is a good-sized space for their size right now.

Buck and Hunter

Buck and Hunter

In a week or so they can all play together and/or they can take turns in the playroom. This new system should provide space and variety for all of the puppies.

Daisy and Metis

Daisy and Metis

Hopefully the weather will cooperate and in early March we can add some outside time as well.

Because the spaces are new to the puppies, the things in the spaces are not. We do not want to overload the babies with novelty but rather provide a manageable amount of new to push the confidence envelope bit by bit.

Nova and Miss Piggy

Nova and Miss Piggy

As I also mentioned recently, we can begin to see the structure of the puppies at this age — here are two shots of Orion…

Orion 2-24 (1).jpg
Orion 2-24.jpg

I just saw trotting in the new playroom — that is also a new skill, and that space allows them to practice it.

FUN!

I hope your day also has both novelty and fun.

P.S. OOPS! I forgot to post this video I did this morning so you can see how things look now — hope you like NPR!

Photos from the Day

Hunter and Buck

Hunter and Buck

Arche

Arche

Rosebud and Capella playing on the floor chair…

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RB and puppy.jpg
Capella

Capella

Stay practice ;)

Stay practice ;)

Zaniah

Zaniah

Good Night

Good Night