Day 18 A.M.

I got up extra early today to relieve Dear Husband, who continues to stay up overnight with the Wildflowers. This 24-hour coverage means that Daisy receives meals about every 2 - 3 hours around the clock, and the puppies are fed on a fairly regular schedule.

Lactation is a big priority here — and for excellent reasons. Nine of them, in fact.

WF D18  all nine.jpg

I continue to explore what is optimal for babies, and have spent the past few hours researching and reading professional, peer-reviewed articles from the past ten years in the areas of formula vs. breast fed, effects of early weaning, and so on; I list just a few of the articles I cite and/or read below.

I am mindful that none of us can always do “optimal” — we are imperfect humans living in an imperfect world. This reality, however, is not an excuse to throw up our hands and be a Slacker.

Rather, we need to continually aim for optimal — as Peale said, “Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you'll land among the stars.”

Larkspur — with ears!

Larkspur — with ears!

I hope it is not news to anyone that "human milk … is considered the gold standard for feeding infants” (Moukarzel et al., 2018, p. 1). Not for puppies of course! Dog milk is the gold standard for feeding puppies.

WF D18 Madhouse.jpg

The amount of research into the benefits of an extended period of only breast feeding are both staggering and not limited to physical health. Moukarzel et al. (2018) noted that “suboptimal provision of nutrients during early postnatal development may have lasting consequences on the brain…” (p. 1).

Sub-optimal = Less than optimal.

Early weaning in rat pups — early by just three days! — “caused lower body weight, length, VFM, total body fat, hypoglycaemia and hypoinsulinaemia, all changes linked to malnutrition status” (Da Silva Lima et al., 2011, p. 1409).

Early weaning = Malnutrition = Less than optimal.

Further, “the disruption of mother–infant bonding in the later lactating period, such as early weaning … greatly affected the infant's neurobehavioral development” (Mogi, K., Nagasawa, M., & Kikusui, T., 2011, p. 1236).

Early weaning = Affected development = Less than optimal.

ACK!

All this reading is making me even more strident about the importance of lactation, delayed weaning, and the dangers of supplementing puppies in any but the most urgent situations.

Breast is best — it is our job to make it work.

Breast milk = Optimal!

WF D18 Daisy nursing.jpg

Another reason for being committed to making lactation work for puppies is the options for replacement and/or supplementation are so so not optimal.

Consider that formula for humans is carefully and extensively studied, and even though that is true it remains inferior nutrition AND more is being learned all the time. For example, researchers have recently identified the importance of Milk Fat Globule Membrane and as a result, human infant formulas have been adjusted.

Larkspur and Clover

Larkspur and Clover

There is zero evidence that puppy formulas — homemade or commercial — are studied and developed with the careful attention that human infant formulas are — and again, human infant formulas — even though very, very well-researched and developed — are inferior to breast milk.

What that means to me is supplementing puppies with any formula is just a bad idea if it can be avoided, and if I ever had to supplement a puppy I would not use a homemade formula.

There is just no possible way a homemade formula has been studied enough to be considered adequate; reading about what goes into human infant formula development has convinced me it is much more complicated (and important) than one might think.

Mallow and Sage

Mallow and Sage

I know — people are thinking, “I have used goat’s milk for puppies for twenty years and …” Great — I wonder how much better it might have been if those puppies had been fed in an optimal way — and there is simply no way to know.

Heck — I wonder how much better my health would be right now had my mother breast fed me!

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As my dad says, “we can’t change what we had for breakfast.” In this discussion, we can take that very literally!

We can, however, plan for a better lunch and dinner.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

LUPINE

LUPINE

CLARKIA

CLARKIA

SAGE

SAGE

LARKSPUR

LARKSPUR

MALLOW AND PAINTBRUSH

MALLOW AND PAINTBRUSH

You’re welcome

You’re welcome

LUPINE AND DAISY

LUPINE AND DAISY

rePete the Cat visits the Wildflowers

rePete the Cat visits the Wildflowers

CLOVER

CLOVER

PAINTBRUSH - remember that puppy eyes start blue

PAINTBRUSH - remember that puppy eyes start blue

Daisy and Buttercup

Daisy and Buttercup

I hope the photos convey what I see throughout the day — puppies who are thriving because they have a devoted, kind, attentive mother in Daisy. If maternal care is the ticket to well-adjusted puppies, the Wildflowers are going to do some serious blooming.

Good Night, Friends.

Work Cited (and just a couple of examples of some that I reviewed)

Aguirre‐Benítez, E., Porras, M., Parra, L., González‐Ríos, J., Garduño‐Torres, D., Albores‐García, D., . . . Hernández‐Falcón, J. (2017). Disruption of behavior and brain metabolism in artificially reared rats. Developmental Neurobiology, 77(12), 1413-1429.

Da Silva Lima, N., Gaspar de Moura, E., Cottini Fonseca Passos, M., Firmino Nogueira Neto, J., Martha Reis, A., De Oliveira, E., & Cristina Lisboa, P. (2011). Early weaning causes undernutrition for a short period and programmes some metabolic syndrome components and leptin resistance in adult rat offspring. British Journal of Nutrition, 105(9), 1405-1413.

Mogi, K., Nagasawa, M., & Kikusui, T. (2011). Developmental consequences and biological significance of mother–infant bonding. Progress in Neuropsychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry, 35(5), 1232-1241.

Moukarzel, S., Dyer, R. A., Garcia, C., Wiedeman, A. M., Boyce, G., Weinberg, J., . . . Innis, S. M. (2018). Milk fat globule membrane supplementation in formula-fed rat pups improves reflex development and may alter brain lipid composition. Scientific Reports, 8(1), 15277. doi:http://dx.doi.org.weblib.lib.umt.edu:8080/10.1038/s41598-018-33603-8




Day 17 A.M. & P.M.

We have a large whelping box (five feet by six feet) but it is getting crowded and so we are preparing to move the puppies. Unfortunately, I change my mind about every ten minutes about the next phase and so I guess we will all be surprised this weekend when it happens.

Daisy enjoys nursing puppies outside of the whelping box — this photo is from this morning. Buttercup was part of the first shift of customers at the Milk Bar and so she was done and hanging with mom. I love the contrast with paw sizes.

WF Day 17 Buttercup on Daisy.jpg

When the Wildflowers finish, they like to do a bit of exploring — this is Sage. He is pleased to share that he is once again the Heavyweight Champion of the Whelping Box — his morning weight was 3.24 pounds.

WF D17 Sage.jpg

I have changed from the scale that weighs in ounces to the new baby scale that reads in pounds. I have been weighing each puppy on both scales for a week so I could assess how the new scale compared. The two scales are not 100% congruent but they are close enough.

Clarkia is in second place at 3.2 pounds followed by Clover and Lupine who tied at 3.18 pounds this morning. All the other puppies are between 2.7 pounds and 2.88 pounds — I am very pleased with the consistent and even weight gains.

Again, no puppy has been supplemented — if anyone ever needs a Canine Lactation Consultant, please reach out because I am happy to help.

This is Paintbrush and Mariposa.

WF D17 Paintbrush and Mariposa.jpg

They were playing nicely when Clarkia barged in between them and settled down for a post-nursing nap.

WF D17 Clarkia Paintbrush.jpg

Buttercup getting her face washed.

WF D17 Buttercup getting licked.jpg

After they spend about an hour nursing and playing and resting outside the whelping box, they go back to the clean and changed whelping box. I weigh them on the way back, waiting until they are so tired that they melt into my hands and onto the scale — and then most just fall right back to sleep when I put them in the whelping box.

This is Clover, Clarkia, and Paintbrush.

WF D17 Clover Paintbrush Clarkia.jpg

Some wake up and wander a bit — this is Lupine showing the picked up ears they just started doing, indicating they are likely beginning to hear at least some sounds. Like vision, hearing arrives gradually — and thank goodness for that! It has to be overwhelming to have all that new information coming in.

WF D17 Picked up ears.jpg

There is now a small bit of water in the whelping box — not necessarily to drink but they certainly may if they want. Rather, it is there for yet another novel experience. This is Lupine — she asks that you do not judge her saggy topline — she says your topline would droop if you had a belly like that one! Instead, I am noting her lovely rear angles.

WF D17 Lupine.jpg

After checking out the new swimming hole, Lupine headed over to mix things up with Larkspur.

WF D17 Larkspur and Lupine.jpg
WF D17 Larkspur andLupine 2 (1).jpg
WF D17 Parkspur and Lupine 3 (1).jpg

After a few minutes, Lupine decided to go off on a walkabout and so Larkspur turned his attention to Mariposa.

WF D17 Mariposa jumps in 4.jpg

They are so fun to watch as they make their clumsy efforts at play. They are also very social and when I sit with them, I quickly have a lap full of puppies.

This is Mallow heading off to Dreamland.

WF D17  Mallow.jpg

We all hope you have a wonderful day!

Video! Click HERE.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

Lupine and Clover

Lupine and Clover

WF D 17 pile of puppies.jpg
Clarkia and Larkspur

Clarkia and Larkspur

The new scale (and cat bed)

The new scale (and cat bed)

WF D 17 Daisy with pups (1).jpg
Daisy and Buttercup

Daisy and Buttercup

WF D 17 watering hole (1).jpg
Clarkia

Clarkia

Mariposa

Mariposa

Good Night!

Day 16 A.M. & P.M.

This Blog has several functions, including sharing cute puppy photos and puppy updates.

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Another function of my posts is helping people to sort out whether we are a good fit — by writing, I reveal things that are important to me in a puppy home. This allows people to opt out or opt in based on the congruence (or lack thereof) of our values, practices, and so on.

I started to write, “it isn’t personal” but then I realize it is 100% personal — we are, after all, talking about things that are all about ourselves and that is absolutely personal. What it isn’t meant to be is insulting — it is okay for us to value different things.

When people write to me, they are also revealing things — to a licensed mental health provider and long-time educator. Good and/or bad, I wear those lenses at all times.

It means I know all of us are wonderfully imperfect — but yes, it also means I am tuned in a different way to things that could be problematic in the life of a puppy.

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And so when I am considering placing puppies I have this multi-layer assessment thing going on that is complicated and nuanced but the bottom line is this: Will I lose sleep over this puppy’s life? Will I worry?

If the answer is yes — my answer is no puppy.

I know that doesn’t land well. I know it hurts and feels like judgment — because it is a judgment. But it is a judgment about goodness of fit, and that involves all of us — me, the puppy, and the potential home.

I am aware this process seems so foreign to those who expect to slap down some money and take home a puppy — but that is what you do when the central focus for the breeder is money.

That is definitely not me.

Clarkia

Clarkia

I am an imperfect person trying to find perfect lives for the Wildflowers. I know it is an impossible task because we are all human and therefore imperfect — but it doesn’t stop me from trying.

And speaking of trying — Sage is feeling a bit smug and boastful this morning, which is a little surprising given that he lost his Heavyweight title to Lupine.

You see, Sage was the busybody this morning after the early out-of-the-box nursing session. He went on a walkabout…

WF D15 Sage walking (1).jpg

…and then he decided to try and summit Mt. Daisy!

WF D15 Sage up Mt. Daisy.jpg

Personally, I think it is cheating when you use your siblings as steps but whatever — he did it! Hence the smug boastfulness.

WF D15 Sage at top (1).jpg

And then he wasn’t quite sure what to do next. After thinking it through, he simply slid down the back of Daisy and continued on his busybody day.

He rehearsed for the Montana Puppy Choir. Daisy’s look is one mothers everywhere recognize.

WF D15 Sage rehearsing (1).jpg

Then he settled in to chew on Daisy…

WF D15 Sage chewing (1).jpg

…and finally he fell asleep.

WF D15 Sage ear (1).jpg

This puppy was playing Bite the Tail — or trying to! They are not very coordinated just yet.

WF D15 Tail (1).jpg

Milk Coma — this is Mallow.

WF D15  Mallow passed out.jpg

Day 16 video — watch with sound but brace yourself because the Montana Puppy Choir is a thing. Click HERE to watch.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

I think the puppies are starting to hear sound — they are picking up their little ears. This is Clover illustrating that…

WF D16 CLOVER.jpg

The plastic lid got a lot more use today — this is Mariposa.

WF D16 Mariposa on plastic.jpg

Mother-daughter chat.

WF D16 Daisy and Clarkia.jpg

I love this photo.

WF D16 Daisy and Clarkia and Mariposa.jpg

Truth be told, Clarkia is a bit of a Drama Llama. She was just parked and practicing her solo for the Montana Puppy Choir.

WF D16 Drama Llama.jpg

A puppy posse — Paintbrush with the open mouth.

WF D16  Puppy Posse.jpg

Clarkia spent some time going up and down the chair, and then used it for a pillow.

WF D16 Clarkia on chair.jpg

A cute look at Buttercup — she is a very sweet puppy.

WF D16 Buttercup.jpg

Bonus video — it is super short and make sure to watch with sound. Click HERE — and yes, it is Clarkia again.