Day 21 A.M. & P.M.

Three weeks old. Amazing.

This is Mariposa with a toy that has been through multiple litters, including Suzanne’s. It makes noise when it is bumped, and that kind of novel sensory experience is what puppies need at this age.

WF D21 Mariposa self stacked.jpg

But it is supported novel experience — it happens in the context of a safe, secure, and familiar place. The goal is confidence, and to develop that puppies (and humans) need new experiences but ones that can be mastered without fear and anxiety. Baby steps — or rather, Puppy Steps.

The Wildflowers are certainly gaining mastery of their bodies. Walking is confident and steady, and they can roll around at will — this is Clarkia.

WF D21 Rolling Clarkia.jpg

After rolling, she chewed on her foot a bit — how cute is that?!

WF D21 Clarkia 3.jpg

Clarkia is a good example of why puppy placement is a puzzle and hard to decide in advance. Puppy personalities are emerging, and I can tell you Clarkia deserves to be in a smart working home with someone who will appreciate her potential — this puppy will go far with the right person.

Daisy continues to keep her puppies clean, well fed, and happy. This kind of maternal attention is absolutely critical to development, and so we support and encourage it and that includes by supporting and encouraging extended and frequent nursing of puppies.

WF D21 Daisy face washing Clarkia.jpg

Some people start puppies on “solid food” at this age.

I remember a long-time breeder who once told me she weaned puppies at three weeks because she, “could feed them better.”

So so inaccurate.

Human parents used to be told to introduce solid foods early (six weeks!) — now the World Health Organization says human infants should be exclusively breast fed until six months old.

The next two photos are a sequence of Paintbrush and Larkspur.

WF D21 Larkspur and Paintbrush.jpg
WF D21 Paintbrush and Larkspur.jpg

We are growing in our understanding that gut microbiota is a key component in immune functioning; we need to care about this as we build and maintain healthy immune systems.

In a review of existing research on the topic of infant intestinal microbiome, Meropol & Edwards (2015) report that, “type of feeding, breast milk versus formula, has a large influence on microbiome composition (p. 230).

Breast milk has evolved to provide exactly what babies need — including what is needed by the baby’s microbiome.

Introduction to solid food changes the gut microbiome in humans and animals, and it is not without consequence; the practice of early weaning in piglets causes significant GI issues and prompts widespread antibiotic use in that industry (Gresse et al., 2017).

WF D21 Paintbrush.jpg

Early introduction to solid foods is linked to a variety of unfortunate long-term outcomes in humans, and so one has to wonder about the rush to replace optimal nutrition with sub-optimal.

One article I read about human breastfeeding discusses a social coercion of weaning theory (Stearns, 2011). Interesting! I think there is social pressure in weaning puppies as well — and likely just a lack of updated knowledge.

Clover and Clarkia

Clover and Clarkia

The Wildflowers — and their developing gut microbiome — will continue to benefit from being exclusively breastfed.

With all the evidence pointing to the importance of this, why would I do anything else?

This morning we added some new blooms to the Wildflowers’ lives — thank you to Marti for this fun-tastic gift.

Larkspur

Larkspur

The flowers crinkle and so offer wonderful and age-appropriate sensory experiences — and they are stinking cute!

WF D21 Lupine flower real.jpg

Puppies love playing with each other — this is Sage and Mariposa.

WF D21 Sage and Mariposa.jpg
WF D21 Mariposa and Sage 2.jpg

Please have a healthy day — and take good care of your own gut microbiome!

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

I forgot to mention something this morning — first social tail wag! Larkspur greeted me this morning by wagging his tail — MY HEART! They are also running now — it is crazy how fast they change.

Mariposa and Buttercup

Mariposa and Buttercup

Paintbrush

Paintbrush

Lupine

Lupine

I think the photo below is hilarious — Clarkia is tipped over in a milk coma and Paintbrush just walked over the top of the nursing puppies…

WF D21 nursing bedlam.jpg

Who need hair gel when your mom is free with her spit?!

WF D21 Bad Hair Day.jpg

The puppies are biting Daisy now - this is Mallow.

WF D21 Mallow.jpg

The play structure was out for about two hours today — this is Mallow again.

WF D21 Mallow structure.jpg

It is getting crowded!

WF D21 nursing.jpg

Larkspur and Clarkia…

WF D21 Larkspur and Clarkia.jpg
Mallow

Mallow

Karma stopped in for a visit. She licked Larkspur for a bit…

WF D21 Karma.jpg

…and all was great until Paintbrush grabbed her tail and got swatted. OOPS.

Larkspur assaulting one of the Bobs.

WF D21  Bob Assault.jpg

Three weeks is a wrap! Good night, Friends.

Work Cited

Meropol, Sharon B ; Edwards, A. (2015). Development of the infant intestinal microbiome: A bird's eye view of a complex process Birth Defects Research. Part C, Embryo Today, Reviews, Dec 2015, Vol.105(4), pp.228-239.

Gresse, R ; Chaucheyras-Durand, F ; Fleury, MA ; Van de Wiele, T ; Forano, E ; Blanquet-Diot, S. (2017). Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis in Postweaning Piglets: Understanding the Keys to Health. Trends In Microbiology, Oct, Vol.25(10), pp.851-873.





Day 20 A.M. & P.M.

Markings.

WF D20 Lupine and Paintbrush 2.jpg

Very few Berners have “perfect” markings.

Although Lupine appears to be correctly marked with her white blaze and muzzle, four white feet and white tail tip, she actually has a marking flaw — it is just not as noticeable as Paintbrush, who does not have much white on the left side of his muzzle.

Note below how Lupine’s white extends past the corner of her mouth on her right side.

WF D20 Lupine and Paintbrush 3.jpg

You can really see it in the photo below — it is called a Swiss Smile.

The small bit of white on the back of her neck is called a Swiss Kiss — that will all but go away as she grows. Both Mariposa and Lupine have those Swiss Kisses.

WF D20 Lupine and Paintbrush 4.jpg

White on a puppy — or lack of white — creates a certain illusion. For example, more white on one paw than the other can actually make the white paw look bigger. White faces seem to make the heads seem bigger — although, to be fair, Lupine has a big head!

WF D20 Lupine and Paintbrush 5.jpg

Things went great overnight in the new Wildflower Place. Dear Husband again stayed up all night — I do not know how people raise litters without a night shift person as it makes ALL the difference. I wake up mostly rested, and both Daisy and the puppies get fed well overnight.

But we will now start to transition back to a more normal sleep routine, which involves Dear Husband staying up to his usual 1 — 2 a.m. (he is naturally a Night Owl ) and me getting up between 4 — 5 a.m., which is normal for me.

This means there is just a short gap where Daisy and the puppies do not have an awake person with them — just close by. Since they will be three weeks old tomorrow (how did THAT happen?!) and they are safely in the escape-proof Wildflower Place (aka Dining Room), I think we are all ready.

This is Mallow — so cute.

WF D20 Mallow.jpg

Back to markings — this is Mariposa and Lupine. If you look at the next two photos, you can see that both puppies have rust to the corner of their mouths; Lupine’s Swiss Smile is only on the right side of her face.

WF D20 Mariposa and Lupine 1.jpg
WF D20 Mariposa and Lupine 2.jpg

Larkspur is a nicely marked puppy but again — not perfect. Look at the difference between his muzzle white and the two girls above.

WF D20 Larkspur.jpg

Sometimes I take photos and forget to also take one with the collar so I know who it is — like this one.

WF D20 Larkspur (1).jpg

Puppy Posse.

WF D20 Puppy Posse 2.jpg

Definitely Larkspur.

WF D20 Larkspur (2).jpg

The Milk Bar is one big party all the time.

WF D20 Nursing Puppies.jpg

Sage has lovely face and head markings but will have dark feet and a four-hair tail tip.

WF D20 Sage (1).jpg

Bottom line — those who want perfect markings on a Berner should look HERE.

For the rest of us — who embrace dogs and people with imperfections — we have the practically perfect Wildflowers.

WF D20 all nine.jpg

Video HERE.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

WF D20 posse.jpg
WF D20 posse 2.jpg

So much toothless chomping going on around here.

WF D20 Larkspur being eaten.jpg
WF D20  Mallow.jpg
WF D20 Bob.jpg
WF D20  Daisy and pups.jpg
WF D20 Karma andpups.jpg
Clover

Clover

We created a nursing alcove so that Daisy can still do shift nursing outside of the puppies’ bedroom/playroom. This is all nine!

WF D20  Nursing alcove.jpg

The paws — love!

WF D20 paws.jpg
Sage

Sage

WF D20 Chomp.jpg
WF D20  another chomp.jpg

If you watched the video you will know that we set up the play structure that Lori sent us for our last litter. They are a perfect age for this.

WF D20 Clarkia.jpg

All of the puppies interacted with the structure with no concerns or issues — it was awesome. It won’t stay in their space all the time — novelty is important and so it will come and go, and the things that hang will change as well.

Mariposa

Mariposa

Good Night, Friends!

Day 19 A.M.

The day started, as usual, with the outside-the-box nursing — these session have stretched out to a couple of hours. They nurse and play a bit and sleep and nurse some more, and Daisy seems perfectly happy with this arrangement.

WF D19 Daisy and pups.jpg

Novel today — a box. That is Mariposa.

WF D19 Mariposa on box.jpg

The Wildflowers LOVE the floor chair — as do I. This is Sage.

WF D19 floor chair Sage.jpg

Mariposa.

WF D19 Mariposa.jpg

Larkspur upside down.

WF D19 Larkspur.jpg

I did a Zoom session while they enjoyed themselves and by the end, it looked like this…

WF D19 All nine.jpg

I weighed them all and then back to the whelping box. Maybe if Sage spent less time on the floor chair, he would not have lost his title — the new Heavyweight Champion of the Whelping Box is Lupine at 3.52 pounds! Yep — she a wee bit round. That is her on top.

WF D19 Lupine from back.jpg

Do not let these innocent faces fool you — the puppies have been plotting. They consulted with Bob and devised their plan…

WF D19  Puppy Posse.jpg

Implementation of the plan commenced promptly…

WF D19 Larspur escape.jpg

They are done with the whelping box and want OUT!

WF D19 escape.jpg

I draped the blanket to perhaps discourage climbing and to add a soft landing on the other side. Let’s just say they are not getting 10’s for their dismounts.

WF D19 Lupine escape.jpg

Back to plotting.

WF D19 plotting puppies.jpg

However, we listen in responsive ways to puppy protesters and so today is moving day! No more whelping box for the Wildflowers — they are ready to transplant.

Video and photos later — in the meantime, have a Happy Sunday!

Video HERE

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

Clarkia

Clarkia

Puppy Posse

Puppy Posse

WF D19 larkspur (1).jpg
Sage — remember eyes are blue at this point.

Sage — remember eyes are blue at this point.

Buttercup

Buttercup

Paintbrush

Paintbrush

Daisy and Paintbrush — happy in the new place.

Daisy and Paintbrush — happy in the new place.

Daisy with Clarkia and Mallow

Daisy with Clarkia and Mallow

The move went well — puppies were a bit anxious about all the space at first but with Daisy hanging with them and all the familiar smells and things, they adjusted quickly. We will be adding FUN to the space tomorrow!

Good Night, Friends!