Day 30 A.M & P.M. and A Birthday!

Today we get to celebrate double time — we have the Wildflowers and today is the seventh birthday of the iPups! How is it possible they are seven?!

iPup photos later — worms this mornings. And puppies — they are related.

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The standard advice is to worm puppies multiple times before they are about 12 weeks old — some recommend starting at 2 - 3 weeks.

“All puppies have worms” — that is what you will hear.

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I walk through life a wee bit skeptical.

How do they know all puppies have worms — have they tested every single puppy? Have large studies been done and found 100% of the puppies had worms?

Answer: No.

Paintbrush

Paintbrush

The parasite we most care about at this point is roundworms (Toxocara canis), which can and do pass nicely from mothers to puppies through the placenta and milk.

But they cannot pass if they are not there — so are we to assume 100% of mother dogs have roundworms?

Apparently so, given the recommendation to deworm all puppies multiple times.

Interesting — because that does not seem compatible with the professional literature.

Mariposa doing some interior design

Mariposa doing some interior design

In a study that included results from over a million fecal flotation tests (dogs) from private veterinary clinics in the USA, the incidence of roundworms was 5% (Mohamed, Moore, & Glickman, 2009). Another study (Drake & Carey, 2019) included over 39 million samples over seven years — the prevalence of roundworms was less than 2%.

Nijsse, Ploeger, Wagenaar, & Mughini-Gras (2015) studied dogs in Holland, and reported their “…observed prevalence of 4.6 % of dogs shedding Toxocara eggs is in agreement with previous studies on household dogs” (p. 568). A study of parasites in dogs and pigs in a village in Cambodia found roundworms in 8% of the dogs (Inpankaew et. al, 2015).

Crinkle toys remain a hit

Crinkle toys remain a hit

I am absolutely in favor of medical interventions that are necessary and smart!

I am not in favor of medical interventions that are not needed because they represent burden and potential risk on a dog or puppy (or human).

Therefore, I had a conversation with my veterinarian. We LOVE our veterinarian precisely because of that: Conversations.

Clarkia

Clarkia

What she suggested is that we run a fecal sample on Daisy when the puppies were four weeks; that test was done yesterday and it was negative. No evidence of roundworms in Daisy.

She further suggested that if Daisy’s test was negative, we test puppies at eight weeks — and so that is the plan.

This is a new chew — it is EcoKind Pet Treats Gold Yak Dog Chews

This is a new chew — it is EcoKind Pet Treats Gold Yak Dog Chews

This is more expensive, of course, than just giving them dewormer they probably do not need — but it represents, in my mind, a Middle Road approach. I am not pretending roundworms are not a potential concern but neither am I treating for imaginary roundworms in the Wildflowers.

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Rather, we have taken a data-informed, veterinarian-approved approach that make sense when one considers the actual incidence of roundworms in household dogs is, in fact, quite low in the United States.

EVENING: PHOTOS FROM THE DAY

The Puppy Socializing Team has arrived!

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The iPups are seven — that is a Big Deal in the Life of a Berner. The iPups are such a special litter with a wonderful human community around them. Thank you to every single person who loves an iPup.

Happy Birthday to Tristan…

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…and Tag…

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…and Kidd…

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…and Nikko…

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…and Sparkle…

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…and Ava (photo soon).

We remember — always and with love — George and Scarlett.

The Wildflowers are related to the iPups. The mother of the iPups — Zoey — is the littermate to Zed, who is the great-grandfather of the Wildflowers. I am not sure what that kind of cousin that makes them all — so we will just say they are related.

THIS is a super quick video of how the Wildflowers reacted to the Boise Socializing Team showing up and jumping right to work.

Good Night, Friends!

Work Cited/Used

Corda, A., Tamponi, C., Meloni, R., Varcasia, A., Parpaglia, M., Gomez-Ochoa, L., & Scala, P. (2019). Ultrasonography for early diagnosis of Toxocara canis infection in puppies. Parasitology Research, 118(3), 873-880.

Drake, J., & Carey, T. (2019). Seasonality and changing prevalence of common canine gastrointestinal nematodes in the USA. Parasites & Vectors, 12(1), 430.

Inpankaew, T., Murrell, K., Pinyopanuwat, D., Chhoun, N., Khov, C., Sem, K., . . . Dalsgaard, S. (2015). A survey for potentially zoonotic gastrointestinal parasites of dogs and pigs in Cambodia. Acta Parasitologica, 60(4), 601-604.

Mohamed AS, Moore GE, Glickman LT (2009) Prevalence of intestinal nematode parasitism among pet dogs in the United States (2003– 2006). J Am Vet Med Assoc 234:631–637.

Nijsse, R., Ploeger, H., Wagenaar, W., & Mughini-Gras, J. (2015). Toxocara canis in household dogs: Prevalence, risk factors and owners’ attitude towards deworming. Parasitology Research, 114(2), 561-569.




Day 29 A.M. &. P.M.

This is will be a quick update this morning as I have an appointment and (masked) errands in Missoula this morning — Dear Husband will be here to keep an eye on the Wildflowers, of course. We never leave them alone.

Two Nursing Alcove photos…

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This is Sage.

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Pete the cat — Daisy does not mind the cats wandering about with her puppies.

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The puppies have a definite preference for the toys that “crinkle” and that includes the wildflower toys and the bananas. Very interesting.

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Click HERE to see a short video from this morning after the Wildflowers moved from the Nursing Alcove back to Puppy Central.

EVENING: Photos from the Fun Day

A bunk bed…

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I love this photo because it says so much about Daisy.

Zoom lens! I was not as close as it seems.

Zoom lens! I was not as close as it seems.

That is Daisy happily meeting Suzanne’s daughter for the first time — in the middle of the Wildflowers. Daisy could not have been more thrilled to see her Bestie Suzanne and to make a new friend in Sarah. Daisy is such a kind dog.

A photo of a photo being taken of Clover.

Suzanne is in my social bubble and has been for the past three months. Masks will be required for visitors not in my immediate social bubble.

Suzanne is in my social bubble and has been for the past three months. Masks will be required for visitors not in my immediate social bubble.

Suzanne with Mariposa and Lupine.

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Okay — here is your look at puppy teeth!

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Paintbrush — so cute and serious.

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We all had fun visiting and being outside — even when there was a passing thunderstorm.

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The puppies did a great job and are ready for more visitors!

Mallow

Mallow

Some of you cannot visit in person and so how about a meet-and-greet via Zoom on Saturday morning at 10 Montana time? I will post the link on Saturday morning.

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Good Night, Friends!

Day 28 A.M. & P.M.

Back to the research on How to Build an Amazingly Awesome Puppy.

Clover — one of nine amazingly awesome Wildflowers

Clover — one of nine amazingly awesome Wildflowers

Most things I discuss are related, although I know that is not always clear.

Today I hope to create a connection between the last two days of my minor ranting about board-and-hurt so-called training and the related concepts of Learned Helplessness and Resilience.

I want to produce confident, resilient puppies.

Just guess which puppy this is leading the charge to master new experiences.

Just guess which puppy this is leading the charge to master new experiences.

What does that mean? It means I want a puppy who will try new things, and who will “bounce” if things do not go well.

I am looking to shape an internal locus of control — a perception that effort influences outcome — because that is key to resilience.

I want the puppies to march through the world with an “I Can” attitude. We want puppies with Grit!

“I can — escape!”

“I can — escape!”

In a review of fifty years of work on the concept of learned helplessness Maier & Seligman (2016) assert that helplessness is not learned, but rather “…passivity and heightened anxiety are the default mammalian reaction to prolonged bad events” (p. 364).

The authors go to say that “what can be learned is cortical—that bad events will be controllable in the future” (p. 364).

And so we should understand that newborns arrive hardwired to be upset and passive in the face of an adverse experience, and this is overcome “…by the experience of mastery over aversive events… (Maier & Seligman, 2016, p. 363).

Of course, this assumes the bad event doesn’t so traumatize the developing brain that the youngster stays stuck in anxiety. Learning to escape something bad, after all, is not the same thing as mastery.

Mastery of a challenge comes with rewards — escape the Nursing Alcove and there are new things to chew and places to pee!

Mastery of a challenge comes with rewards — escape the Nursing Alcove and there are new things to chew and places to pee!

It is normal to feel some degree of distress in the face of a challenge (Brown, 2015). What we want is the willingness to whine through the distress and do it anyway — or at least try.

Sigh. Loose puppies make one clean Puppy Central in a big hurry.

Sigh. Loose puppies make one clean Puppy Central in a big hurry.

A resilient human does this all the time — in fact, we are all doing this now as we face the pandemic. Lots of whining (and some wine-ing, I know) but we keep marching.

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Our job as humans is to offer puppies opportunities for mastery. The tasks must not be impossible or super scary — or too boring, easy, and/or repetitive.

There is a sweet spot — that is our goal.

Well, it is my goal.

The puppies who did not escape but who decided to hang with mom — or climb her.

The puppies who did not escape but who decided to hang with mom — or climb her.

Dogs and humans who learn to avoid bad outcomes are not building resilience — in fact, avoidant coping styles are associated with less resilient personalities (Brown, 2015). Therefore, pain-based and/or fear-based training, which relies on avoidance of an aversive (e.g., e-collar, which is code for shock collar), are exactly the opposite of what we want — unless we want a dog who is anxious and avoidant.

I sure don’t!

What I want for puppies and people is the ability to square up and face the challenge, confident they can do it — even if they whine a lot.

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Our Wildflowers are four weeks old today. They are still exclusively nursing — of course. They are enjoying novel things every day to support the development of intelligence, curiosity, and resilience — but they are carefully protected from experiences that push them past their developmental capacities and comfort-levels. And starting tomorrow — their world will expand to include visitors.

But today — party time.

EVENING: Four Week Photos (plus a couple of extras)

Paintbrush

Paintbrush

Mallow

Mallow

Clarkia

Clarkia

Sage

Sage

Mariposa

Mariposa

Lupine

Lupine

Buttercup

Buttercup

Larkspur

Larkspur

Clover

Clover

DH and Mariposa

DH and Mariposa

Clarkia and toes

Clarkia and toes

Karma the Demo Cat

Karma the Demo Cat

Sparkle checking things out

Sparkle checking things out

Good Night, Friends!

Work Cited

Brown, R. (2015). Building children and young people's resilience: Lessons from psychology. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 14, 115-124.

Maier, S., & Seligman, M. (2016). Learned Helplessness at Fifty: Insights From Neuroscience. Psychological Review, 123(4), 349-367.