Archive for the ‘D Litter’ Category
Day 4! Nail Trims!
Friday, November 13th, 2020So their nails were sharp so I trimmed them. It’s a bit fraught since the nails are tiny at this age. I use a human nail nipper and just catch the hook at the end of the nail and snip it. I didn’t do back nails yet, I’ll do those tomorrow.
Everyone is growing well, and Alice is really proving to be just a stellar mother. She is quite upset if I leave her for any length of time right now but that will ease off with time.
Turn your volume up for what puppies sound like when they’re practicing the theremin complaining about someone muscling in on their nipple:
Alice being a good mama:

I hope to get the puppycam up and running asap!
Weigh in:
Alfa (and yes, that’s how it’s spelled in international radio code): 318 grams (213 at birth)
Bravo: 283 grams (205 at birth)
Charlie: 269 grams (173 at birth)
Delta: 332 grams (220 at birth)
Echo: 273 grams (176 at birth)
Foxtrot: 337 grams (213 at birth) – CHONK!
Golf: 325 grams (225 at birth)
Contraction!
Friday, November 13th, 2020Skip this if biology isn’t your thing, but I took this short video of a really good strong contraction during Monday’s “best whelping ever”. If you’re interested, I gave a subcutaneous calcium injection once we had strong contractions per my repro vet’s advice, Pedialyte with glucose given a couple of times to keep her strength up but honestly this was just so smooth and easy, she kept contracting like this throughout and didn’t get exhausted at all.
The puppies nursing helps with oxytocin release which also helps strengthen the contractions (calcium helps support the muscles doing the work), which is why I don’t understand when breeders take the puppies away until labor is finished – if you have a bitch who is moving around a lot while she’s laboring you can put the puppies in a safe warm box in the whelping box area to keep them safe if needed, but then put them back with her as much as possible. Alice was very chill throughout so the puppies stayed right on her the whole time. It’s much more natural this way and it all helps both her AND the puppies (she gets the oxytocin to help with labor and bonding and they get colostrum from nursing and stimulating from her cleaning them).
If every whelping was as perfect as this one I’d never worry about it!
Day 3! ENS Starts!
Thursday, November 12th, 2020Three days old means we start satanic ritual abuse Early Neurological Stimulation! Which we do from day 3 through 16. This is one of those “can’t hurt/might help” things which, in conjunction with Puppy Culture, can really help puppies grow up with a good set of skills and resilience.

Everyone gained well, it’s a testament to just how much time Alice spends in with them that everyone has been gaining consistently since birth. Bravo had a tiny loss at the end of the first 24 hours but has more than made up for it (it’s typical for puppies to lose in the first 24 hours for a variety of reasons, including when you weighed them after they were born), but after that they should gain an average of 5-10% each day and should have roughly doubled their birth weight after about a week.
One thing I did differently this time is to put the heating pad under the bedding in the middle of the box instead of in a corner like I’ve done previously. You should only heat part of the box since puppies cannot regulate their body temperatures at this age so they need to be able to move towards or away from the heat source to stay comfortable and not get chilled or overheated (one of the many reasons not to use a heat lamp). In the middle that means Alice can lie to the outside and stay cool herself, and it keeps the puppies out of the corners where they can sometimes get stuck. So far this seems to be working well but we’ll see.
They are getting quite vocal, you can tell the difference between true distress (mum leaving the box, mum stepping on your foot accidentally, help I’m trapped in a corner), contented grunting and squeaking while they nurse, and grouching at someone trying to muscle in on their nipple etc. It’s especially interesting because they can’t hear yet. As Jim pointed out you can tell by how much noise they make that dogs are predators, because no prey animal baby would be that loud and risk calling attention to themselves.
Because I am terrible at math (but pretty good at Excel), I use a nerd spreadsheet that has a ton of useful information for me in order to track their growth and progress. I started with a spreadsheet someone else made years ago and have modified it somewhat with each litter as I learn more about what I like to keep track of.

It’s color coded by collar color (rainbow colors, not gendered, and in birth order). I weigh them twice a day for the first week, then once a day, and I also track changes week to week, average daily/weekly weights, early neurological stimulation, etc. Since I tend to be pretty sleep deprived in the first week or two, having this to update as I weigh, cuddle, and examine each puppy every day is really useful. (if any breeder friends would like to use it I’ll happily share it)

Don’t tell Alice but I have been bringing puppies over to meet Grandma Zhora and Great-Grandma Nina through the baby gate when Alice is outside. The puppies can’t see or hear yet, but they can smell and feel things, so we are handling and stroking them a lot, and letting them sniff different smells. The puppies’ family are very interested in them!
Here is an adorable picture of Charlie from last night:

Alice has the most coat of my dogs and her tail is truly magnificently plumed. This makes her beautiful, but it has also given me a healthy respect for my breeder friends who have long coated dogs. I know for next time that I’ll be wrapping Alice’s tail with Vetwrap when it’s whelping time. It’s normal for bitches to have lochia after whelping (just like people do after THEY whelp), and holy moly even though she’s a rock star at keeping herself clean (unlike her mother Zhora, who kept her puppies spotless but who felt it was my job to clean up after her), it still gets all over her tail. Baby wipes and tail baths help but…yowza. People with Shelties and other really coated breeds…how do you do it?
Day 2! Meet The Lucky Sevens!
Wednesday, November 11th, 2020Everyone did great overnight, Alice was much more settled other than the usual post-whelping diarrhea (improving but still a few trips outside overnight), and getting up for overnight meals (she has kibble available all the time but I am feeding her meals of canned gastrointestinal food, mother’s porridge and tripe).

Just after lunch she wanted to go out and DEMANDED to play some fetch. It was nice to see her shift out of mom mode and into Alice mode, then she shifted right back and wanted to come back into the puppy room. She had a great time running around again, she hasn’t been able to run normally for several weeks because she was so huge.
I’ve been enormously impressed with how easily and quickly Alice settled into mothering. Usually a first timer can get a bit panicky with the first puppy or two, but she’s such a steady dog in all respects that this was no different, she took on mothering just like she’s taken on everything else. No muss, no fuss. Being a good mother is so important, there are breeds that tend to be awful mothers and I can’t imagine how much more work that is for breeders. Most Vallhunds tend to be great mothers and my lines certainly are.
The world pretty much stops when a litter is born here, at least for the first few days. As nice as it is to think about time off work and nesting in with the puppies, it’s actually a lot of work, especially at the start. I was so sore yesterday after spending most of Monday on my hands and knees crawling around on the floor, and I have a rug burn on my elbow from getting puppies suctioned and cleaned up.
We put collars on the puppies today. Usually I don’t because they’re easy enough to tell apart with markings, but even though we have some really flashy markings in this litter, two of the females AND two of the males are similar enough that it was making me anxious that I couldn’t reliably tell them apart, and that really matters for weight checks since you need to know if someone isn’t gaining as they should. Just like last time, the collar colors are not gendered and are simply rainbow colors in birth order (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet and pink). These are breakaway collars but even so, someone is in the room with them just about all the time just in case!
So without further ado, meet the Lucky Sevens (in birth order):
Alfa (red collar) female with four white feet and a white chest and belly with a black stripe on her white belly. Birth weight 213 grams, weighed in this morning at 246 grams!


Bravo (orange collar) male with no white on his front feet, a tiny white stripe on his chest and white back toes. Birth weight 205 grams, weighed in this morning at 231 grams!

Charlie (yellow collar) female with a white neck spot, all four feet white. Birth weight 173 grams, weighing in this morning at 194 grams.


Delta (green collar) male with a white chest with a white stripe to his belly, four white feet. Birth weight 220 grams, weighing in this morning at 257 grams!


Echo (blue collar), male with no white on his front feet, and a little white stripe on his chest. Birth weight 176 grams, weighing in this morning at 206 grams.


Foxtrot (purple collar) female with four white feet, white from her chest to her throat and a black spot on her umbilicus. Birth weight 213 grams, weighing in this morning at 256 grams.


Golf (pink collar) female with no white on her front feet and tiny white back toes. Birth weight 225 grams, weighing in this morning at 249 grams.


The puppy room is our guest room off the family room, so the puppies get the sounds (when they can hear) and smells of the household while still being in a secluded spot so mom doesn’t get stressed. We have a baby gate across the door to keep the other dogs out. Grandma Zhora and Great-Grandma Nina are fascinated, and Zhora cries when the puppies are squeaking like she thinks she needs to come in and tend to them.


I am very lucky to have an awesome husband who, while he won’t touch puppies before they’re born (he thinks feeling puppies moving in the womb is “gross” and “probably aliens”), he spends a lot of time cuddling with them once they’re born. He will probably hold one of his Zoom lecture classes from the puppy pen.


Day 1
Tuesday, November 10th, 2020(I call the birthday day 0 which makes today day 1)

We had a bit of a rough night, what can sometimes happen is low calcium can cause restlessness and anxiety, and that’s what happened overnight. I’m so thankful to have the amazing resource of the Canine Repro group on Facebook. So I was up all night getting calcium into Alice until we reached the level that relaxed her. Since about 5 AM she’s been calm and mothering perfectly. Today I’ll make her some special food (Mother’s Porridge) to help support her milk supply and calcium levels in addition to the Doc Roy’s Healthy Bones I’m using (they’re a balanced calcium/phosphorus supplement and they’re tasty too). She’ll stay on the calcium supplement until the puppies are weaned, and then I’ll gradually wean her off it. She may not need to be on the amount she’s on right now, I will try reducing it gradually after a day or two to find the sweet spot. Short term calcium supplementation is safe, and dogs (especially with large litters) are at risk for eclampsia, especially around the week 2 and week 4 marks, which is when the puppies really grow and put a lot of demand on her.
In addition to the calcium she’s getting 1 sunflower lecithin capsule twice daily to help prevent mastitis, plus her usual DHA supplement and probiotic.

She’s got a bowl of her regular ProPlan Sport food available at all times and I’m giving her Royal Canin Gastrointestinal Puppy canned food, which should be easy on her system (they often have diarrhea for a few days after whelping, and she also ate the placentas), so far she hasn’t even pooped though!
The lucky sevens all did GREAT overnight, everyone gained which is very unusual (usually they lose a bit in the first 24 hours then start gaining again). The average weight of the litter at birth was 194.7 grams (I weigh them in grams because I’m from Canada originally and because it’s easier to track small changes in grams), average weight this morning is 211 grams and average weight gain was 6.45 %. I have a nerd spreadsheet that calculates all this stuff for me, because math.
I generally don’t like to put collars on at birth and usually you get enough markings etc. to keep track of who’s who, poor Jim is the note taker while sleep-deprived I calls out what sex they are and what markings they have. Unfortunately this can mean that you end up with descriptions that can fit more than one puppy. I try to refine this on day 1 now that they’re dry and plumped up, so that even if I mixed up puppies between birth and day 1, it’s at least accurate going forward. Tracking weights is important because it can give you an early warning of someone not thriving who might need some extra help. I will hand feed them all a bit eventually anyway because I think it starts them feeling good things about people early on (thanks to my Rottweiler breeder friend Diane Richardson who does this and who told me about it)
Day 61 – Stage 1!
Monday, November 9th, 2020Starting around 7 this morning it looks like Alice is in stage 1 labor. She did some nesting overnight, didn’t want breakfast, vomited and has been progressively getting more restless. Episodes of panting, digging/nesting and whining now. She is having little contractions to start moving the puppies down into position to be born. This stage can take several hours. Normal whelping occurs between days 61-65 of ovulation (often larger litters earlier in that window and smaller litters later). So day 61 is perfectly normal.
At 12:47 we welcomed the first of the D litter, and the last at 2:22. The fastest whelping I’ve ever had, and during the DAY too.
She was a rock star. I was pretty sure she’d spend the day in stage 1 and start delivering just as my repro vet closed (even though I have her home and cell numbers, I’d rather not have to use them). She’s being an amazing mother.
We have four girls and three boys.


Getting Close!
Saturday, November 7th, 2020Progesterone this morning was 3.95 ng/mL. Repro vet says she could go into labor within 36 hours. Doing last minute bustling around just in case she DOES go in tomorrow night!

While we did have terbutaline on hand to stop premature labor if needed, we won’t be using it, we’re close enough that it should be fine.
Alice ate breakfast and lunch today but very slowly. She is very large.
This was last night:


And today’s news (huge sigh of relief, thank freaking goodness):

Set up!
Wednesday, November 4th, 2020
Whelping box all set up! See that stain on the carpet at bottom right? That’s from where Alice was born three years ago…
I’ve been sleeping in the guest room for the last week and now we’re all set up for next week. I’ll make up some Myra’s Formula and freeze it over the next day or two, then we’ll be about as ready as we’ll ever be!
Day 55 – Lucky Seven
Tuesday, November 3rd, 2020
Puppy count x-ray showed 7! Everyone looks good per my awesome repro vet! One week and one day to go (63 days from ovulation +/- 2 days so anywhere from Monday on next week!)
(also there was an election today….)