Friday, 16 May 2014

Topaz puppies: 1 week old!

Topaz's babies turned one week old yesterday. They are growing by leaps and bounds - all are now well over 300g, so have gained about 50% of their birth weight in the first week. Their eyes and ears are still closed, so they are still relying on smell and touch to find mama.




As the big pups are still in the puppy corner (for one more sleep!) the whelping box is still in my bedroom, where they occasionally wake me at night with their squeaking when they have lost their way and can't find mama or get tangled up in the blankets that line the box. Then I get out of bed, fish them out of their tangle and put them close to mama.


Tomorrow the last but one of the big pups are going to their new homes, so then we will move the whelping box into the puppy cornern and I will no longer have my sleep disturbed (I hope). Though occasionally in the past, when the babes are in distress and mama can't help them, she whines or yaps enough to wake me and then I have to head over to rescue the little ones.

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Phoenix puppies: 8 weeks - the home stretch!

Today was the big snip for those puppies going as pets! They went to the vet first thing this morning to be "fixed" and came home mid-afternoon, a bit tired but not too done in. It is remarkable how quickly they recover at this young age - by the evening they were quite vocal and active, and tomorrow I'm sure you'd hardly guess they had anything done.

The first pup to leave will be Cumin, who will join his Guardian this Wednesday evening.
Next to go will be Katniss Alice and Tobey Lupin, who will follow on Friday evening.
Nelly Iris will join her new Mama on Saturday morning, and Chewy Zurry will follow on Saturday afternoon.
There remains only Juniper still in need of a family. Fingers crossed it won't take long!

That's it for today's update - won't be long now and you'll be taking your new family member home!

P.S. For pix of the newborns, I recommend going on to Dragon Ram's Facebookpage. My daugher has posted some very nice photos there. I have yet to take/make the time to get them onto this blog.

Friday, 9 May 2014

Mother's Day Doodle Romp

This is a reminder that the next DragonRam Doodle Romp is to take place on Mother's Day - Sunday May 11 at 3pm. Meet at DragonRam HQ for a romp through the nearby open spaces. I am happy to report that the grass is green, the trees are leafing out, and the ground is mostly dry, so we will be able to expand our romp beyond the paved parking lots into the green and wooded areas. RSVP to roma@dragonramdoodles.com.

Guess How Many Puppies: Topaz Edition - And the winner is...!

The winner for the Topaz edition of our Guess How Many Puppies contest is...

Martin L, who guessed 6 puppies botn May 9 at 15:34 pm - so he had the nubmer right and was within 23 hours of the first birth. Jojo TC was also close - she guessed 6 puppies with the first born May 7 at 12:15, about 28 hours too early. Good try Jojo!!

Martin will receive a $10 Timmy's gift card (and I know there is a Timmy's a short distance from his home so he can put it to good use!)

(Note that, though there are only 5 living pups, 6 were indeed born, so a guess of 6 is the correct number. 

These were the final guesses:


Name
# of puppies
Date/time of first arrival
Patrice P
4
7 May, 17:07
Amélie TC
4
8 May, 16:45
Emma P
4
9 May, 18:00
Karen P
5
7 May, 19:00
Roma
5
7 May, 19:15
Tristan Q
5
7 May, 20:00
Sarah P
5
8 May, 17:00
Jojo TC
6
7 May, 12:15
Martin L
6
9 May, 15:34
Suzanne W
6
9 May, 16:20
Mathom Q
6
10 May, 00:01
Adrienne TC
6
10 May, 06:00
Mary Q
6
11 May, 20:00

Thursday, 8 May 2014

Topaz babies have arrived!

We are pleased to report that Topaz gave birth to 6 beautiful babies this evening! Unfortunately one was stillborn, so we have 5 living puppies to enjoy.

Her temperature had dropped last night and was still low this morning, indicating whelping was likely to occur within 24 hours. But it usually isn't right away, so we went off to our daily activites leaving my father at home to keep an eye on Topaz (well, after he got home from breakfast out).

The kids got home from school around 2:40 and reported all was well and Topaz's temperature was still low. Once the temperature rises again it indicates whelping will occur within the hour. But of course then you need to monitor temperature hourly...

The kids took all the big dogs out for a walk around 4pm and decided to cme back after not too long as Topaz seemed to straining tas though to poop, but she wasn't popping - maybe a puppy was on its way.

Back at the house, Topaz went into her crate and lay there quietly, so nothing seemed to be happening after all. Half an hour later, they went to check on her - and lo and behold, there were two puppies!!She had made nary a peep and there they were!

After that things got quiet for a while. Quite a while in fact. I got home and we ate supper and still nothing was happening. Then the kids remarked that she seemed to be straining but nothing was happening... and this went on for a while. Finally I investigated and I could feel a puppy a ways back in the birth canal, ready to come out but Topaz wasn't straining any more. It seemed the sac might have broken which got me concerned as the puppy can soon suffocate if it can't get out and start breathing. But it was too far in for me to reach - so what to do?

I phoned Linda of Canadian Doodle puppies who has had at least twice as many litters as me and she checked one of her books and gave me a ffew tips. We started by giving Topaz some calcium in the form of Tums, to heolp stimulate contractions. Then we held her standing up on her hind legs, to let gravity ehlp get the puppy down, and I massaged the opening - and sure enough, within 10 minutes we had actio and the puppy was out. But unfortuantely it had geen stuck in the birth canal too long and was stillborn.

About 10 minutes later, nice and easy. Then there began another long period of waiting. Generally I don't get worked up easily, but after two hours I was getting concerned again as Topaz was occasionally straining but nothing was happening. This time, however, I could feel nothing in the birth canal. I was sure I could hear a heartbeat with my daughter's stethoscope, and we could feel some movement, so things seemed okay.

Finally at 10:06 out popped #5, followed within 15 minutes by #6, both healthy and hearty.

So we have:
- red male, born at about 16:40, 172g
- black parti female, about 16:50, 227g
- balck female, 19:26, 202g - stillborn
- red female, 19:40, 208g
- black male, 22:06, 165 g (the runt)
- gold male, 10:23, 185g

Over the next two months you can watch them grow and develop int o beautiful little dogs!

(Pictures to follow!)

Topaz litter: Any day now!

Topaz joined us on Tuesday evening as her due date is imminent. Temperature readings Tuesday night and Wednesday morning were normal, but Wednesday evening her temperature had dropped below 100 degrees. A second low reading will indicate that whelping will happen within 24 hours. We'll see...

The house feels very full now, and it will only get fuller once the little pups arrive! Thankfully for the first three weeks or so they don't make much impression on the general state of the household, sticking to their wehlping box and relyign on Mama for everything.

By the time they are starting to get active and move out of the box, the older pups should be mostly gone. (I'm still hoping to make that "all" gone, but 2 still need homes - and then there's still Ophelia!). Four, at least, will be going to their forever families at the beginning of May long weekend, and that will already make the house more managealbe.

Stay tuned for a birth announcement one of these days soon!

Phoenix pups: Temperament Evaluations



It’s been a big week for the puppies! Life is getting more and more interesting and varied for them. Last Wednesday they had their first major car ride all the way to the vet’s office, where they were prodded and poked. Nobody complained very much about the poke, and did very well with all the handling by strangers. 

Then on Monday we did the puppy temperament evaluation. This was a new process for us and I had been eagerly anticipating it, hoping it would prove a useful tool in matching puppies to families and identifying possible issues a puppy might encounter in a certain situation, and conversely that the family might encounter with a certain puppy. 

To date we have relied on general, unstructure observations of how the puppies react in various situations, how adventurous they are when taken to the school classroom, the vet, or outside in the fields, how ready they are to explore when they first emerge from the puppy corner and venture into the rest of the house, and so on. While these observations have been helpful, they are fairly vague and generally based on seeing the pups with us and as members of a pack. Furthermore, while we do notice differences among puppies, it has been hard to exactly frame them and put them into words that might be helpful to a family in making a selection. One still ends up using general terms like playful, cuddly, adventurous, and so on.

Having now gone through the evaluation process once, I can say that I wish we had been doing it all along as it provodes a framework and a vocabulary to, first, identify clearly the different personality characteristics of each pup individually and, second, to identify possible ways of handling the various personalities and the types of situations in which the pups will thrive and where they might have more difficulties. 

The format of the test is this: one member of the evaluation team interacts with the puppy while the second takes notes. Each puppy is evaluated individually, in a strange setting by a person it has never met before. These factors in and of themselves are stressors that provide a context to identify how a puppy reacts to new environments and the things it looks to for comfort and security. Each element of the test is designed to evaluate a specific characteristic – patience, biddability, courage, confidence, pain tolerance, sight and sound reactions, and so on. It also identifies what the puppy is more focused on – what readily catches and holds its attention – such as food, people, other dogs, objects, etc. Then there is the motivational element: does it seek to be rewarded with food, contact with people, touch, praise, play, other dogs? Put all of these together and you get an idea of what makes this specific dog tick, how it might react in certain situations, what can be done to motivate it to do what you want, and so on.


It was fascinating to watch the six pups go through the test. Each is indeed distinct. The three females, in particular, were all so different. First we put Gold Girl through her paces. She was a little “wild child” – very active, investigating everything, playing with the objects, eager to explore, not particularly attentive to the person doing the evaluation, but very attentive to the new and strange things all around her. She hardly stopped moving, and didn’t care too much about new noises and sights.

Next came Chocolate Phantom girl. She was almost the exact opposite of the first! She pretty much shut down in the face of all these new things, trying to find a safe, secure spot to hide. The instant we brought another, older dog into the room, however, she was a different puppy – active, playful, happy. She was also very motivated by food, coming out of her scaredy-dog mode somewhat for treats. She will be a good snuggler, but she’ll want a bit of time to get used to new people and places.

Black Phantom Girl (Katniss), was third to be tested. She was pretty much right in the middle of the other two – balanced, happy, active but not wild, alert but not startle-prone, courageous and confident but still attentive to people. She is the one we will be placing in a Guardian Home as a breeding prospect puppy – her type of balanced temperament is exactly what we aim to produce and reproduce!

The males also showed distinctions, though they didn’t range across the scale the way the females did. Caramel Boy is quite vocal, courageous though somewhat lacking in confidence, thoughtfull but a bit insecure. Gold Boy is probably the most people-oriencted of them all and seeks to orient himself by his humans. Mocha Phantom Boy (Cumin) again is quite balanced – smart, courageous, not overly reactive but very attuned to his environment. He is the one we will be placing in A Guardian Home (still needed!) as a prospective stud.

Over the next few days, the families who have reserved puppies will be making their selection. Once this has happened, I will post more details on each and highlight the two pups still in need of homes.  Sorry I didn’t take any pictures during the evaluation process – I was too busy just observing!