I agree- this pup should NOT go back to the others to socialize until they can make sure the mother is not going to be around- for the safety of the pup...Originally Posted by applesmom
I agree- this pup should NOT go back to the others to socialize until they can make sure the mother is not going to be around- for the safety of the pup...Originally Posted by applesmom
This pup is over an hour away from the mother and sibs as her post stated
The question she asked was did any of us think it was safe to allow her other dog to possibly surragate as warmth factor. She has already seperated it, and is bottle feeding it, her female spayed bitch seems to have taken an interest in it. and while it is possible that the bitch could surrogate it, I would wait until it was a few weeks old before allowing that, there is no denying that having a same specie surrogate will help the pup in the long run. The question at hand is if she should try it now.
I would say from my own experience no, I have had luck with moms that litters were close in birth dates surrogating, and have had a few dogs that were excellent babysitters, and nannies for other specie, but as a rule they all had previous litter experience.
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Well put! I agree!Originally Posted by Dr.Goodnow
To train a dog you have to think like a dog!
Originally Posted by borzoimom
That's not what I said. The dogs in the foster home shouldn't be allowed near the weakened puppy.
Returning the pup to the litter, if it should survive, should be done by re-introducing it to the mother first and away from the puppies. If the mother won't accept it then the pup would have to remain isolated from the litter.
There's also the possibility that the pup as it gets older would be unable to be returned to the litter, even if the mother accepts it. Since the owners both work, there wouldn't be constant supervision and the other puppies could get too rough with it. That would depend on the age of course.
If the pup shows signs of thriving in the next few day's it would be best to try to return her to the mom and the litter before the eyes and ears open. That would give her a far better shot at a normal puppyhood!
To train a dog you have to think like a dog!
WRONG- if you return this pup to the mother- the mother will not recognize the pup as hers, in protection of her own- possibly get aggressive.Originally Posted by applesmom
The best way to do this is to wait until until the pup is weaned, the others are weaned- then add- IF AND ONLY IF there is no sign of disease from the returned pup into the the litter..
Applesmom.
Right, here goes. I was only 15 at the time and everyone thought the pup was going to die. She was so tiny and weak. I took her and started feeding her with lactol, a powder milk make especially for pups and kittens etc...
My dad brought another one to me, a bit bigger than her but still being pushed around too much by the others. I suppose they made good canine company for each other. When we tried to put the little bitch back with the litter, she'd go downhill fast so I had to take her back and carry on hand rearing her and she'd perk up again within an hour. She was just unable to feed at all and, even though Mist would have allowed her to feed, the other pups just pushed her out of the way and she weakened fast.
Still, she survived and they were both eating solid food before we just put them back with the others. I would have been happy to keep them with me, it was my dad who said about putting them back. I suppose because they only had my scent on them which Mist knew and because Mist was so maternal anyway that she took them back as her own without problems and the other litter mates seemed fine with them also. These two pups always remembered me though, especially the little dog, he became quite attached to me and would cry if other people held him but then quieten down when I took him back although he was comfortable with mum and siblings still if I wasn't there. It was quite heart wrenching when they were sold.
I couldn't just suppliment them whilst leaving them with Mist and the other pups because I didn't live with my dad and thats where Mist and the pups were at that time. There was nobody else willing or able to take them in and hand rear them. My dad would normally let such pups just die but I couldn't do that.
I bet Mist would have taken any other dogs pups as her own to tell you the truth...just like she always tried to take Jess's as her own, lol.
When she was a pup, she used to dig holes in the garden and put my dads plant pots in them, haha. I read in one of my dog behaviour books about another dog doing the exact same thing and it turned out she was doing it as a maternal thing, digging a den and treating the plant pots as puppies, haha. The behaviourist said that she would likely be a very good mother if she was ever bred from...our Mist was.
I don't think they all need previous litter experience to foster a baby animal though. For example, in our daily paper not long back, there was a female cat, spayed, who acted as surrogate to a baby orphaned weasel. She hadn't had kittens before but her owner found that she took to the weasel, cleaned it, curled up with it and kept it warm etc...There were photos of her with it.
There was even an article posted even more recently where a young female leopard tried to mother a baby baboon. She was filmed cleaning it and picking it up like a cub and taken up into the tree where it was safe and there were photos of her doing it in the paper. Unfortunately, without it's real mum and her milk, it weakened and died and the young leopard finally left it after so long. She wasn't much more than a cub herself, obviously had never had cubs of her own. She just didn't have the means to rear a baby baboon.![]()
I'm sure most animals would not act in this way but you always get your one in a millions, lol.
Thanks Canus-Lupus, the reason for keeping them seperated makes perfect sense now.I couldn't just suppliment them whilst leaving them with Mist and the other pups because I didn't live with my dad and thats where Mist and the pups were at that time.![]()
To train a dog you have to think like a dog!
After reading this thread, I am so heart broken for this puppy. I sure hope he makes it. I would not put that pup back with the litter....too much risk with the momma dog. Just keep her warm, fed, and stimulate bowels, that is all you can do right now for her. Good luck and please keep us posted.
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It would depend on the circumstances and the bitch. In a case like this we can't assume the bitch will reject the puppy. Many wouldn't. It would be best for a puppy that young to at least give it a chance to rejoin the litter. I sure would.Originally Posted by borzoimom
To train a dog you have to think like a dog!
Any updates? How is the puppy doing?
To train a dog you have to think like a dog!
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