Day 4 — Struggling to Thrive

Metro is in the incubator at the emergency room where we brought him at in the middle of the night.

When we fed him yesterday afternoon, we hoped he had turned the corner. He sucked from the bottle, and the amount of fluid our vet calculated that he drank sounded good.

Unfortunately, the feedings at 6:30, 10, and 1 am had him eating very little. He kept losing weight, getting down to 4.97 ounces at 3 am from 5.39 ounces at 9 in the morning.

He was born at 6.31 ounces… losing weight the first day is normal, and he went down to 5.71 on Tuesday night.  But, yesterday was his day to start showing gains, and he didn’t.

We didn’t know if he’d last until morning, so we went to the vet at 3:30.

The ER vet who checked us in said that his body temperature was low, probably in part from the drive over where he was wrapped in towels and had a heating stone… and still lost body heat!

At about 8 this morning the ER doctor called and said that Metro is holding his own. He’s being fed every 1 1/2 hours, being kept in the incubator, and maintaining both this weight and body temperature. They hope that he will start being more active and be ready to feed from a bottle again today.

In the first week, the doctor said, some puppies just don’t catch on and start eating. They fail to thrive.

The photo below shows Metro in his first hour of life. He was smaller than his sister then, and has continued to be thin. His failure to eat from his mother or the bottle is life threatening.

Caution! Fragile!

Caution! Fragile! Metro in his first hour.

We are rooting for Metro. Eat, boy!

By |2018-10-01T18:56:32-07:00September 27, 2018|dachshunds|1 Comment

Day 3 — Intervention

Geoffrey Blowing on Metro to Keep Him Warm Prior to Feeding

Geoffrey Blowing on Metro to Keep Him Warm Prior to Feeding

At the instructions of our regular vet, we went out and bought puppy nipples and bottles from Petco after her 10:30 visit. The formula Dr. Cain recommends was fine, but the delivery mechanisms we’d acquired were too large for dachshund puppies!

Our SF vet, Dr. Jill Chase, returned to our house at 2:30 to help us give Metro his first bottle feeding.

One part formula, two parts warm water, stir, mix, put in the bottle and feed. Pretty straight forward… unless you’ve never done it before, the puppy needing food is your two-day old, and the nipple won’t cooperate and accept a pin prick!

Geoffrey Holding Metro for Bottle Feeding by Dr. Jill Chase

Geoffrey Holding Metro for Bottle Feeding by Dr. Jill Chase

But, those  obstacles were overcome, and the bottle found its way into Metro’s mouth a little after 3 pm.

The good news is:

  • He started sucking the bottle
  • He ate/drank about an ounce of formula
Geoffrey Holding Metro at the Bottle Feeding

Geoffrey Holding Metro at the Bottle Feeding

So, we try more between 6:15 and 7:15.  That feeding won’t be so visually recorded, though, as there will be no spare hands for the camera.

Metro did well with the bottle. We are hopeful that he’ll start transferring his sucking skills to Mom once he gets the hang of it on the bottle.

By |2018-10-01T18:57:43-07:00September 26, 2018|dachshunds|2 Comments

Day 3 — Eat! Please!!

MUNI, Metro, and Zenith

MUNI, the girl seen here on the left, is gaining weight. The boy is losing weight and not staying well latched on.

The Midday Report today has to focus on getting nourishment to the boy.

The first week of their lives puppies aren’t very interesting, anyway. They eat and sleep. They crawl over mother to find a dining spot, but they don’t play, open their eyes, or generally act much more than consumers of milk.  That’s ideally.

The girl, who we are tentatively calling MUNI, is doing okay.  She is constantly on a nipple and sucking. She’s gained weight.

Since yesterday’s report Mother Zenith has started eating more (but not a lot), drinking some water, and peeing some. She likes cottage cheese the best, will eat a couple pieces of kibble mixed in.

Yesterday, Zenith was agitated much of the day. We believe she was in pain from the day-before surgery and the lack of pain pills available. (The universal wisdom in 2018 is to not give pain meds to nursing mothers unless it is absolutely necessary. This suggestion is endorsed by female vets, not just males on some Senate panel.)

But, today she is on the upswing. She seems to be gradually recovering from surgery.

Our third patient, however, is not following an ideal path. Metro, the boy, is lively and seemingly strong as he crawls along his mother. But, even when we lead him to a nipple, he will nurse for a very brief period of time before wandering off.  He has actually lost weight in the last 24 hours. Losing weight in the first 24 hours is normal. Continued weight loss is not normal nor healthy.

We have armed ourselves with powered canine mother’s milk, pet bottles, and suitable sucking devices. Our local vet is coming over at 2:30 to show us how to get him eating from the bottles. If he doesn’t do that well, we have feeding tubes ready.

That’s all for the 2:15 report. Stay tuned!

By |2018-10-01T18:58:27-07:00September 26, 2018|dachshunds|1 Comment

Trying to Get Comfortable – Day 2 at 1:45 pm

A day for vigilance, or how to act like nervous grandparents.

Our major concern at the moment is that Zenith ate only a breakfast of boiled chicken breast at about 7 and has refused more, refused more with rice, refused more with rice and chicken broth. She also has moments of whining and nervousness, moving the puppies further back in the whelping box, especially if both Geoffrey and I are in the room at the same time.

The puppies seem fine. The girl continues to nap on a nipple and wakes to nurishment. We worry that the boy stays on a nibble only a minute or so before climbing further or wandering around. He is neither whining nor lethargic. But isn’t as a steady sucker as his sister. We bought Esbilac (canine milk replacer) just in case we need to supplement his intake from Zenith.

Zenith's Puppies Together While Mom is Out

Zenith’s Puppies Together While Mom is Out

We have received a lot of advice and suggestions from friends — thank you!

I suspect that Zenith is in some pain, still from yesterday’s surgery. And this is all new and strange!

And, thanks to Geoffrey for his duty in the puppy room. He and Zenith are calmer together than she and I, but I worry about how little Geoffrey has slept.

By |2018-10-01T18:58:13-07:00September 25, 2018|dachshunds|3 Comments

Zenith’s Puppies — Day One

Zenith’s C-Section at Bishop Ranch was on schedule and had happy results.  At 2:02 this afternoon a girl was born, followed about a minute later by a smaller, darker boy. Dr. Janice Cain and her team were reassuring, warm, professional, and kept us all healthy and sane.

Bringing the Puppy to her first Towel

Bringing the Puppy to her first Towelling

It’s now 10:15 at night and we are all home and settled down a bit.

Zenith and the girls are in with Geoffrey in the television room. The heat is on to a cozy 75 degrees. Zenith is in the whelping box, and most of the time the puppies are in with her.

The girl is definitely eating, sleeping on a teat so a snack is quickly available. We are somewhat worried about the boy’s milk consumption, but we think he’s feeding. He just seems to wander more than zeroing in on a food supply as his sister does. Zenith herself is only interested in boiled chicken since the surgery, but she is getting increasing alert and seems fine.

Geoffrey will be staying in the TV room overnight, making sure that food is offered every couple hours.

A Rose by Any Other Name…

We have been asked several times what the puppies names are. Here’s the deal:

Puppies are given litter names while they are with their birth family (that’s us). So, what we call them may be their name for only a couple months. And, right now, we haven’t firmly decided what we want to call them when they’re with us. We’re leaning to MUNI for the girl and Metro for the boy. What do you think?

Once they go to their permanent home, they are given a “call name”.  The permanent family selects the call name. Our dog’s call names are Paris, SeQuel, Apex, and Zenith. This is what they answer to when we call them. Or should answer to…

But, the official AKC name is a completely different name! That’s the name the judges see in the program. So, for example, Apex’s formal name is Ch. Ozdachs Royal Succession of Oz, and Zenith is Ozdachs Warrior Princess of Oz. Any puppies our girls have will have a formal name that starts with our kennel name, Ozdachs.

Make sense.

Baby Pictures

Finally, I have started a collection of puppy pictures, starting with today’s C-Section. Check out Zenith’s Puppies’ Pictures online.

https://ozdachs.smugmug.com/Dachshunds/Zeniths-Puppies/

The puppies about 30 minutes after birth.

By |2018-09-24T22:49:29-07:00September 24, 2018|dachshunds|1 Comment
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