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#1 (permalink) |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Denmark, Ohio
Posts: 17,499
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Cupcake will be seven weeks old on Thursday. She is six pounds today.
Anyhow, the new owner who is a GSD breeder, wants her early and said she would take care of first shots. But I wanted her to have as much time with her dam as possible, as her dam is playing with her and possibly doing the job of the siblings she does not have. I wormed her at four weeks, and again today. What I am worried about is sending her off at eight weeks with no shots. Should I just take her to the vet and do the first shots and give the new owner the shot record. I will probably talk it over with her. But, I am also a little concerned about the shots themselves. Normally, my puppies are a bit bigger at this point. Is is dangerous to give her the vaccines and would you wait? If I do shots, I want to do them a few days at least before turning the dog over. Thoughts?
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RIP Arwen, CD RN CGC ![]() RIP Whitney, RN CGC ![]() Jenna, RN CGC Babs, CD RA CGC Herding Instinct Certificate Heidi, RA CGC Tori, RN CGC SG3 Odessa, SchH1, Kkl1, AD Ninja, RN CGC Milla, RN CGC Joy, Star Puppy, RN CGC Dolly & Bear |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Knighted Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Illinois
Posts: 3,224
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I would be a little concerned because of her size & weight...but yet...small breeds are that same size when given innoculations.
I use Vanguard...less problems and allergic reactions that Fort Dodge products.
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Huerta Hof German Shepherds www.teamhuertahof.com ....where breeding is still considered an art.... |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,605
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Quote:
You may want to consider vaccinating for Parvo only since the pup appears to be so small. I would probably let the vet do it due to the pups size. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Denmark, Ohio
Posts: 17,499
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I always do shots at the vet.
The pup is small because she nearly died after the c-section and it took her a long time to catch up. The bitch is not gigantic -- she is a properly sized German showline bitch. When I brought Arwen home, she was six pounds at six weeks, when I took her to the vet that first time. So she is not that terribly small. She will not be seven weeks until tomorrow, and she will have gained a bit more by then -- did today already. (Arwen is not related, but she was between 68 and 75 pounds when full grown -- not a small bitch at all.) My question is more would you wait until eight weeks and let the new owner do the shots -- as she suggested, or would it be better to go ahead with the shots so that she may have some protection prior to going to this person's home?
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RIP Arwen, CD RN CGC ![]() RIP Whitney, RN CGC ![]() Jenna, RN CGC Babs, CD RA CGC Herding Instinct Certificate Heidi, RA CGC Tori, RN CGC SG3 Odessa, SchH1, Kkl1, AD Ninja, RN CGC Milla, RN CGC Joy, Star Puppy, RN CGC Dolly & Bear |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: North Florida
Posts: 4,860
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If I was going to do it I would probably have the first set done just so I wouldn't have to worry about it.
Really depends on your comfort level. i think I good case could be made for either side. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 12,470
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Selzer -
You trust this person enough to sell them the dog. Why do you worry about the shots? Are the shots the only redflag you have? How would you react if you were in the buyer's shoes? You had asked specifically that something be handled one way, the seller did it the way you didn't want it done. I suppose you could put it in the contract that she will have the shots done on YYYY/MM/DD and send you verification by YYYYMMDD or you will take the pup back. I think your "I'm going to talk to her." is the very best answer. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Moderator
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Old Lyme, CT USA
Posts: 14,237
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middle, not selzer here, but I believe the person taking the puppy is the stud dog owner, so it's not a 'for sale' puppy.
Personally, and I'm not a breeder, because she is small and a singleton, I'd keep her until she was 10 weeks, do the first shot at 8-9 weeks of age. Is there a reason the person has to have her at 8 weeks? (I know most want them at 8 weeks but it's no big deal to wait a couple weeks) And as Robin said, they give small breeds the same dosage as a large breed. Maybe even think about doing 1/2 dosage for the first shot?
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Diane Danger Danger vom Kleinen Hain aka Masi "Angel" Jakoda's Bewitchen Sami CD OA OAJ OAC NGC OJC RS-O GS-N JS-O TT HIC CGC "Angel" Steinwald's Four x Four CGC HIC TT Harmonyhill's Hy Jynx NA NAJ NAC NJC RS-N JS-N HIC Jakoda's Jagged Edge |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Denmark, Ohio
Posts: 17,499
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Quote:
This puppy is out of my bitch who I just imported from Germany who is out of a double world sieger. The dog is an up and coming young male. My friend is very interested in this puppy for the bloodlines, as well as having a youngster. Yes I trust her, she has been breeding and showing and importing dogs for more than half a century. But a lot rides on this puppy for both of us. I was going to keep a male out of this breeding. I just would hate for anything to happen to this little one now, for both of us. Two dangers I see, one is that she has a reaction to the shots and dies. That would be terrible. The other is that she goes to this person's home, with no shots, and this person has dogs, and contracts something and dies. I can understand wanting to keep a singleton longer than eight weeks. She wants the dog earlier than eight weeks, and will go ahead and do the shots, since I have no puppy, and lost the puppies, and paid an arm and a leg for the c-section and to keep this little tyke going, I think she wants to give me a break on this vet bill. That is all. I am just looking for opinions on which is the greater danger. In think my friend has enough experience to keep the pup out of harms way until the shots have enough time to take effect. And she would have to have distemper or parvo or one of the other things vaccinated against in the environment for there to be a problem. And I checked out Capt Max's book to check on weights. Of the litters that he followed, the smallest pup at the end of seven weeks was 6 pounds 11 ounces. She is 6 pounds 10 today, at seven weeks, which is still in the ball park really, best I could really expect after the rocky beginning.
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RIP Arwen, CD RN CGC ![]() RIP Whitney, RN CGC ![]() Jenna, RN CGC Babs, CD RA CGC Herding Instinct Certificate Heidi, RA CGC Tori, RN CGC SG3 Odessa, SchH1, Kkl1, AD Ninja, RN CGC Milla, RN CGC Joy, Star Puppy, RN CGC Dolly & Bear |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Macedon, NY
Posts: 1,054
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Selzer, can you two compromise. Keep the puppy a couple weeks longer and let her vaccinate the pup when she gets her. They do give the same vaccines no mater the size of the puppy (breed). Some vets will only give one or two vaccines and not a 5-way or 7-way to a smaller pup. I plan to only give the parvo/distemper vax at 7 wks.
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Dawn Brogan German Shepherd Yoko von der Burg Austerlitz pedigree information http://www.pedigreedatabase.com/germ...html?id=713938 |
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