Saturday, March 26, 2022

The Lady Drinks Litter(s) - Two Weeks Pictures - Bit O'Honey' s Pups

 ClarkeBar Grizwold and our three ladies came up with a total of thirteen pups. Each has its own traits and personalities, but at two weeks only the traits have started to show, so I'll leave the personality discussions for a later date. The pups have done as all litters do, double in size weekly. They are not any more active, but are mostly just larger bags of fur, but some have progressed further than this.

The growth of a litter is fairly predictable. At one weeks there isn't much to report. By two weeks we have eyes open to differing degrees and a few are "bear" walking around the whelping box. By next weekend their ears are open, eyes are open wide, and they have jumped out of their whelping beds and are toddling around exploring their world. We begin putting water where they can find it. At four weeks The whelping beds are no longer useful so we remove them. The pups begin to show distinctive personalities at four weeks and things begin to get fun. We begin weening near the end of four weeks and introduce them to a crate. We're not sure what will happen with this litter, but we assume all of the puppies will pile into the crate in a jumble. By six weeks the puppies are weened and eating out of a dish. At seven weeks the mothers can return to the dog house, leaving the pups until morning.  At eight weeks the pups are ready for re-homing. Some of the pups will stay with us a bit longer, but most new puppy parents don't want to wait past the eight week date.

We spent the morning taking pictures and weighing everybody. Thirteen is a lot of puppies so this takes all morning. We also give the pups their first nail trimming, something that should be done once a month for the rest of their lives. Regular nail trimming is important if you intend on keeping the nails short. There is a bone under the nails which grows out with the nails. The shorter the the nails are kept, the shorter the nail-bones will remain. We aren't very dedicated to short nails because our Hounds live outside on a farm with dirt surfaces. We trim nails as needed, but if you have a city dog it might be better to keep the nails shorter.  Look at the bottom of this page for directions on how to clip nails.


Bit O'Honey's litter was only two pups. Small, but there's an explanation: When mating takes place, the more coupling that happens, the larger the litter. Since they were sneaking off, and we were in the process of separating everyone, then her and ClarkeBar likely only found each other once. (This numerous coupling theory is not a hard and fast rule.)  Since Honey only has the two to care for, they are really quite large when compared with the other two litters. 

Hurricane is the heaviest of all thirteen pups tipping the scale at fifty-six ounces. This is quite a gain since he started life a hefty 18.9 ounces. His eyes are opening this morning. He has wonderful skin wrinkling and it looks like he will follow his father's American/ European style. 

Hurricane coloring nearly qualifies him as a "Lemon" Basset, but expect a red and white adult.

While bigger than his bother, he seems more compact. 

Hurricane's snow white belly is so ticklish. 

Ukraine Mule is a wonderful puppy. His eyes are open wide and his fur is very soft. He is definitely a red and white wonder-pup, but has a small belly button hernia which will need addressed if it doesn't go away soon. Hernias are commonplace and this is the only hernia in any of these litters. Ukraine Mule will likely be staying with us until twelve weeks if a hernia fix is needed. He too is doing well for weight gain. He is up to 48 ounces from a healthy 18.5.

We named Ukraine Mule following on the Russian Invasion of Ukraine. 
We're pretty sure the Russian people weren't for the move,
But Moscow Mule?  Nah!

The Mule is a wonderfully chunky little boy.

A snowy white belly!



Monday, March 21, 2022

Our new Advertisement

 
If you've come to find a puppy for your family, then everything you need to do is here on this page. To the left is a Wait list email widget. This is how you get in touch and ask for more information. Near the email widget are pages with information about who we are and how we do things. We try hard to make things simple, but using text to describe the simple clearly is always a challenge. But we've been at this a while, much longer than the history of this BLOG page, so we have some idea about how to make sure people get the information they need to be confident in our efforts. There are so many scammers out there, giving people confidence is a job in itself.

So please feel free to browse around. But also take some time to go to our Facebook Group and ask questions of its membership (the link is at the top). Get references. Look us up. Call us or write for answers. But you needn't stop there. You are welcome to visit our little farm and meet our dogs and hold our puppies. In fact, if you decide to take a puppy we will insist on a visit prior to making a choice. We need to know you as much as you need to know us. 

As our little Basset kennel winds its way through the years, the world around it changes. Back before we moved to the Farm (seems like a long time ago) we sold many of our pups through the Critter Cabana in Wilsonville and Newberg. The folks there are nice and they do an ethically pleasing business. Prior to this everything we did went through the Oregonian newspaper classified section. At that time people took the paper so this was how things were done. 

Since just about the end of the last millennia we started sharing through the Internet. Finding homes for the puppies we produce has always been a challenge. I had to learn to write web pages and do good photography, then do what they once called "typesetting", which is now called graphic design. 

Hence this "flyer" styled advertisement. The culmination of the best of today's and yesterdays, advertising technologies. 

You can click on this for the full sized image.



Wednesday, March 16, 2022

The Lady Drinks Litter(s) - Laffee Taffee

 

Taffee at three years

Grizelda Laffee Taffee (AKC) and ClarkeBar Grizwold have given us seven very exciting little pups. This is their third litter and experience tells me there will be seven exceptionally pretty Basset Hounds available to new Basset parents. There is something about pairing these two which produces greatness and near-greatness. Because of this we will be pricing this litter at $1600.00 each pup. It will certainly be worth the little bit extra. We kept a male from the last litter to replace ClarkeBar, they are just so very good. Her first litter produced the best male I've seen in American Bassets. 

Taffee at ten weeks

Laffee Taffee is quite small (35 pounds) for a Basset Hound with exceptional European features. Her ears are special, her coloring wonderful, and her personality is sparkling. She is a very good hunter on our farm and tenacious, patient, and quick. She is clever and willful, cuddly and eternally happy.  There have been no health issues with any of her offspring. A great Basset Hound Female and great mother.

ClarkeBar Grizwold is an eight year old charmer. He's getting a bit white in the muzzle, so we kept one of his boys a few litters back and plan on retiring him soon. Clarke is a bit smaller that other Basset males (45 pounds), but he carries himself well.

ClarkeBar Grizwold at eight years


  
ClarkeBar at eight weeks
He has very good European features, where they count, and is very athletic in form (wasp waisted with a deep sternum). He is genetically tested and has sired twelve litters.  His offspring generally share his good European traits, but this is a very good American Basset Hound in form and temperament. 





Chocolate Martini is a robust little 16 ounce Basset puppy.
He's quick and has been scooting  around the whelping pen getting into trouble.
If someone is yelping, it's Chocolate Martini

Chocolate Martini has wonderfully simple coloring right now
But he will likely develop some brown around the head.
He appear to have white eyelids but this is just naked skin reflections

Cosmopolitan is our miracle baby, born quiet and  carefully recessitated.
She took some time to bring back from the edge, but was totally worth it.
She is a happy little 12 ounce miracle.

Cosmo is a lovely little Basset female. 
Perhaps she will develop into something near to her mother.
A tiny miracle. If I could keep her I would.

Daquiri is everything  a tri-colored boy can be at three days old.
He is a solid one pound in weight and we can't wait to find out what he will become.

Daquiri has the sweetest face and a wonderful Harry Potter blaze.
Eventually his entire head will likely go brown, but it will be a nice brown.

Gimlet is an absolutely beautiful.14.6 ounce baby boy Basset.
His coloring is wonderful and his ears are already longer than all others.

Gimlet favors his mother's facial coloring and will develop into a great tri-colored adult.
Only time will tell how these pups will turn out but this one starts of with the right stuff.

Kamakazee has quirky good looks. Slightly off of center, but somehow right as well.
He is a healthy 16 ounces. It make the math easy. 

Kamakazee seems to be below the average of this litter.
But the average is very, very high. He's a jewel.

Mai Tai is gorgeous, perfectly symmetrical in facial coloring and mostly in the body fur.
This will only add to her beauty as she grows.

Mai Tai is a great example of a litter where there are none of medium quality.
She is a strong 14.5 ounces of fun.

Some days it seems worth it to be a breeder.
Mimosa makes it worth the trouble. 
Clarke and Taffee make some beautiful pups.
Mimosa is a wonderful 13.7 ounces of cuddly fun.

Mimosa has a Betty Boop face, nearly random coloring,
and will become a nice tri-colored member of some luck family



The Lady Drink Litter(s) - Bit O'Honey

 

Bit O'Honey at ten weeks

Beatrix O'Honey (AKC) and ClarkeBar Grizwold unexpectedly gave us two wonderful little boy Basset Hound pups in Bit O'Honey's second litter. Her previous litter, coupled with the Normande bloodline and lack of exceptional traits, put these pups in the pet quality price range. Both pups will be priced at $1200.00 dollars, and one Reservation have been made in this litter of two pups.

Honey at two years

Beatrix O'Honey is a very nice Basset of the Normande type. Her coat is quite a bit tighter, her legs look longer, and her features appear narrower with merely adequate ear length and fews. She is from the same litter as our Abba Zabba but her coloring is much more of the tri-colored scheme. Honey is good natured, but is developing into an alpha female to take the place of leadership following our retirement of The Cinnamon Bear last year.

ClarkeBar Grizwold at eight years

ClarkeBar Grizwold is an eight year old charmer. He's getting a bit white in the muzzle, so we kept one of his boys a few litters back and plan on retiring him soon. Clarke is a bit smaller that other Basset males, but he carries himself well.


  
ClarkeBar at eight weeks
He has very good European features, where they count, and is very athletic in form (wasp waisted with a deep sternum). He is genetically tested and has sired twelve litters.  His offspring generally share his good European traits, but this is a very good American Basset Hound in form and temperament. 






Hurricane is a good sized baby Basset boy who weighs a solid 18.9 ounces at three days old.
He is a "lemon" in coloring (for the most part),
but his reds will come in stronger than they appear today.

Hurricane is a wonderfully large blaze, nearly covering his entire head in front of his ears.
If ClarkeBar's genetics shine through he will be a great looking Basset.

Ukraine Mule, because F*** Moscow, is a wonderfully cuddly by of 18.5 ounces.
He will eventually develop deep reds to offset his bright whites.

Though it is much to early to tell, he appears to have a fearless energy to him.
I'm guessing he will develop into a great red and white Basset.


The Lady Drinks Litters(s) - Abba Zabba



Abba Zabba at two years
Abagail (Abba) Zabba (AKC) and ClarkeBar Grizwold (AKC) have given us four lovely little Basset Hound pups in her first litter. While it is still much too early to say anything with certainty, it appears today that two of these pups are of very good quality and two are possibly of show quality. One of these might just be a movie star. Since this is the first Abba Zabba litter, she is unproven and her puppy price reflects this at $1200.00 each. Contact us if you are interested in taking one of these pups home and I will send you the information. 


Abby at ten weeks
Abba Zabba is a nice little two year old Basset of the Normande type. She has narrow features and tight skin with merely adequate ear length and fews.  She is super athletic, kind, and ferocious when hunting. She is un-characteristically timid for the breed. She is a good singer and would rather spend time with the dogs, but doesn't mind being petted occasionally. 

ClarkeBar Grizwold is an eight year old charmer. He's getting a bit white in the muzzle, so we kept one of his boys a few litters back and plan on retiring him soon. Clarke is a bit smaller that other Basset males, but he carries himself well.

 
ClarkeBar at eight weeks
He has very good European features, where they count, and is very athletic in form (wasp waisted with a deep sternum). He is genetically tested and has sired twelve litters.  His offspring generally share his good European traits, but this is a very good American Basset Hound in form and temperament. 


ClarkeBar Grizwold at eight years

Bellini is a special Basset pups at three days old 
and may grow up to be a movie star.
His black pants, white boots, and giraffe coat are spectacular.


Bellini is exceptionally good looking and he has great facial symmetry.
He weighed 15.5 ounces this morning and is as healthy as we can hope.


Fuzzy Navel is a handsome little boy, but a chunk at 20.3 ounces.
It seems he likes his milk and loves his mom.


It is hard to tell, but at this point it appears he 
will be a tri-colored Basset with mostly black fur.
Black Bassets are a rare treat, his fur is nearly precisely symmetrical in color.


WooWoo has something of his father's facial features.
He's pretty small at 13.7 ounces but as heathy as can be and quite strong.


There are ample reasons to expect he will be appear as a tricolored Basset. 
No white tipped tail, this is unusual in Bassets unusual.


Pink Lady is a lovely little 18.2 ounce girl without a facial blaze.
She will definitely become a black and tan Basset. But only time will tell.


Pink Lady is Abba Zabba's only female pup. 
Her ears are pretty long for this early on and her skin is very loose.


Monday, March 14, 2022

As of this morning . . .

 We had an event filled day yesterday. Taffee gave us seven wonderful babies, all tri-colored. And we found out, for the first time, that Abba Zabba was pregnant. We found out because she gave us four beautiful pups. We suspect Bit O'Honey is also going to bring us new babies as well, but so far all we have is one entirely nervous little girl who claims she is nearing her time. 

One of Taffee's litter was a sad puppy, born quiet. I got to work on her right away and we were able to pull her back into our little world. The new puppy is doing fine and her kennel name is Cosmo. 

All together we have eleven pups wriggling around and expect as many as four more in the coming hours or days. But we didn't expect this at all and so are scrambling a bit, trying to figure out how to do the raising of puppies job the best we can.

We won't complain for the blessings. We will simply go to work and get things ready.

Once all the pups are present and counted we will contact the Wait List people and begin posting pictures.

Stranger Things: HUGE NEWS!

 It seems, while looking back in time, that plans we made usually came together pretty much on time and within reasonable limits. This Farm has other ideas about plans and always has. 

For those who would rather not read explanations and carefully worded prose I'm going to suggest looking directly down to the bottom of this article for the Cliff Notes. But you will be missing out on at least half the fun of reading how simple plans can be completely ruined in just a few hours time and we made a whole lot of careful plans. . . 

When we decided to begin our farm project we had a long history of goal setting and a pretty good record for achieving the goals just as we had planned. You can read how our Farm project began by clicking here. But the history of this project has not gone entirely to the form we created. In fact, much of our plan, though never quite failing in some way, has never followed the forms we put down. 

Oh sure, you might say, we found the Farm, cleared the land and built the house, among other key features of our grand design, but nearly none of it happened how we planned it and almost none of it came in on schedule.

As for Rocketdog Bassets . . . We had big plans. Big - carefully crafted - plans.

We started Rocketdog just as we had intended. We acquired good dogs according to our plan and began a real breeding program which included a schedule (and everything).  We included in our plans a means of sustaining the program through multiple females and made sure all pf it was ethically correct. We definitely were never going to exploit our dogs or do things that even looked sketchy. We bred CarmelCorn SanDiego according to the plan and when she proved unsuitable for breeding we found a good home for her. The Cinnamon Bear came along well and did two of our planned three litters and we followed our plan for rehoming her too (to quite a bit sadder result). In fact, our plans went along fairly well and pretty much as we intended.

But when it came to Laffee Taffee, the first pup bought following our acquisition of the Farm, things never went to the plan. She never showed any outward signs of coming into season and became pregnant the first time a bit too young and before we had the facilities ready for whelping. She threw great pups but just couldn't get with the program at all. Taffee gave us her third litter, in three seasons, essentially burning through a five year plan in just two years. Now we are faced with a wonderful young dog, which ought to be removed from our breeding schedule, spayed, and retired to a new home, four years ahead of the plan, which we will never rehome (because we stopped trying to do this). Taffee has broken every plan we made and we are now faced with something of an ethical problem: Do we retire her here and keep her for the next twelve unproductive years? Or do we allow one more litter, damn the ethics, then spay her and retire her here? Both solid questions requiring a solid answer But these are not the only questions. 

We got Abba Zabba and her littermate sister Bit O'Honey following our move to the Farm, while living in our tiny home. We tried to make them both wait until two years old, but Bit O'Honey and ClarkBar snuck off before we could catch them and so she had her first litter six months or so earlier than we would have hoped. Honey had a small litter of fairly good pups. Abba Zabba didn't seem too interested so we figured she'd be sequestered with ClarkeBar this Spring as would be normal. But Taffee once more, jumped the line. We caught her doing it and immediately locked everyone down to prevent any more surprises. This is where our carefully made plans, and their contingencies, began to run off the rails.

As Taffee's due date approached, and while we still had not built the proper kenneling facilities, we decided to move her into the new Farmhouse and began preparing space for whelping. We had a nicely made plan for a comfortable place in the Pantry and began making the plan happen. She was due for delivery this coming Tuesday and all was going along under some perceived measure of control. 

But this morning, when Ann went out to feed the others, Abba Zabba failed to report for breakfast. Ann fed everyone and went out to the dog yard to find Abby had delivered four pretty little puppies without showing any signs of pregnancy at all. She had whelped them unaided in the back of our large heated doghouse and was happily keeping them there the whole night through. 

And, within five seconds of finding these puppies, every single plan we have ever made got called into question. 

But the issue goes even farther out of whack. You see, hounds are cooperative animals. The females often have something called a sympathetic pregnancy and exhibit signs of becoming mothers even when there is no chance of babies showing up. They can put on weight and even express milk while waiting for the opportunity to help raise the pups that do show up. The Cinnamon Bear often would nurse Carmen's pups, though not efficiently, just to help out. So when Bit O'Honey started showing signs of milk production we really didn't think much of it. Abba Zabba showed no signs of a sympathetic pregnancy, or any other signs of real pregnancy either. So, because Honey is our developing Alpha, it didn't seem too much of an issue. Now we are not so sure. Honey seems ready to whelp her second litter in the next few days. So all of our carefully made plans and actions don't seem to have made the slightest difference in Natures plan at all. We may end up with three litters this week. 

BUT, this is not a case of making lemonade from unexpected lemons. Breeding is a big part of our economic plans and this unexpected boon only moves things along a bit sooner. What we have here is an unexpected slug of additional work that we must deal with in the moment and a real question as to our ability to plan anything at all.

The difference between strategic planning and tactical response is where we find ourselves today. All of our careful strategies seem to have failed (miserably), but we are "good on our feet" and can organize our responses in real time and on the fly. Things will either work themselves out or we will work them through.

As of this very minute we have nine pups delivered, expecting two more today and perhaps five more tomorrow. It's possible that there will be more, or slightly less, but we are preparing for any eventuality. We have begun wildly expanding our plans to have one litter in the Pantry to having three. The biggest problem we face now is caring for this huge amount of dog life to happen in a house where we insisted there would never be any dogs allowed. But, so much for plans.

The key will be to maintain gratitude for the good and constructive ignorance of the possible bad. We have to decide if any planning will be worthwhile going forward, but I'm pretty sure of my eventual answer to this. We have to look at our ethical assumptions and make new decisions about who we are and who we think we were, to see if changes need to be made too. All of which sounds a bit like planning, which we might no longer be competent to do. 

For now were are grateful for the increase in our flock, and mindful of the amount of additional work we must do to get through the next ten weeks. These ten weeks were going to be used preparing for our Farm plans, and they still will be. But it is going to be a long and difficult, but prosperous, Spring.


Notes: These are the broad strokes . . . 
  • We intended to breed Abba Zabba's first litter this Spring.
  • But Laffee Taffee obviously jumped the line and ClarkeBar got to her before we had any notion
  • We locked ClarkeBar and RockyRoads up immediately upon seeing that Taffee had been bred.
  • All three of the girls immediately went out of season.
  • We figured that they were being cooperative, something Hounds often do.
  • Taffee's gestation went along as normal as the earlySpring rain.
  • We began preparing a place inside of the New Farmhouse for whelping.
  • Towards Taffee's due date Abba Zabba and Bit O'Honey began producing milk.
  • We figured they were having sympathetic pregnancies, it happens all the time.
  • As it turned out we had three pregnant females.
  • Abba Zabba showed no outward signs of pregnancy.
  • We found Abby in the dog house this morning with four beautiful pups.
  • Taffee went into labor yesterday and began delivering Sunday.
  • We are assuming Bit O'Honey is also pregnant and will deliver very soon. 
    She went into labor around midnight today.
  • So we will have three litters of pups this Spring and none in the Fall (God willing).