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Week 1 (Carol)
It had been a long
day. With eight seven and one-half week old Vizsla puppies in the house, the day
had been focused on puppies and families coming in to visit their future
puppies. I was finally settling down for the evening, and I turned on my
computer to check my e-mails. All of a sudden an IM flashed across my screen
from a breeder friend, Ann in Delaware, asking if I knew of anyone with a
lactating bitch that could wet-nurse a litter of puppies.
Sadly, a friend of
hers, Holly, had lost her beautiful champion Cardigan Welsh Corgi bitch, Demi,
and two of her ten puppies during a routine C-Section. This was a very special
breeding for Demi, being a long distance breeding from New York to Florida, and
the pregnancy had been textbook. However, Demi had grown very large with the
pregnancy, and Holly had been worried that the size of the litter would be too
much for her girl; a pre-whelp x-ray had shown 9, possibly 10 pups, so Holly had
set up a C-Section for that Sunday just to be safe. Demi wagged her way into the
vet's office that Sunday morning but went into cardiac arrest while on the
operating table. Of course, losing Demi sent Holly into shock. Holly managed to
find some goat colostrum and with the help of a friend, bottle fed the entire
litter. Anyone who has ever bottle fed a puppy knows what a difficult task it
would be to try and raise eight puppies without a mom. Tube feeding is another
option, but that is not without risk. Holly set out to find a foster mom for her
babies.
Thoughts raced through
my head – the mother of my puppies, Kestrel, had been dried up for 9 days. Kes
is an older bitch, and I thought the probability of bringing milk back in was
slim. I immediately thought of Patsy’s bitch, Nellie who had whelped a small
litter of three puppies just a few days earlier. Nellie was used to larger
litters, and she had been very whiney, looking for more puppies. This might be a
good thing for Nellie and the Corgis. The biggest risk to this endeavor would be
if either litter of puppies was not protected against herpes virus. In dogs,
herpes virus is a respiratory infection, and most dogs that have done dog shows
have been exposed and developed immunity. Once a mom is exposed, she carries a
positive titer and she can pass immunity to her newborns – but the unanswered
question in my mind was (and still is) whether the failure of the Corgis to have
nursed off their mom’s colostrom in any way would affect acquisition of such
immunity. Because both moms were show champions with lots of dog show exposure,
we decided that the likelihood of immunity in both litters was very high, and
that the risk was an acceptable one. (Young puppies without immunity who
contract Herpes virus during the first three weeks of their lives can die
because of their inability to regulate body temperature; one important
"treatment" which can save some infected pups is to raise the temperature in the
whelping box to an extremely high level).
After giving careful
thought to the situation and the risks, Patsy immediately said that she would
have Nellie foster the Corgi litter. Nellie lives in Malden, MA, which is north
of Boston, and Demi’s litter was in the Albany, NY area. It was decided that
because Holly was so exhausted and could not make a 5-hour trip to Malden, we
would start the integration at my house in Marlborough, CT, which was about 2
hours from Holly and 3 hours from Nellie. I am home most of the time and could
monitor the integration for the first week. Leah and Patsy met mid-way to give
Nellie and her 3 pups to Leah to bring to my house in CT, and Holly headed from
Albany to CT with the Corgi puppies. My son and I set up the whelping box, the
baby monitors and readied the room for newborns. Leah and Holly arrived within
seconds of one another, at around 11:30 p.m.
We rubbed the Corgi
puppies on the Vizsla puppies so that they would carry their scent, and within
minutes, Nellie was feeding the baby Corgis! she was not too sure about cleaning
up after them, but she was very willing to let them nurse. Holly slept in the
room with Nellie and the pups, and Nellie started to accept them as her own
during the night. What a beautiful sight to behold! the pups loved Nellie and
vice versa. The next morning, Monday, Holly had to return home to her other
dogs because her husband was out of state. I brought the Corgi pups to my vet
to have their dewclaws removed. I was taking my 7 1/2 week olds in that morning
for exams and shots, and when I called Dr. Mills , a Pembroke Corgi breeder,
and explained the situation, she said she would squeeze in the Cardigan Corgis.
When we returned from the vet, Nellie again was a little confused – she nursed,
but did not seem keen on cleaning up after the Corgis. By the end of that first
full day, though, these puppies were as much Nellie's puppies as the vizsla
puppies – they had become Corglas! Nellie was fully on board with their care and
welfare!

On Tuesday, Holly and
her husband Leonard came to see their babies, to take photos and bond with their
newborns. It was interesting to listen to them as they noted the different
colors and markings – something we vizsla people don’t get a chance to do! The
litter is a mix of blacks and merles, with very interesting markings. I became
attached to the little black girl with the hourglass on her head, and of course
to the little black boy with the diamond on his head who needed a little
assistance getting on the nipple for a couple of days. Leah would visit every
day, bringing homemade soups and stews for Nellie. Nellie and her vizsla babies
and the Corglas stayed with me for almost a week, during which the puppies
thrived under Nellie’s loving care. Interestingly, when Nellie’s vizsla puppies
reached the age at which one might expect Nellie to leave the box more
frequently and for longer periods of time, she did not – she adjusted her “can’t
leave the whelping box” phase of lactation to the age of the younger Corgi
litter. She was very protective of her entire brood. Patsy, Bob and Eric came
down on Saturday and headed back to Malden, where the Corglas would begin the
next chapter of their adventure.

It is a bit ironic
that those of us who have helped out in this endeavor have been called angels
and praised profusely. Blessings have been showered upon us; friends of Holly
who own vizslas and make gourmet dog cookies have sent us dog cookies; Demi’s
breeder in Florida has written us tributes thanking us for our help - but truly
we are the ones who were blessed. I firmly believe that 95% of “dog people”
faced with this same request would have stepped up to the plate - dog people are
notorious for helping each other out. In 1991, my bitch became ill with a
uterine infection when her puppies were a week old, and my good friend Karen had
her bitch Tessa foster my litter for 2 weeks, along with her own litter of 8
(that was 15 puppies that Tessa raised for two weeks.) Do unto others. Do what
has to be done. Pay It Forward. However one looks at it, we are very fortunate
to have been able to help. Nellie has benefited because she truly was worried
about her small litter, and her puppies were getting way too fat! The Corgis
helped drain the milk bar and get those vizslas’ weights under control. All of
us who helped in this endeavor received the most wonderful gift of all - of
being able to give to someone else and watch these puppies thrive. We now have a
new ring to watch at dog shows! And from now on, my pre-breeding exam will
always include a titer for herpesvirus.
Week 2 (Patsy)
As we left Carol’s
house with Nellie and the” corglas”, it suddenly hit me – this was a huge
responsibility to care for someone else’s litter – especially under such tragic
circumstances and knowing how important these puppies were to Holly and
Leonard. Demi gave her life to have these babies. The whelping box was still
set up, and the boys made sure everything was clean and tidy to welcome the
puppies and Nellie back home. Nellie settled right in and started taking care
of her eleven puppies. Everyone was doing fine. The vizslas were 10 days old
and they were starting to open their eyes and ears, and the corgi’s were now 6
days old and still finding and fighting their way to the nipples for food. What
a sight to see - the corgi’s at that time would get their little tails up and
wagging and muscle their way in among my chunky vizslas. Vola, my other vizsla,
decided that she could help Nellie by running the “pottying department”, and
Nellie was more than willing to have her help out.
As the puppies grew,
Nellie maintained a watchful eye over her brood. Holly would call and we would
talk about the differences in the breeds and the different idiosyncrasies that
they have. Holly shared some of the folklore of the Cardigan Welsh Corgi and
explained some of the coloring of the dogs. The corgi’s were more vocal than the
vizslas, and before their eyes opened they would spend a lot of time sleeping on
their backs. My family and I were getting attached to all 11. We would weigh,
cut nails. and take pictures and forward the pictures to Holly so she could see
how well her “Dream Litter” was growing. Holly studied the pictures and remarked
on the beauty of the puppies; I could feel her smile and her tears.
Week 3 (Patsy)
Thanks to sharing the
milk-bar with eight feisty corgis who had no trouble muscling their way in to
eat, the vizslas continued to trim down and got up on their feet very quickly.
The vizslas were in the 4 pound range, and the corgis were in the 2 pound range.
Nellie was starting to get a little tired, but was still very attentive. The
corgis started to open their eyes at day 14 and got up on their little feet. I
noticed that they did not wobble as much as the vizslas and still were much more
vocal. Everyone had teeth in and getting around very well. It was time to
start weaning. Surprisingly the corgi’s got right down to business, caught on
very quickly, perhaps more room by the food dish as opposed to their step mom.
I would find them with their tails up heading to the dish, talking away and the
vizslas had to now muscle their way in to the food dish. There was one corgi
that would get in the saucer dish and just walk in the circle and eat. As they
got on their feet, we got everyone into an x-pen area and all the pups got down
to serious playing. The neighborhood children all came over to play with the
puppies and nicknames started to attach to the puppies! Because of their
markings, it is easier to identify puppies in a corgi litter! Vizslas often have
to wear collars to tell them apart! What fun everyone had.

At
the end of week three, the corglas were mostly weaned, and it was time for them
to go home. We were all getting attached to the pups and felt sad that they were
going, but it was time. Nellie saw Erik and I put HER corgi babies in the
crate, she kissed them good-bye, and off we went to meet Holly and Leonard. I
cannot express the emotion that we all felt: to finally meet face to face; for
Holly and Leonard to see the “Dream Litter so grown up; and for us, knowing how
Nellie had helped these babies get started in their lives – and trust me, Demi
is never far from anyone’s mind. Carol, Leah, Erik and I can’t wait to visit the
Cardigan Corgi ring and see one of these puppies, knowing that somewhere in the
heart of that puppy runs a little bit of vizsla! Holly said Demi was a corgi
who pointed…maybe that was a sign of things to come! Now I just hope that the
vizslas don’t try to herd while hunting, because somewhere in the heart of each
of the vizsla puppies runs a little bit of corgi!
All of us involved in
this experience truly feel blessed - helping one another out is what life is all
about – hopefully, the joy of this litter will help ease a bit of the sadness
that Holly, Leonard, Demi’s breeder Rita and Demi’s many fans and friends, feel
for her loss. She has left quite a legacy in her beautiful children (pictured at
4 weeks with babyfood on their faces at home with Holly & Leonard).
Demi’s Dream Litter
  
The Boys (Above) and The
Girls (Below)
    
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