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My female dog is 2 and a half and she's not been mated before. She is ready for her stud now and yet having stood for him she then yelps and panics when he actually enters her.

He somehow managed a tie this afternoon, but it took it out of him so much I thought he was going to flake out with exhaustion.

I am due to have the second mating in a couple of days, will I always have to go through this where she is uncomfortable or will it improve later in the season or with age?

In addition to this I am concerned that if the mating itself caused her to react like this, how will my girl cope with the pain of whelping.

I have checked The Book Of The B*tch and it does not mention this particular aspect of mating.

Thanks for reading.

2007-01-22 12:31:12 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Dogs

12 answers

pop over to www.champdogsforum.co.uk they have a breeding section they should be able to answer all your questions.

2007-01-22 22:24:07 · answer #1 · answered by ***Missy*** 4 · 0 0

Yes it's true. It's called tying. The female will stop breeding before she will want to mate, but please don't mate them. You need to research a breed before you just let 2 dogs together and let them have puppies. If you don't know what you're doing and people ask you questions that you can't answer they aren't going to want to take your puppies. Then you're either stuck with dogs that you will have to feed and care for or you'll take them to a shelter or who knows where. There is NO money in raising dogs. You need to vaccinate all the puppies, have them wormed, feed them the best foods you can afford and then there's the care of the mother! You can lose her all together. She has to be taken extra care of and what if she needs a C-section? That's bucks. And Pugs are a dime a dozen lately because there are already too many of them. You may have to hold on to them for almost a year before you even find buyers. That's even if you're selling to anyone just to make a buck. A really breeder will practically interrogate you before you take one of there pups and contracts are strict. And they don't make money. Trust me.

2016-05-23 23:16:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This is not a dog which should be bred, she should be spayed.

Take her to the vet and get her checked.

Was she screened at all before you bred her?

Why are you going to put your dog through fear, pain and panic and risk damaging a stud dog? I am sure she is a nice dog, but is she a great example of the breed? Is she an awesome performance dog? fantastic hunter?

All of life is cost-benefit analysis. Is a cup of coffee worth $1 to you? $5? $25? At some point the cost is more than what you get---in this case I would say the cost sounds high unless you are getting some pretty awesome world-class dogs.

If she is a world-class dog and the vet says she's healthy, try AI another time.

Peace

2007-01-22 15:21:40 · answer #3 · answered by bookmom 6 · 1 1

This is a bit ch that should NOT be bred, or there should be very experienced people there. With maiden bit ches, you do not just put them with a male and let nature take it's course!!!!!! Experienced people can better deal with this type of problem so the poor male does not get to the point that you describe!!!! This is also quite stressful for the girl!!!!!!!!
If the situation does not get better in 2 days when you should try again.....DO NOT LET THEM TRY AGAIN!!!!!!!! Call it enough and go from there. If there is no pregnancy, spay her or decide if it is worth AI. Some bit ches have a vaginal stricture that makes it very uncomfortable for them to breed. Only in the situation of a VERY good quality bit ch, do you then AI these girls. Bit ches of mediocre quality that have this should be spayed!!!!!!

2007-01-22 13:25:30 · answer #4 · answered by ARE YOUR NEWFS GELLIN'? 7 · 2 0

you haven't said what breed she is?

If she does this, then she is either not in her cycle enough or its too much for her. Is the stud dog your dog? same breed? this will effect her as well.

I'm sorry to be rude, but if you don't no the answer your self to your own question you shouldn't breed, you won't no what is happening during the whelping progress, what were you intending to do with the pup's? because if she is like this now, i would of thought she wouldn't cope and a c section would be needed!! Please don't try the second mating he can really hurt your girl dog.

2007-01-22 19:09:03 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

You need to hold the two together. Grab both (while they are butt to butt) in a bear hug (under their abdomens) and push/hold them together. If she always behaves like this you may want to AI her rather then try for a natural breeding. You sound a little educated on this subject so I haven't given the speech yet. But I have to. Why are you breeding her? Has she and the stud been tested for the necessary things in the particular breed. Is she really breeding quality? Is she a champion and the sire also? You don't need to be breeding if your just going to be adding to my and other rescuers workloads. Please spay and neuter your pets because they are just that: pets. Unless they are show quality and have proved themselves to be such.

2007-01-22 17:44:03 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

if its her first litter be with her when she delivers she'll be scared and nervous and excited all at the same time she'll need you to be there to comfort her by the way you should research all you can cause from what i can tell you dont know much about breeding dogs if you havent researched yet your not ready to breed dogs yet p.s. with her being a virgin dog it was probably scary for the first time not realizing what was going on and its possible with her reactions she might have female problems so get her checked out ok hope this helps

2007-01-22 12:45:16 · answer #7 · answered by sassy 3 · 1 1

Uh, maybe you shouldn't force your dog to breed??? It's apparent that she's either not interested or it is too painful (for whatever reason). Has she at least been checked over by a veterinarian before you tried to mate her?
Why don't you just get her spayed and let her live a happy, pain-free doggy life? :) You needn't make more puppies, anyhow, there are plenty out there needing to be adopted.

2007-01-22 12:37:39 · answer #8 · answered by Jen 1 · 3 2

A dog with this type of reaction should NOT be bred..also she should never have been bred before having a thorough vet exam and had and passed health testing (not just simple vet exams)..she also should have been evaluated or shown to make sure she meets breed standard.

2007-01-22 12:35:56 · answer #9 · answered by Great Dane Lover 7 · 3 2

then if its putting stress on her dont mate her. That exactly what we need in the world...more puppies.....there are millions of dogs in shelters. If you want another dog get a puppy from a rescue group.

2007-01-22 12:38:02 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

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