I am trying to breed my femal blue heeler. I brought the male to her yard. He has been here since last night and it is the next day in the afternoon and I still havent noticed anything happening.So far i waited 10 days while she was bleeding and she stopped yesterday. She stands in front of him like she wants to but when male trys to approach she growls and snaps. Is this normal?I am just wondering how long it may take for breeding to start and how long I should keep male?
2007-12-01
06:18:42
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9 answers
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asked by
heather
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in
Pets
➔ Dogs
for everyones information.... i lived with my sister when she had 3-4 different litters of puppies.i know what to do and have a near buy friend whom is a vet
2007-12-01
12:52:37 ·
update #1
she said responsible not perfect god chill out sometimes this is normal for a first time breeding
good luck
2007-12-01 07:38:41
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answer #1
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answered by ♥FANCYS_MAMMA♥ 6
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Sorry my dear - if you were a responsible breeder, you wouldn't be asking a bunch of strangers, who may or may not know what they are talking about (!!) - on YA. You would have your breeding mentor there with you - walking you through the whole process - a process that you have already watched and observed several times and participated WITH your breeding mentor.
So nope - not a responsible breeder. Can't wait to see you in 63 days when she's whelping and you don't know what to do then either -
TTFN!!!
2007-12-01 07:29:01
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If you were a responsible breeder, you would know that more times than not, the male will not mate in a strange place. This is Basic Breeding 101. You really should contact your mentor to walk you through this problem and how to get around them.
2007-12-01 06:25:54
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answer #3
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answered by Katslookup - a Fostering Fool! 6
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Yep! I absolutely agree with Believer here! In addition to not knowing what you are doing, you are trying to produce a breed that is NOT a good choice for a family dog and often ends up in a kill shelter because of the nipping and headstrong behavior. As the owner of one of these "discarded" dogs, I sincerely hope you change your mind and spay your dog before you are responsible for the possible death of your puppies when they bite someone who doesn't know how to train this breed.
My heeler is from a kill shelter. She was beaten, abused, starved, and let loose to live on the streets at one year old. Probably because she had some aggression issues that her owners had no idea how to fix. Is this what you want for your puppies?
2007-12-01 08:15:19
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answer #4
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answered by anne b 7
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it may be advantageous if the only thank you to sign in canines is that in case you have the close by breed warden come and look at your canines, kennel and workplace work. whilst your lady is going into warmth, you could desire to have the means to touch the KC, tell them to deliver out a breed warden to examine tattoos or microchips, learn the pedigrees to circumvent inbreeding, look at your centers and workplace work. Then he could desire to have the excellent say over in spite of if or no longer you could sign in the clutter. do no longer enable them to fool you...the AKC has lots of money to do it...i could think of the UKC and CKC do besides. The breed warden additionally should word the DNA sequence from any canines you have on the time. in the event that they doubled the cost of registration, i'm fairly particular that could desire to pay for various complete time breed wardens. the main important concern could be looking human beings to take the activity that have the understanding to do it...and the character to no longer be corrupt.
2016-10-18 12:10:45
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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HOW is this RESPONSIBLE breeding when you clearly do not know much about breeding??????
You can do a LOT of research on the computer. There are a lot of sites that have good information.
If this is a MAIDEN bit ch, YOU may have to assist with the breeding! Do you know HOW to do that?????
2007-12-01 06:24:31
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answer #6
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answered by ARE YOUR NEWFS GELLIN'? 7
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Hone, you don't know enough about dogs in general to be attempting to breed... send the male home and get her spayed - what are you going to do when the REAL problems arise? This is not at all a responsible thing to do... just like in driving and brain surgery, learn FIRST then do...
2007-12-01 06:28:29
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answer #7
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answered by Nancy M 6
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You should have them on neutral territory... females can be very territorial and likely sees this guy as an intruder! Take it easy, you have about a week of fertility here... The dogs should have gotten to know eachother before she went into heat. They develop relationships as we do! I really hope you have a mentor... I would contact a local breeder and pay for her help here, since you don't know what to do just yet!
2007-12-01 06:30:53
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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If you have no clue about breeding, please don't breed your female. This question does not considered as responsible breeding question. If you are responsible, you should ask your mentor, not any strangers at YA.
2007-12-01 06:45:56
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answer #9
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answered by Wild Ginger 5
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