What's the Best Age to Get A Puppy?
Pirated from Kalahari Rhodesian Ridgebacks
Most people think the best age to get a puppy is 6 weeks -
WRONG,WRONG,WRONG! Between 7 and 12 weeks is the best time and here's a couple
of well-researched reasons why.....
REASON ONE:
A nursing puppy receives antibodies from its mother's milk (called
maternal antibodies) that protect it from disease during the first months of its
life. Unfortunately, these antibodies can also keep a vaccine from being
effective. These maternal antibodies gradually start to decrease around 6 weeks
of age but may still interfere with early vaccinations. That is why puppies area
given a series of vaccinations. It is best to have two series of vaccinations
given before a puppy is stressed by going to a new home, changing diets, and
being exposed to an environment that may contain animals that are sick. In the
state of Florida it is against the law to sell a puppy before it is 8 weeks
old.
REASON TWO:
Puppies have 4 critical periods of development between birth and 16 weeks
(4 mos) of their lives. What happens to them during these 4 mos. determines what
kind of companion they will become and shapes their character for the rest of
their lives!
- Birth to 21 days (3 weeks) - during this period the puppy's brain is
mostly reactionary in that the brain is developing neural pathways. During
this time the mother and her milk are most important. The puppy needs adequate
food, the stimulation it gets from the mother licking it and the warmth it
gets from mom and it's littermates. By three weeks (21st day) the puppy's
brain has taken on adult brain form and the puppy can toddle around, blink,
hear, eliminate without mother's stimulation and begin to explore it's
immediate surroundings. They begin to try to play with their siblings and
mother.
- 3 weeks to 7 weeks (49th day) - During this period puppies learn canine
socialization and learn dominance order - most important in training and
getting along with other dogs! This is a time of rapid development, both
physically and mentally. From 21-28 days (4 weeks) is especially crucial and
should the puppy be separated from its mother and littermates at this time it
would be so emotionally upsetting that the puppy will never be compensated in
life for the loss of interaction of its mother and littermates.
Characteristically, puppies weaned at 4 weeks are a training nightmare because
they never get the connection between a reward or correction and what they
were doing at the time. (For example, the dog grabs your sandwich and you yell
"NO". It will not understand why you are saying no, nor why it is unacceptable
to grab what it wants.) Between 4 and 5 weeks is when the puppy becomes aware
of its surroundings and littermates and discovers when it bites too hard on
one of them or Mama Dog - it gets corrected by Mama or the littermate bites
back - hard! They learn to play bite at an acceptable level for their
playmates. This is important to us because we can then teach them not to bite
or nip us....they will learn that we are rather delicate creatures by puppy
standards! :-)
Canine socialization is so important for a puppy to be well-adjusted. A
puppy needs contact and interaction with it's mom and littermates to learn
doggy social graces, such as how to approach another dog, how to show
submission and how to initate play. A puppy weaned at 5 weeks is
characterically aggressive towards strange dogs. Some people call this "Dog
aggressive", but it is basically caused by the dog not knowing how to approach
or be approached by a another dog. Mothers discipline pups and teach them as
well....this is as important in dogs as it is in human children. A puppy
weaned at 6 weeks may have the social skills but will not have all the
self-confidence in itself as it would after 7 weeks. This is extremely
important in a service dog or a dog you want to take responsiblity for you,
your home and property.
- 49 to 84 days ( 7 weeks to 12 weeks)- By the 49th day a puppy is
neurologically complete...it has an adult brain, but no experience! (Kinda
like you were when you got out of school and tried to find a job - couldn't
get a job because you lacked job experience.:-/ ) A good breeder will handle
their pups daily, from birth, and during this time it is critical for someone
to give it affection and guidance for the puppy to be willing to form
attachments to people and learn to trust humans. Puppies must get one-on-one
socialization with a human at least once a week to develope as an
individual.
- 12 - 16 weeks - This is a great time for play training to become more
serious and when human and dog decide who is boss. A dog's character for life
is formed between 4 weeks to 16 weeks. No matter how good inherited character
traits are, if puppies are not given proper exposure, they will never be as
good a dog as it could have been. There is NO way to go back and make it up to
a dog is later life for failures at this age. A dog without socialization
prior to 16 weeks does not develop as an individual with self-confidence in
its self.
REASON THREE:
Many show breeders wait until 8-12 weeks to grade their puppies into pet
or show potential categories. Socialization and puppy training during this
period is critical for the needs of the puppies and their individual
personalities. A shy puppy should get more supportive attention and an overly
outgoing puppy should learn how to play correctly.
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