Downloads Free Whelping Record Sheets
Resources you may find useful....
CANINE DUE DATE CALCULATOR
An excel spreadsheet calculator that will work out your bitches due date based either on date of ovulation or date of last mating. Click here for information on ovulation testing
BITCH TEMPERATURE MONITORING
An excel spreadsheet or printable sheet for a visual of your bitches temperature to help in estimating whelping start. Thermometer
WHELPING RECORD
This is a free Free Whelping Record Sheets printout that you can use to keep a detailed record of the whelping process, including labour start times along with puppy details such as weights, ID, palette check and placenta count.
LITTER WEIGHT RECORD
This is a free printout that you can use to record daily and weekly puppy weights. It helps to track weight gain/loss and detect any potential health issues early on.
PUPPY WEIGHT TREND SPREADSHEET
A spreadsheet that can be used to track daily puppy rweights to day 14 and weekly to week 8. Spot trends easily and low gainers fast
STUD DOG BREEDING RECORD
A printable sheet summarising the mating history of a stud dog. For help finding a stud dog click here
Services We Offer
We are experts in canine progesterone testing, interpretation, advice and breeding success, we also offer microchipping, ultrasound scanning, artificial insemination and parasitology. We run all of our laboratory tests including canine progesterone testing on-site following GLP and strict SOP protocols. All blood samples are provided to us by owners. We also offer a free downloads page offering free whelping record sheets
Progesterone Testing
Testing the levels of serum progesterone in a bitches blood indicates at what point she will ovulate and subsequently WHEN to mate.
Microchipping
Microchipping is quick and easy to get done, and greatly increases the chances that a lost dog will be reunited safely with their owner.
Ultrasound
An ultrasound scan is the best way to find out if your bitch is pregnant. This is usually carried out four weeks after mating or insemination.
Titre Tests
Your dog may not need that yearly (or even 3 yearly) booster at all! According to latest guidelines, WSAVA, suggest that DHP booster vaccinations may not be required as often as previously thought.
Frequently Asked Questions
More accurate puppy counts are possible when you bring your dog for a scan 28-32 days after last mating.
A Titre test indicate whether or not your dog has immunity against the tested diseases, namely theDistemper, Hepatitis and Parvovirus elements of the core vaccines for dogs
By providing us with a blood sample from your dog, a canine progesterone test is able to determine the circulating levels of progesterone in her blood and therefore indicating when she ovulates.
Our accurate canine progesterone testing method using the industry gold standard MiniVidas, combined with our expert advice, knowledge and guidance, you will ensure you have the best possible chance of a successful litter with your bitch.
It is recognised that in the dog up to 75% of failures to conceive can be attributed to incorrect timing of breeding. ¹
More precise timing of the breeding events is required when:
There is limited access to the stud
When artificial reproductive techniques are going to be used
When the quality of the semen is questionable.
The ability to accurately time breeding is of practical and economic importance to breeders. Optimal timing helps breeders:
Maximise pregnancy rates and litter size (Semen and stud fees are expensive.)
Plan travel for matings
Optimise of time for assisted breeding techniques (artificial insemination using fresh, chilled, or frozen
semen)
Optimise the timing of breeding when access to the stud is limited to one or two matings
Prevent unnecessary use of male
With the planning of matings when the same male is used on two bitches simultaneously
Optimise the time for breeding in bitches that have a history of non-receptivity or show silent heats
Estimate expected whelping dates more accurately based on a known ovulation date.
Successful fertilisation typically occurs between 3–4 days before the end of estrus. By simply observing a bitch during her heat cycle, there is no way of knowing when the end of estrus will be. To complicate matters, some bitches may bleed throughout their entire heat period, whereas other may not, some bitches may stand for a stud willingly, even long before there are eggs available for fertilisation, whilst others may only be receptive for a day or two. There are many other variations and idiosyncratic behaviors that can confuse the breeder, all contributing to a missed opportunity to breed the bitch successfully.
The ovulation test is most commonly used by breeders who are subject to large stud fees and require some sort of guarantee that their bitch had the correct progesterone levels; if their bitch does not become pregnant, but had the correct progesterone levels, the fault is usually the stud dog.
It is a common misconception among breeders that the heat cycle and the point at which a bitch will allow mating replicates itself in each repeating heat cycle of each individual bitch. The breeder then uses the data from a previous cycle and applies it to the next cycle. For instance, because a bitch was previously successfully bred on day 10 (starting from first signs of heat), the breeder will keep on mating that specific bitch on day 10. While this might work in some cases, it most certainly won’t work in all cases. Similarly, it is not always true that the stud can sniff out exactly when the bitch is at her peak (optimum time for fertilization).
We recommend taking an initial sample at day 9 following your dog showing the first signs of bleeding. Subsequent tests/advice will depend on this initial result.
We try and limit the number of tests required to accurate predict ovulation. It is better to take an initial sample and retest 3 or four days after than to completely miss ovulation. Typically two or three tests are required.