Showsight - February 2022 Edition

BONDED BY BIRTHING

What a plan! You’ve seen it as you watch nature shows on TV. The newborn gazelle or newly hatched chicken “knows” its mother and will follow her as soon as it can stand up. A buffalo baby, born, in the past, into a herd of thousands of look- alikes will only follow its mother. Don’t get your ruff up. You are human, not an animal, but any midwife or obste- trician will agree that when today’s child- birth is by C-section, an important bit of nature’s plan can be lost. Release of oxyto- cin is diminished during C-section deliv- ery, though medical doctors know this and compensate with an oxytocin injection which also stimulates uterine contractions and milk letdown. So, if you plan a litter by C-section, ask your veterinarian about oxytocin and give the mother dog something natural to do when she wakes up. What usually happens in humans nowadays is, whether surgical or natural birth, a nurse takes the newborn infant, cleans it up, then wraps it in a blanket and hands it to the anxious mother. The veterinary assistant cleans the puppy, removing all birth fluids as you sit in the waiting room… unless you are priv- ileged to attend the C-section, in which case most breeders will automatically start helping to clean the newborns. STOP!!! Do NOT sanitize those pups too much. In doing a surgical delivery, we interfered with something very important. Let’s not make it worse and then complain that she “rejected” her puppies. Nature meant for the mother to clean the newborn. It is a major component of the birth-bonding process. All mammals, elephant, horse or human, bond with their newborn by that first scent as they lick and clean it. You can’t just tell your dog coming out of anesthesia, “It’s okay, that is your baby…” and expect her to understand. Even the first-time mother is compelled to clean her newborn that is loaded with hor- monal inducements that demand she lick it and love it. Now you know why so many dog mothers refuse their newborns after sur- gical delivery. It all happened without her knowledge or awareness. Although she released some oxytocin before sur- gery, make sure that your veterinar- ian gives her the “milk-letdown-bonding” oxytocin shot. And as an aside, think about this… There was a time when human females instinctively prepared a birthing nest with

RANCHERS AND ZOOLOGISTS HAVE LONG-KNOWN HOW BIRTHING PHEROMONES WORK AND HOW CRITICAL THAT FIRST OXYTOCIN-LADEN BONDING SCENT IS. YOU, THE DOG BREEDER, ARE EITHER TURNED-OFF BY THE “MESS” OR YOU ARE INSPIRED, PROUD, BONDED BY THE BIRTHING AS YOU HOLD A STILL-WET NEWBORN AND INHALE THAT SWEET, MUSTY SCENT.

leaves and grasses, both of which drained the birth fluids. The human mother cuddled her wet, slippery newborn to the breast, against her heart. She sighed, breathed deeply, and bonded with her baby. The new mother then cleaned and cushioned her newborn with pelts. As soon as possible, the human mother went to a stream or lake to remove the tell- tale birthing scents that draw predators. Google doesn’t seem to know about this, but common sense tells me that, primitive though she was, the human mother took steps to de-scent herself and her newborn. She wasn’t a deer that could just move on with her fawn so, rabbit, wolf or human, she’d do her best and then lay low in her nest until she was able to move the newborns away from the birthing scents. Then, somewhere along the way, we humans invented midwives and doc- tors who took away those precious first moments and the mother’s natural pro- cess of cleaning and bonding with her newborn. Is it any wonder that we have

increasing social problems decade by decade? So, the takeaway is simple: If it must be a Cesarean section, tell the veterinarian to save (and keep warm!) at least one placenta to put in with her not- too-clean newborns. Ranchers and zoologists have long- known how birthing pheromones work and how critical that first oxytocin-laden bonding scent is. You, the dog breeder, are either turned-off by the “mess” or you are inspired, proud, bonded by the birthing as you hold a still-wet newborn and inhale that sweet, musty scent. By the way, perfume makers were the first to capitalize on the fact that humans are either turned-off or subconsciously attracted by scent. That’s why “the first perfume was made in 1370 at the com- mand of Queen Elizabeth of Hungary.” — Wikipedia . So, when your next litter arrives or you assist a friend in whelping, inhale! There’s nothing quite like newborn scent and its inspiring pheromones.

120 | SHOWSIGHT MAGAZINE, FEBRUARY 2022

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