HOW TO FEED A BITCH IN WHELP
Dear Jubilee:
My bitch is in whelp, and I need information on how to feed her and what supplements that she needs. She normally eats a raw diet.
Taking Care of Mom
Dear Taking Care of Mom,
We pretty much follow Ian
Billinghurst, Grow Your Pups With Bones, for our pregnancy and
lactation diets. He generally says that if the bitch has been on a good raw
diet, then for the first two thirds of her pregnancy, she just remains on
her basic raw diet. He does warn that you should not give her cod liver oil
during that part of the pregnancy because it can harm the developing
fetuses.
During the last half of the pregnancy, he says to feed more food, and we do.
Especially during the last third of the pregnancy. His rule of thumb is to
increase the amount of food fed each week, beginning at about week six, by 5
to 10 percent, so that by week eight she is eating up to 1 1/2 times what
she had in early pregnancy. He also says to gradually reduce the meal size
and increase meal frequency so that by week eight, she is getting three or
four meals a day, with each meal being about half the size of what she got
each day when she was not pregnant. At this time, I also start giving her a
small piece of calf's liver each day as a treat.
For the last third of the pregnancy, he says to increase the nutrients
essential for growth. During this time, he suggests adding extra protein,
extra vitamins, extra essential fatty acids, and extra minerals (but NO
calcium). To increase the nutrient density, he says to increase foods like
muscle meat, eggs, liver, kidneys, essential fatty acid oils, and to reduce
her raw meaty bones to about 25 percent of the overall diet or even cut out
bones all together. He says to feed fewer veggies and fruit. And he
recommends adding extra kelp, vitamin E, multi B and vitamin C. At this
time, he says you can begin to include a small amount of cod liver oil.
During the last week of pregnancy, he says to gradually reduce the total
amount of food fed, so that a couple of days before whelping, she is getting
about half of the increased amount that you were feeding during week eight.
He also says to increase the amount of veggies, almost totally eliminate the
bones, and reduce the meat and offal. By the time she whelps, she may be
getting only a quarter of what she got in week 8. Remember to reduce the
supplements proportionately as well.
When the bitch is whelping, we do let her eat all of the placentas. We
believe that this is part of the natural process for a bitch -- we also
understand that it is a concentrated food, full of protein, full of
blood-forming and milk-forming elements. We also believe that they help let
her milk down.
Billinghurst says to feed the lactating bitch as much as she wants. While
she is nursing, she needs lots of liquids (including the fortified yogurt
mix – see below) to make milk; she needs mineral rich food high in calcium
to make the milk; and she needs energy foods. We feed about four meals a day
-- sometimes just raw meaty bones, and we give the milk mixture (see below)
in addition to her meals, and sometimes a mush of raw meaty bones mixed with
some veggies and her supplements). At first, she may refuse whole bones, so
we stock up on ground raw meaty bones for the first couple of weeks and use
them instead of raw meaty bones. If we don't use it all because she starts
wanting whole bones again, we save the ground raw meaty bones (keep them
frozen) for weaning the puppies. While nursing, the bitch needs lots and
lots of raw meaty bones.
We also make the meat-veggie mush with ground raw meaty bones while she is
lactating. And we make that mush with 80 percent ground raw meaty bones and
20 percent pulverized veggies.
We make a variation of the Billinghurst fortified milk mixture. His recipe
is to mix one cup of milk, one teasp of honey, one or two teaspoons of flax
seed oil, one raw egg or two egg yolks and one or two junket tablets. Blend
it all in a blender and let it come to body temperature by suspending the
container in hot water. Keep the mixture at body temperature for 10 minutes
to allow the junket to work. This is way too much work for us, and the
junket tablet does not always work. So we make a milk mixture with a cup of
plain yoghurt, a teasp of raw honey, some salmon oil, two egg yolks, and
some water. Our bitches love this, and it is quick and easy to mix up. We
use it to tempt them to eat during the first day after whelping, and then I
continue to give it to them a couple of times a day all the time they are
nursing. Sometimes to use it instead of one of the four meals, we mix in
some oatmeal flakes that have soaked overnight, and they love it this way as
well.
To keep her drinking lots
of fluids, we mix chicken broth or beef broths with her water, sort of
50-50. And we give this to her fresh many times during the day.
When the puppies are approaching seven or eight weeks of age, we reduce the
bitch’s total food intake over a few days from all she has been eating down
to the amount she ate when she was not pregnant; we cut out the raw meaty
bones and the milk mixture; and we restrict her water to non-flavored water
and only let her have access to it for about 10 minutes several times a day.
We up the veggie content of the mush to about 75 percent and reduce the meat
without bones to about 25 percent, and weI reduce the oil and kelp and eggs.
She can have recreational bones for chewing on. If the milk does not dry up
on this regimen, we fast her for a day. After the fast, she resumes her
normal raw diet with all the raw meaty bones, the essential fatty acids, the
protein etc.
Jubilee