By: Dr. Ed
Bailey
Originally published
in Gun Dog Magazine
Should
anyone still want to
take home their brand
new pup at less than ten
weeks? The reasons to
reprint are several: (1)
Breed clubs and dog
clubs from across the
United States and Canada
as well as from far off
places like Australia
and Hawaii in one
direction and England
and Germany in the other
have asked permission to
reprint it in their
journals, newsletters
and magazines; (2) There
are many new readers of
Gun Dog who did not have
a chance to read it
though many heard about
it through their clubs;
(3) Breeders have asked
permission to copy the
article to use as a
handout to prospective
buyers; (4) Prospective
buyers have asked for
copy privileges to give
to breeders from whom
they thought they would
buy a pup; and (5) The
message either didn't
get through or wasn't
accepted (believed) by a
lot of people with a
solid mindset, i.e.
breeder trying to
convince buyer, buyer
trying to convince
breeder, clubs giving
their membership
something to think
about, or a totally
missed message.
Here are
some examples. An
acquaintance of mine
decided he wanted to
become a breeder so I
lent him the original
research literature on
the socialization
processes in dogs, about
600 pages of reported
research. Some months
latter when I went to
retrieve this chunk of
my library and I asked
him what he thought, his
comment was, "That was a
lot of heavy reading."
Soon after he produced
his first litter and
moved the pups as close
to the 49th day as he
could. Obviously he had
a “gotta let 'em go at
seven weeks” mind set.
And why not; he had just
read an article in his
club publication written
by a pro trainer/writer
with the opening
sentence-"Be sure you
get your pup at seven
weeks." There was no
reason given, no
justification, not even
a rationalization, just
the statement.
Another
example, this from a
breeder who had been
trying unsuccessfully
for years to convince
prospective buyers to
wait until pups were ten
to twelve weeks old. The
copies were to be
handouts to back up what
had been argued for
years. This person
breeds a good number of
top dogs yet has
prospective buyers say,
"If you won't let me
have the pup at exactly
seven weeks, I'll go to
a breeder who will." And
they do.
These
are just some examples
among many that have
come in. One is of a
breeder who should know
better fighting buyers
who do, one of a breeder
who does know better
fighting buyers who
should, and one of a pro
trainer/writer who
should just plain know
better. I gather from
the requests to reprint
that have come in that
there are more buyers
who need convincing than
breeders. Generally,
breeders who have been
out of their back yard
and around the block are
pretty knowledgeable.
But especially the first
time buyers seem to have
this problem of being
overly marinated in
mythology. Or maybe it's
just a matter of good
old B.S. baffling
brains.
Whatever
reasons were behind the
requests for reproducing
the article, they were
strong enough for the
editor of Gun Dog to
feel the article should
appear again and I
agree. So here it is
with some minor
editorial changes but no
changes in the factual
data. There has been no
new research on dog
socialization; the work
has been so thoroughly
done that further work
would only be whistling
in the wind.
So where
did all this magical
seven weeks old, forty
nine days and not a
minute later idea that
permeates so much of
puppy peddling come
from? The first mention
of it that I remember in
popular literature burst
onto the hunting dog
scene in 1961. The last
sentence in Chapter 3 of
a book by Richard
Wolters said . . . "get
and start your dog at
the right time - seven
weeks - that's 49 days
old." And in another
place in the same
chapter in italics for
emphasis yet..."buy
your puppy and take him
home at the exact age of
49 days." Oddly
enough the book was
called "Gun Dog” and
also featured the
wing-on-a-string-thing.
It's a toss up whether
overdoing the wing or
the 49 days has had the
most negative impact on
hunting dogs.
But
Wolters didn't just
dream up the magical
seven weeks. Possibly
what twigged his
imagination and induced
his cosmic leap to
"exact age of 49 days"
was a paper by
Pfaffenberger and Scott
that appeared in 1959 in
the Journal of Genetic
Psychology entitled,
"The Relationship
Between Delayed
Socialization and
Trainability in Guide
Dogs." This paper
suggested that guide
dogs had the correct
amount of attachment to
people to become guide
dogs if the average age
at separation from
littermates was not less
than seven weeks. Or,
maybe it was a paper by
Freedman, King and
Elliot, 1961, in Science
entitled, "Critical
Periods in the Social
Development of dogs." Or
it could have been any
of a long list of papers
by Scott and his
coworkers beginning
about 1944 and
culminating in the book
published in 1965 by
John Paul Scott and John
Fuller, Genetics and the
Social Behavior of the
Dog.
This book, later
published under a
slightly different
title, brought together
more than twenty years
of study of dog
socialization processes
done at the Roscoe B.
Jackson Memorial
Laboratory at Bar
Harbor, Maine. The study
was massive, utilizing
hundreds of dogs-
Wirehaired Fox Terriers,
Cocker Spaniels, African
Basenjis, Shetland
Sheepdogs and Beagles.
Scott was a leading
animal behaviorist; one
of only a handful in
North America at the
time, Fuller was a
geneticist, more
interested in the
genetic potential for
the occurrence of a
behavior than in its
development.
Additionally there were
many students working
toward advanced degrees,
post-doctoral students
and student volunteers,
all interested in animal
behavior; most
specifically in domestic
dogs. This was an early
think tank directed at
studying dog behavior.
Wolters refers to the
work of Scott and Fuller
in his book, so he
evidently got the 49-day
idea from their work
somehow. But nowhere in
all their published work
do they say to get a
puppy at the "exact age
of 49 days". Wolters
apparently added 2 and 2
and came up with 49. So
what did they really
find?
One
finding extremely
important to the
mystical (mythical?) 49
days time frame was that
pups in a single litter
can vary in
developmental age by a
week in each direction
though all are born
within a few hours. This
developmental variation
arises from several
sources- conception can
vary two to three days
due to super fetation,
delay in implantation of
fertilized ova in the
uterus may be another
two to three days,
location in the uterine
horn, blood supply to
the various embryos,
developmental arrests or
speedups, differential
delay in parturition all
can contribute to
developmental
variability. There is
also differential
post partum
development especially
during the first few
weeks. This means that
by the time the pup
reaches 49 days since
birth, it can be
anywhere between 42 and
56 days old
developmentally relative
to all other pups in the
total population of pups
whelped on the same day,
even to pups in the same
litter. And it is the
neural, physiological
and physical
development, not the
exact chronological age,
not minutes elapsed
since popping into the
cold, cruel world that
is important in the
behavioral stability or
lack of it in pups and
later when the pups
reach adult status.
I put
this finding first
because I consider it
the most important for
putting the 49 days
thing into perspective.
Seven weeks is only a
chronological age, only
the number of days since
parturition.
Developmentally, it is
an average of a large
sample size with
statistical limits of
plus or minus a week. It
says that predictably,
95 per cent of any
population of domestic
dogs at seven weeks
after parturition will
be between six and eight
weeks old
developmentally. Look at
any litter closely and
objectively each week
for behavioral
differences and you will
see surprising
variability. You will
see some pups that are
precocial, some delayed.
What one pup does at a
given age, others will
only do next week or
some did three days ago.
Another
major finding of the
Scott and Fuller studies
was the delimitation of
hypothetical periods in
social development
alluded to earlier, with
specific time markers
using behavioral and
physical development
characteristics for the
beginning and end of
each period. Days of age
are averages with plus
and minus limits used to
make the periods
somewhat translatable to
real time.
For
example, one marker
signifying the beginning
of the socialization
period is ear movement
in response to sound.
Average age for this
time marker is 19.5 days
with 95% of the pups
showing this
characteristic between
14.9 and 24.1 days.
Another marker is first
teeth eruption at 20.8
days with 95% limits
from 15.0 to 26.6 days.
So according to these
time markers the average
age for the start of the
socialization period is
about 21 days but can
vary from 15 to 27 days
in terms of
developmental criteria.
Scott
and coworkers delimited
four critical periods of
social development. I
Neonatal - birth to two
weeks; II Transition -
two to three weeks; III
Socialization - from
three to 12 weeks; IV
Juvenile - 12 to 32
weeks. Beyond 32 weeks
dogs were considered
sexually mature. We
might add to the front
end the prenatal period,
which the research group
did not consider, but
which includes from
implantation to
parturition. Also, we
could add a period on
the tail end, which
would include the time
from one to two years
and call it a period of
emotional maturation
similar to a
post-teenage child.
During
the prenatal period the
developing embryonic pup
is influenced by
visceral stimuli and
hormones from the dam.
Drugs, X-ray, chemicals,
diseases, parasites,
nutrition, all happening
to the mother to be can
be dangerous to the
pups, especially in the
first trimester. Severe
stress to the pups in
the final trimester from
temperature, nutrition
and other physiological
and physical conditions
impinging on the bitch
can result in later pup
problems such as
increased emotional
state, extremes in
behavior and reduced
learning ability.
The
neonatal period is
characterized by nursing
and sleeping, at this
time pups develop an
olfactory imprint of the
mother, her breasts, the
nest, and each other.
The senses of smell and
touch (olfactory and
tactile senses) are
better developed during
this period and are the
only ones useable by the
pups to get information
from the outside world.
Humans handling pups at
this time provides a
mild stress, which acts
to improve pups
physically and
emotionally. Pups
handled during the first
two weeks grow faster,
mature faster, and are
more resistant to
diseases. They are more
stable, handle emotional
stress better, are more
exploratory and learn
faster than pups not
handled during this
period.
The transition period
from two to three weeks
old is when pups gain
the use of the remaining
modalities of sight,
hearing and
proprioception. Eyes
open at around three
weeks, hearing begins
about ten days later at
about the same time as
walking and this
coincides with one-spot
defecation outside the
nest. The onset of
social interactions with
mother and siblings
begins at the end of the
transitional period. The
pup goes from the little
fat blob that grunts to
an animated live little
guy in these two weeks.
Pups have no fear at
this time so any large
objects like a person
hovering over them or a
loud noise as in any
typical home, machinery,
appliances, dropped
pans, stumbled over
buckets, voices, all
perceived for the first
time do not evoke fear
responses. Rather they
are associated with low
anxiety and get little
notice except a mild
startle response and a
glance in the noise
direction. Fear is still
three or more weeks in
coming.
The
socialization period
begins at three weeks
and extends to week 14.
During this period pups
learn to be dogs.
Through play fight, play
sex, play hunting,
catching and guarding
prey, they develop
skills needed later in
life. They learn the
"language" of dominance
and submission such as
soft bite, head turn,
and threat intensity.
They also learn to
associate with and bond
with people. Generally
most students of dog
behavior consider
socialization of dogs
with dogs coming first,
from three to six weeks,
and dogs with people
following, from six to
14 weeks. In reality the
two types of
socialization overlap
just about totally. Dog
on dog or primary
socialization begin
during late gestation
stages and continue
through juvenile into
sub-adult stage. People
socialization, or what I
have called secondary
socialization in another
Gun Dog article, starts
with the basic
associations formed from
handling shortly after
birth until six or seven
weeks, before the fear
response escalates.
Unless socialization on
dogs and people is well
underway by then, it has
only a small chance of
happening at all.
The last
half of the
socialization period is
marked by the
development of fear
responses starting in
the fifth week, then
escalating rapidly
through the seventh week
to a peak at nine weeks,
then levels off in the
tenth week where it
remains for the dog's
life. In general
anything associated with
fear during weeks seven
through nine in the
non-socialized dog
remains a fearful
stimulus for life unless
changed by systematic
desensitizing. Fearful
of aversive stimuli
occurring for the first
time during this period
such as harsh
punishment, isolation,
or any strong fear
inducing stimulus, can
result in extremes in
behavior, abnormal
fearfulness, difficulty
in training or
anti-social behavior as
an adult. This part of
this period is much like
the seven to eight month
old child who begins to
cry when approached by a
stranger though would
have giggled at every
stranger just a month
earlier. The juvenile
phase is from three to
eight months of age and
is a sort of post
graduate period when
what occurred in the
socialization period
must be reinforced of
corrected if there is a
problem brought on by
something improperly
done in preceding
periods.
Beyond
eight months the dog is
considered adult and
doing adult behaviors
such as leg lifting in
territorial marking,
gradual increase in
dominance and general
aggression in males;
first estrus period in
females, behavior
patterns related to
reproduction in general.
This is the period when
the dog will attempt to
take over if genetically
a dominant dog, or be
super submissive if
genetically shy or
submissive. From the
start of this period to
eighteen months to two
years the dog is
comparable to a teenager
and facing about the
same types of identity
crises. But again, these
ages are averages of
large sample sizes with
standard deviations. I
want to emphasize they
are not to be taken
literally; they are not
carved in stone.
Period
III is of most interest
to a prospective puppy
buyer, this is the
socialization period.
This was also the period
concentrated on most by
the Bar Harbor group.
Their findings
demonstrated that
socialization with dogs,
mother and litter mates,
begins at three weeks,
peaks at seven weeks but
continues for up to
several months longer.
The events that mark the
beginning of this period
are eyes open and
definite startle
responses to sudden
sounds. Adult heart rate
and brain wave patterns
coincide with peak
dog-on-dog socialization
at seven weeks. The
period of human
acceptance begins at
five weeks with the
improvement in pup
mobility and peaks at
eight and nine weeks,
but will continue on for
another five to six
weeks. The criteria used
to determine the limits
of human acceptance
were: lowest fear and
highest approach scores
at five weeks implied
the start, and high fear
with low approach that
became no approach at
fourteen weeks was
considered to be the
end. They suggested the
dog-on-people
socialization could
start before five weeks,
but prior to then the
low mobility hinders
approach responses. So
attraction to and
acceptance of people
actually occurs at least
two to three weeks
earlier.
The
startle response to
sound apparent at three
weeks accelerates and
appears as the earliest
indication of a fear
response at five weeks.
To establish these
limits, pups were left
with the mother with no
human contact until the
age of testing. That
means the high fear
response to humans at
fourteen weeks was the
age at which pups
encountered humans for
the first time.
Similarly, the low fear,
high approach scores at
five weeks was the first
exposure to humans for
this age group.
Exposure
to humans in various
amounts in other groups
of pups showed that even
as little as two
20-minute periods a week
from four weeks onward
was adequate for
developing social
attachments to people.
So why "exactly 49
days"? There is no
mention of 49th day
being anything special
by any of the
collaborators in all
this dog behavior
research. Where could
the magic of seven weeks
come from?
One
indication that seven
weeks might be a
reasonable average for
socialization processes
to occur, but not
necessarily the only or
even the optimum age,
was summarized in a
graphic plot of the
approach/avoidance
scores on age in weeks
presented in the paper
on critical periods in
social development of
dogs by Freedman, King
and Elliot, three
members of the research
group. The graph shows
the approach scores were
low at two and three
weeks, jumped
dramatically at five
weeks, then gradually
declined to almost no
approach at fourteen
weeks. Avoidance scores,
equated
to the development of a
fear response, were none
at three to five weeks,
and then jumped abruptly
at seven weeks to a
maximum by ten weeks.
The lines representing
decreasing approach and
increasing avoidance
cross in the seventh
week. From this the
authors concluded the
period for most rapid
socialization was
optimum at six to eight
weeks. However, pups in
this study had no
exposure to people until
the day of testing and
each week's cohort of
dogs was tested only
once. It measured only
the accumulative effect
of deprivation of human
contact such as would
occur in wild canids
like wolf, coyote, and
wild dogs of any sort.
But somehow Wolters
honed this six to eight
weeks old to exactly 49
days and hopefully not a
minute later.
Based on
the results of Freedman,
King and Elliot with
pups whose initial
exposure to humans was
when they were tested,
Scott suggested two
rules for producing
well-balanced,
well-adjusted dogs. The
first of these is that
the ideal time to
produce a close social
relationship between
puppy and master occurs
between six and eight
weeks of age. This is
the optimal time to
remove it from litter
and make it into a house
pet. Done earlier the
pup hasn't enough
opportunity to form
social relationships
with other dogs, but
would be very attached
to people. At the other
extreme, if exposure to
people is delayed to
twelve or more weeks of
age the pup will have
good relationship with
dogs but will be timid
and have no confidence
with people. A strong
relationship with people
is important for pet
dogs and for working
dogs such as guide dogs,
and for some hunting
dogs where they work
under close direction.
This might apply to say
field trial retrievers.
For those dogs that do
not require such a
strong dog-human
relationship, such as
the hounds and field
trial pointing breeds,
exposure at the six to
eight week period is not
so essential.
The
second general rule is
that puppies should be
exposed, at least in a
preliminary way, to the
circumstances in which
they will live as an
adult, and this should
be done before three or
four months old. The
young puppy at eight to
twelve weeks is highly
malleable and adaptable
and this is the time to
lay the foundation for
its future life work.
If
puppies have very little
or no human contact,
seven weeks is
conservative- six weeks
would be a better age to
get the pup. Waiting to
twelve weeks would
produce the so-called
kennel shy dog. The only
case I can imagine with
no people exposure today
is a multi-breed puppy
mill run on a
shoestring. Anyone who
buys a hunting dog pup
from such a breeder is
not popping on all
cylinders.
But
assuming all is normal,
the breeder is
knowledgeable enough
about his breed and
cares enough to talk to,
pet, handle, expose to
noises, to strange
situations, strange
textures underfoot, and
allows the pups to
interact fully with
mother and siblings,
then Scott's rule one
doesn't apply.
The pups
will have contact with
humans, probably on a
daily basis from birth
onward. So seven weeks
will not necessarily be
the best time for puppy
to be taken from litter
mates. Likewise, the
period from six to eight
weeks has some down
sides.
One down
side is the rapid
increase in fear
responses, things like
avoidance of strangers
and fearfulness of new
or strange situations.
Barely noticeable at
five weeks, fear
escalates most in the
seventh week. Abrupt
separation from mom and
littermates, the only
rock solid security the
pup knows, is the most
traumatic experience of
its life so far.
Transplanting at seven
weeks to a totally new
environment is magnified
because the developing
fear is rapidly
escalating. Keeping the
pup in the same
situation it has
previously associated
with low fear during the
three to six week old
period- same location,
same mom, same litter
mates and same breeder
with same enriched
environment routine-
will smooth out the
rough road that begins
with the rapid
development of the fear
reflex late in week six
and through week seven
before it levels of in
the tenth week.
Another
down side that is
related, temporally at
least, to the rapid
increase in fear is
weaning. Among the time
marker events included
in the Scott and Fuller
study is the normal
beginning of weaning at
seven weeks. Weaning is
right up there with
total separation from
everything familiar for
being super traumatic to
a pup.
Also
less documented, but
alluded to in some of
the work of the Bar
Harbor group, is that
the socialization
process of dogs on dogs
is not yet completed at
seven weeks.
Establishment of these
social connections and
honing them will go on
for some weeks and even
months in the case of
some behaviors. Sure, a
dog can survive without
it, millions do, but it
will be
more
complete socially if it
could have another three
weeks with mom and all
the kids at home. Adult
sexual behavior of both
males and females is
affected, as is social
ordering in sexual
encounters where males
must be dominant and
females must not be. The
cooperative or
competitive individual
personality of a puppy
develops during the
ninth and tenth week so
selection of the type of
pup you want is a lot
less iffy at ten than at
seven weeks. There are
other behavioral
modifications as a
result of leaving the
litter early, but tested
documentation is scarce.
An
almost totally
undocumented but long
time rule of thumb in
parts of Europe is that
at ten weeks the pup is
a scale model of what it
will be as an adult.
Anyone ever watching
pups grow knows that one
day the feet are too
large for the ears, the
next day the ears are
outsized in relation to
leg length. But at ten
weeks, for a few days,
all parts are in the
approximate proportions
they will be when the
pup is all grown up.
There is no other time
in the growth curve when
you have such a preview
of coming attractions,
of just how the pup will
look as an adult. I know
of no hard evidence or
research documenting
this phenomenon, only
anecdotal information.
It would require a
systematic set of
measurements done at ten
weeks and again at a
year and at two, as a
minimum, on a whole
series of individual
dogs representing many
different
breeds
and balanced for gender,
that's hundreds of dogs.
I've looked at only a
few and the phenomenon
held for those but it
could have been chance,
or applied only to the
breeds, or primarily in
males or other
confounding variables.
So when
should you go knock on
the breeder's door and
with a huge grin say,
"I'm here for my puppy."
First, the answer
depends on the breeder
and on how he/she treats
the bitch and the pups.
If it's the puppy
factory alluded to
earlier, where pups got
little or no human
contact from
birth
until you arrived to
pick out your pup, seven
weeks is already too
late. If you must deal
with such a breeder, and
I can think of no reason
why you would, six weeks
is the oldest if you
hope to save the pup.
With the rapid onset of
the fear response at
seven weeks, every day
after six weeks old
increases the
probability of the pup
suffering because there
is a lack of human
contact. The dog,
depending on inherited
temperament and breed,
will be impossible or at
best extremely difficult
to train, may be a fear
biter, surely will be
people shy, and will act
like a wild canid
generally if left in
litter with no human
contact for its first
twelve weeks.
But if
the breeder is reputable
and knows a modicum of
dog behavior and has the
whelping and growing pen
in the middle of where
everyone passes (who can
resist getting their
hands into a group of
chubby little pups
clamoring for attention)
seven weeks is too young
to leave home. Older is
better. The optimum time
to leave the litter
would be ten weeks when
the pup is most
adaptable. Picking a pup
is a crap shoot at best,
but you can get a better
glimpse of your
pup-in-a-poke at ten
weeks because that is
when what you see is
what you get in both the
physical and
psychological
attributes.
Will
breeders agree if you
insist on ten weeks?
Some will, some already
insist on it even though
they might lose sales,
and others will want to
sell pups as early as
possible. The cost to a
breeder in food, care,
wear and tear on
facilities not to
mention nerves, rises
exponentially as pup’s
age. The profit that
might accrue by seven
weeks dwindles rapidly
to in that intervening
three weeks from seven
to ten.
However,
the breeders who would
agree will be more
confident in any
guarantees they give and
will have more satisfied
customers. The dogs they
send out will be much
better prepared for
life. They won't cry
throughout their first
night away from
littermates and mom. No
hot water bottles or
ticking clocks for these
fearless little guys.
They will have the
social, physical and
psychological equipment
needed to take the
upheaval, the move, the
new people in their
life, and to take on
whatever life and the
world have to offer. We
should all be so lucky.