Ask the French Bulldog Experts

We've chosen four highly experienced French Bulldog experts to help with every aspect of French Bulldog ownership. Send your questions to -

Hope Saidel
Hope Saidel French Bulldog Training, Obedience, Therapy and Behaviour Questions
Kathi Liebe
Kathi Liebe French Bulldog Breeding and Showing Questions
Pat Pearce
Pat Pearce French Bulldog Breeding and Showing Questions
Lori Hunt
Dr. Lori Hunt, DVM French Bulldog Health and Veterinary Questions
Carol G
Carol G. Website, Dog Food, and Miscellaneous Weird Questions

Please note that advice from any of our experts is not intended to replace a proper examination by a Veterinarian. When in doubt or in case of an emergency, please take your dog to see a veterinarian for a hands on examination. Click here to locate an experience Brachycephalic Veterinarian in your area.

Ask the French Bulldog Trainer - When to start training?

gollygear July 5th, 2008

Hi, my question is: How early should you start training your french bulldog puppy? We’re getting our french bulldog soon (next week!) and were thinking about doing some private sessions at home as well as a puppy class as well. However, we weren’t sure if 8-9 weeks was too young.

Thanks!

Hope writes -

A new puppy! Congratulations!
Puppies are sponges. Like all other babies, they start learning from the moment they’re born. When the pup becomes yours, you automatically become its teacher. Your objective is to make sure it learns what you want it to know.
When you call your pup by its name - reward it for coming. Never, ever punish your dog for coming to you. The converse is also an absolute: never call your dog to punish or correct it.
Praise your dog for appropriate behavior - when he potties outside, when he chews on a toy instead of your fingers, when he sits. Name the good behavior while you do this “good go potty,” “good sit,” etc.
A puppy class is good for socialization and fundamentals. It’s also good to have a trainer right there who will answer all your questions and give immediate feedback, knowing you and your puppy. Please do your research on the class - observe before you bring your dog and make sure that the environment is safe your your little one.
Unless this is your first dog and you’re looking for help with basics: housebreaking, chewing, jumping, socialization, etc., there’s not much point to a private trainer at this age. Puppies are notorious for being brilliant in obedience, until it all falls out of their heads when they hit adolescence.
I would let your puppy be a puppy; teach the basics, including “sit and accept praise,” “come,” “sit,” “down,” walking nicely on lead, and the all-important “leave it.” It’s enough of a lesson plan for now. Babies have a limited attention span and Frenchies aren’t crazy about repetitive drills. There are some dogs who will endlessly “practise” a behavior, Frenchies aren’t among them. Training sessions for a puppy should be a couple of minutes, a few times a day, not counting the continuous training of daily life.
You can always add on and pursue further training - no dog is too old to learn new tricks. As always, when you are researching trainers and classes, don’t be shy about checking them out. You are your puppy’s advocate. Never allow anyone to do anything with your pup that you’re not comfortable with - and don’t let them convince you to, either.
Good luck with the baby!
-Hope

Ask the French Bulldog Vet - Free whelped, or C Section?

lorihuntdvm July 4th, 2008

I have a frenchie that is expecting her first litter of puppies.  I am trying to decide if I should schedule a C-section or allow her to try to whelp naturally.  What is your opinion?

Dr. Lori writes -
Absolutely you need to plan on a c-section!

Generally speaking, frenchies are not free whelping dogs.  So a cesarean will be necessary.  Trying to free whelp will most likely result in the loss of mom or puppies or BOTH!

Unless you have an exact due date based on ovulation date (which can be determined by progesterone testing done while breeding), then you will need to wait for signs.

I really hope you did progesterone testing!

As her approximate due date gets close, you should take her temperature rectally three times daily.  A normal bitch’s temperature is 100-102.  12-24 hours before labor begins, her temp will drop by at least one full degree and often down around 98 degrees Fahrenheit.  This is the time when you call your vet and schedule the section for that day.  You can also take her to your vet and have daily progesterones done (need to be able to get results quickly, within hours) as when her progesterone drops below 2.0 ng/dl, she will be safe to section.

Good Luck as frenchies can be very difficult to whelp and raise and by your question it sounds like you haven’t done nearly enough research.  I hope you have some time before they arrive to prepare.

Dr. Lori Hunt, DVM

Editor’s Note: I once had a lovely little bitch who came from a free whelping mother. As her due date approached, I assumed she would also be able to successfully free whelp. I was experienced in assisting my girls with their deliveries, and confident all would go well.

Unfortunately, I was wrong - her first puppy, a large pied boy, became lodged in her birth canal. We barely made it to the emergency clinic in time to save her life and the lives of her other two pups. The boy was already dead. Now, I c section all my girls. It’s just not worth losing a single other pup, at least not to me…

Ask the French Bulldog Geek - Resources for Home Cooked Dog Food?

admin July 4th, 2008

My question is regarding the proper food for a French Bulldog. I have been recommended Taste of the wild kibble, Evo, also a raw diet and home made meals. I am not comfortable with the raw however I am willing to make the homemade meals but do not know what would be a good recipe.

I would not want to make a regular meal that is lacking the vitamins and nutrition necessary for my dogs. It seems there are all kinds of sources of what is best…but what really is?

I was just hoping for some helpful insight.

Carol writes -

When I was personally still cooking for my dogs, I used the mix available from Essex Cottage Farms. It looks basically like a sack of flour, and contains all the assorted bone meal and minerals needed to balance out the food. To it, I added meat (ground beef, chicken, turkey, or fish), ground vegetables, greens (mostly alfalfa) and some oil. I’d then bake it, either in individual serving muffin tins, or as a ‘meat loaf’. The dogs seemed to love it! In fact, when Tessa was pregnant with her litter of ten (!!) Frenchie puppies, Essex Cottage Farms food was the only thing I could get her to eat.

Since what you want seems to be more a completely ‘home made’ recipe, I asked for advice from some of the members of the French Bulldog mailing lists:

Monica of HotSchott French Bulldogs writes -

Carol, there is a GREAT book out there for home cookers. I used to before I fed raw and I used to use the recipes all the time. My husband always thought I was cooking for him. LOLOLOL The book is called Barker’s Grub and can be purchased from Amazon.com.

Linda writes -

my vet gave me a copy that is actually from science diet that has many different recipes on the page. And he worked with me on each dogs weight to devise the amount of vitamins and bone meal to add to the recipes. And it has everything from calorie reduced to protein reduced to many types. You could go to science diet ( not that I would recommend you feed their food ) but down load the recopies. I often used eggs for the protein as you can measure it exactly. And yams or sweet potatoes . Children’’s’ vitamins dissolve much better and natural health food section of your store has them. For 5o lb dogs I used 1/2 or 1 teas per day. But work with your vet .and yes I used canned salmon too.

Another suggestion was to join a mailing list for people who home cook for their pets -

You might try this group. Some do raw, some cook, some feed kibble, and some combine. Always great info and discussions,

http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/K9Kitchen

I also found these recipes books, which seem to have favorable reviews from people who’ve used them:

The Good Food Cookbook for Dogs - 50 Homemade Recipes

Real Food for Dogs - 50 Vet Approved Recipes

The Natural Pet Food Cook Book

Bone Appetit

Three Dog Bakery Cookbook

Better Food for Dogs

Here’s a great website for home cooking resources - http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/dogfoodrecipes.htm

Enjoy, and bone appetit!

Carol

Ask the Frenchie Geek - French Bulldog pups ears up?

bullmarketfrogs July 3rd, 2008

A reader writes to ask:


I enjoyed reading the web site. I do have a question and it probably strange. Is a Frenchie born with ears erect or do they become erect later?
First off, there are no strange questions! Ok, I’m actually going to take that back, because we have had a few strange questions - but this isn’t one of them.

French Bulldogs, like all dogs, are born with their ears sealed. The flaps seal the ear canal shut, making pups effectively deaf for the first week or so of life. At about 12 - 15 days, the ear flaps open, and pups begin to hear.

Like most erect eared dog breeds, Frenchies adhere to their own personal schedule when it comes to ears ‘going up’. Some pups spend time with one ear up, one ear down (a syndrome we refer to as “Squeeee!” ear, because “Squeee!” is the sound you make as you almost die from the cuteness of the partially flopsy eared pup).

Solo with Flopsy Ears
Solo with ‘flopsy’ ears

Sometimes both ears go up, only to come back down during the traumatic teething period. Sometimes, especially with larger, softer leathered ears, the tips might ‘curl’.

French Bulldog Puppy with Ear Curl
Dexter with a ‘curl’ on his ear

The only rule of thumb is that each pup’s ears will do what they want on their own schedule, and usually without any need for owners to muck around with taping or popsicle sticks or worrying themselves frantic.

Leave them be, and they’ll come up in time.

Carol

Ask the French Vet - French Bulldog with Missing Parts??

lorihuntdvm July 3rd, 2008

My 5 year old Frenchie has been plagued with recurrent UTIs. We have done antibiotics repeatedly. We recently took her to an Internist and he discovered she only had one kidney. Is this common in Frenchie and is there something we can do to help prevent these reoccurring infections?

The Internist wants to discuss some surgical options. I am a little hesitant about resorting to surgery.

Any suggestions or something that might have been overlooked?

Dr. Lori writes -

I do believe recurrent UTIs can be common in frenchies, but your little girl is the first I have heard to only have one kidney. I suspect that this is at the root of her UTI problem.

One suggestion may be changing her food to a more urinary tract friendly diet, whether it be prescription or cooked.

I have also found some help with recurrent bladder problems in using some of the joint support supplements, like GlycoFlex III, there is anecdotal evidence to support that it lubricates the surface of the bladder making it tougher for bacteria to take root.

Joint sumplenets are never a bad idea for frenchies, so you don’t have much to lose by trying…

Good luck with your sweet girl and kudos to you for going for the best vet care you could get to help her out!

Lori Hunt, DVM

Next »