The next thing required of me was . . . nothing. I had to wait. Take care of Victory, make sure she wasn't stressed (thank heaven it was okay for ME to be stressed!), and wait.
Our repro vet said we could come in three weeks for an ultrasound to confirm pregnancy. However, I was worried that three weeks wouldn't be long enough and didn't want to go then only to be told that we were just too early to know for sure. I booked the ultrasound for almost four weeks after the first breeding, but then I got in touch with Jean and asked her advice. "An experienced person can find them at three weeks," she said. "Anyone can find them at four." Ah . . . one point for four weeks. "But at three weeks they should all fit on one screen, so it's easier to count them," she added. Ah . . . a point for three weeks. Well, I'm all about decision-making. It was a tie: I decided to choose a compromise position and opted for 3 1/2 weeks, which meant that I would be waiting (just waiting) for just over three weeks from the time I returned from Cape Cod. And although I did tell a few people and was very grateful for their positive energy and good wishes, I asked them not to announce that the breeding had happened until we knew whether or not she was pregnant. I figured there would still be lots of waiting to get through once we knew.
I had done some reading on canine reproduction, and I understood that I had to avoid stressing Victory. Good stress, bad stress -- doesn't really matter which it is, according to my vet; stress just isn't good for bitches in early pregnancy. So I stopped doing any agility training. I stopped going to obedience class. I stopped taking her for runs with other dogs. Yes, I realize some people would say that was overkill in the prevention of stress and prevention of infection risk categories. But I figured that given all we'd invested already in making this breeding successful, I was going to do everything I could to help make that happen.
Instead of those other activities, we walked for hours each day, we did shaping exercises in the house, we played with her ball in the yard, we did our obedience practice on our own . . . and I watched her. I watched her like a hawk for signs that she might be pregnant -- and for signs that anything might be wrong.
I admit it: I'm something of a worrier. And I'm just a little obsessive. But I really thought it best to err on the side of caution, so I kept watching.
Little did I know that while I was watching her, sorrow was creeping up on us from another direction entirely. A week before the date of our ultrasound, tragedy struck: my beautiful, sweet, funny Rugby, my 11 1/2-year-old Australian Shepherd, died of hemangiosarcoma. Despite all my attentiveness, I just hadn't seen this coming. Rugby had seemed to be rather sore in the past week or so, sometimes not wanting to leave his snuggly bed in the morning, sometimes not wanting to go for a walk with us. But he had an old injury and was often creaky, so I put his soreness down to that. What was actually happening was that he was bleeding internally, and on Thursday, December 9th, one day after Victory's third birthday, we sent him to the Bridge. My little Victory was suddenly the sole animal in what only months before had been a four-animal house. It was heartbreaking. It's still heartbreaking.
My sweet Rugby boy, Victory's big brother
The last week of waiting was the hardest. We were dealing with Rugby's loss, and I was really nervous, now almost afraid to hope for good news. Victory seemed fine, but she seemed pretty normal, and I was afraid that normal wasn't a good sign. I looked for something more conclusive, like morning sickness, but the fact was that although I felt rather nauseous each morning, she seemed fine. But on Thursday, the day before the ultrasound, she refused her breakfast, and my heart skipped a beat or two.
The ultrasound was scheduled for 8 a.m. Friday, which was a blessing considering that several of my mental gaskets were close to the blowing point. Ray and I brought Victory back into the ultrasound room and put her on her back in the cool cradle-like holder the vets use. Victory loves to sleep on her back (she's on her back right now, in fact!), so she thought that was just keen; she lay there, totally at ease and comfortable. Sarah, the technician, shaved some hair off her belly, Dr. Gumley applied some gel to his magic ultrasound wand, and we were off.
What did I see? At first, absolutely nothing. What did he say? Absolutely nothing . . . for about 10 almost unbearably long seconds. And then, in the most lovely sing-song voice ever heard: "Oh, I think we're pregnant!" I almost fainted. For the next several minutes he went over and over her belly, orienting himself each time by her bladder, showing me tiny flickering heartbeats, and trying to count puppies: "There's one . . . two . . . there's three . . . there's four!" And then in another direction: "There's one . . . there's two . . . there's three . . . now where did four go?" "There's one . . . there's two . . . there's three . . . oh, there's four . . . Whoops! There's FIVE . . . and there's SIX!!" Now, I know it's hard to get an accurate count by ultrasound, but that was pretty darned exciting news.
With tears in my eyes, I said, "May I hug you?" And hug him I did.
2011 has had some wonderful things in it, most notably the wedding of my son, the birth of my first grandchild, Jack Levi Fawcett, on September 6th, and the news that he and his mom and dad are moving back to Ottawa in the spring. But it's been hard, too, and it has seen a lot of loss in the larger Ottawa dog community, among my friends, and in my own home. I needed some really good news. I needed to know that 2012 would begin with a celebration of life. Victory, Jiffy, Diane, Dr. Mike, and Dr. Gumley came through for us in a very big way, and 2012 promises to be filled with excitement -- and puppy breath!
I am over-the-moon delighted to announce that Taylormade Victory Dance NA NAJ NF, aka Victory, aka Princess of the Pillows, is in whelp to BISS CH Bare Cove Back in a Jiffy AX MXJ, aka Jiffy, aka The Beloved. We just couldn't be happier.
The handsome papa-to-be (Photo courtesy Diane Gregoire)
And now? We wait, of course! (And I keep watching . . . .)
The shaved belly, soon to be much bigger!