Well at 5am on Friday the 7th August , in the pouring rain , the freezing cold south westerly wind and in the pitch dark , I was in a paddock at Awahuri helping one of my older ewes Molly to bring Splish and Splosh her twins into this world. Saw the little boy (Splosh) get a drink, and the little girl (Splish) was just starting to drink when I left. I go back out there 10.30am to just double check them and to check my other ewes and see if anymore had lambed. Splish the little girl isn't strong enough to stand and is totally wet and freezing :(. She wouldn't have the energy to follow mum for a drink. The decision was made instantly. Splish was scooped up and put inside my jacket and jersey ( wet cold lambs are not the best fashion accessory to wear under your rain coat lol ) and we head back to home here in town to try and warm her and save her.
This was a  HUGE experiment and  risk on my part at this  stage ( but  to me I had no  choice ) as  at this  stage  I had 5 Greyhounds  living in the house in town with me, none of  which rated  Cat Friendly, and 1 which is  so  anti-cat he  will actively  try and  get any cat he sees when on a  street walk.
I knew Gogo ( Go Strait Threw) and   Bridgette ( Bardo's  Angel ... RIP my  sweet old  angel) and  Lilly  (Riri Megumi) would  most likely be ok  with the lamb  as  they had  raised a bottle  fed lamb  at home  2 seasons ago. Sammy ( Krussian) and  Lenny  ( Leadfoot Lenny ) were a totally different kettle of  fish. Neither of them had seen a new born ( well ok about 5 hours old  at this stage ) lamb before.
To be honest I fully expected  Lenny  to have a  go  at the lamb, Sammy I didn't know  what his  reaction  would be but with no choice I had to try and  save the lamb and would  just deal with the  outcome whatever it was! The Hounds would just HAVE to learn!!
I came in and muzzled all of the gang, made up a homemade incubator of sorts ( large cardboard box, hot-water bottle in the bottom with a blanket over it, 2ltr milk bottles filled with hot water in each corner of it, covered with a blanket), went and put Lamb in it and brought it inside. I put the box on the floor and let them all come and have a sniff and a look. GoGo and Bridgey and Lilly knew instantly what it was and were fine and had muzzles off inside about 3 minutes and all gave the lamb a lick and sniffs and wander off.
Sammy  was intrigued by   the lamb   and  had to have  very long sniffs and  prodded it with his  nose  ( muzzle )  and then  realized it was OK and  was happy, so his muzzle came off too :)
Lenny ....  now  you have  to remember  that  Lenny  is not that long off the  track, was a fairly reasonable race  dog  :) ,  and was totally   focused  on the hunt and the  chase, he is  also  very strong willed and  very very powerful and  hard to hang on to, and  to him I thought the  lamb would have looked  like a lure.
Well Lenny was intrigued by this little  sick thing in the box and  he tried to lick it  through the muzzle and I thought I saw teeth  appear there a  couple of times, so his muzzle stayed on.
He kept coming back  to  the box  bedside me  and wanting to see the lamb  and  check it  ( I guess was wait for his  dinner to warm up  lol ) and I  would lift the blanket and let him see the lamb  and then  he was happy  and   would  go  to his lounge chair and then he'd be back again in another  3 minutes  to check it again.
I took about 45minutes  for  Splish  (lamb) to warm up enough  to  try and  move  around a little and realize she was hungry ... so far so good  :) :)
I had  cows  colostrum milk in the freezer (you never know when you're going to need  some   when  you are  round  animals lol ) and I had taken a litre out and had it soaking in  hot water since I first came in so I had something to feed her. Only Lenny  still had muzzle on at this stage. I got a bottle ready and  got  Splishy lamb out and  sat her on my knee and  gave her bottle. Lenny was right there to watch  and  try and  sniff but was not making any attempt to bite her. I had  to chance it at some  stage  and  see what would happen, so I moved the  incubator box to  beside my leg ( so if it did turn to  custard I could get Splishy into the soft box quickly), got a good grip  on Lenny's   collar and took his muzzle  off. I was 100%  ready  for it to turn to custard ...... and   :) :) :)  Lenny  licked her all over and  loved her and made no attempt at any stage  to bite her  :) :)
So pleased, as it had gone  so much better  than I had  thought it  would.
We now had a Short White Greyhound that goes baaa and not woof and her name is Splishy.
The  2 of my  younger boys  Sammy and  Lenny  are  fine with the  new thing  that arrived in their house in Splishy. Lenny in particular  has blown me  out of the water with how  he is with  Splishy ,  he lets her get away  with absolute murder  lol .. she will wander up to  Lenny and  bunt him in is  tummy to get him  to "let his milk down" when I am late with her bottle, she has been  seen trying to  suck/chew around his belly to get milk from it, she  chews on his  toenails and  sucks on his  feet  if he  has them hanging over the couch edge, he  even puts  up with her  arrive at high speed  and  land
on him when he on couch  or on my bed .... there  will be a  low  quiet little growl when she annoys  him , but  then he just lets her carry on  and  does nothing about it , doesn't even get up and walk away ... Just  totally amazing really  :)
Splishy is a bit of a brat at times and the hounds ( well Lenny just lets her lol ) tell her when she is annoying, and I know she speaks enough Greyhound to know what they are saying :) Splishy is very much a Greyhound and part of this pack, ( till she gets weaned at 12 weeks of age, and gets to go back to paddock and be a real sheep lol ) , she is accepted totally by the pack and she comes on all our street walks with us, sleeps with the Hounds, comes on all the car rides with us. She is certain in her own mind she is a Greyhound, and the Hounds think she is one too ( just short and can be annoying lol ) .
To me this just goes to show if you have a little time and patience, know your dogs , handle the introductions in a controlled and quiet way ( as best you can at the time anyway :) ) then Greyhounds are very trainable and are capable of adjusting to new situations and changes very easily :)
That's how we ended up with the Hounds living with a lamb :)
Regards Stu


