Cara Sandler
Forums Enthusiast
At almost 15 weeks, she is 7 pounds. Very tinyHow cute! She's so smalllll
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At almost 15 weeks, she is 7 pounds. Very tinyHow cute! She's so smalllll
But I don't really care about the money. I'm just glad that she's ok.

Yes, her parents are both negative for the MDR1 mutation, but it could be a new mutation.Oh, no what shocks - good to hear she is doing well again
- yes, we want to make sure that our fur kids are doing well - in such a situation - we can not relate to money
Is her parents tested for MDR1?
I actually already have the test kits - I just hadn't done them yet. But you can be sure I'm doing it now!!!!!!Cara, I'm glad she's doing OK.
You can get an MDR1 test kit from the University of Washington's Veterinary School. When I ran the test on Edan and CJ a few years ago it was only $60 for the kit. The results are emailed to you. I then printed off the results and gave them to my vet for their records. It's probably the best way to be sure if she has the mutation or not.

And in case you're wondering how difficult it can be to wrestle a corn cob out of your sheltie's mouth - it is INCREDIBLY hard!!!!!!!!Well, Skylar just grabbed hold of a corncob while we were out walking. WHY anyone would throw a corncob out on the sidewalk, I'll never know. But it's clear that until Skylar has a better "leave it" I have to keep her from grabbing whatever she sees (she has a great "leave it" in a controlled environment, but not at all when she spots something out on the street before I see it). The vet this weekend suggested a basket muzzle while we're out in Miami (around the horse poop) and I hate the idea of using it, but until she has better self-control I think we're going to need to try it. It's not worth potentially losing her because she has gotten hold of something dangerous.