calliecritturs
Posted : 8/20/2006 9:58:48 PM
Heat lasts three weeks but you won't know exactly when she started. The first week her scent is released. She IS fertile (they *are* fertile all three weeks). The second week she is the most interested in mating and will match the male in her eagerness. The third week that wanes -- but she IS still fertile. So if he's interested in her and she's not so in him, then yes she's likely still fertile.
I've honestly never even heard of keeping a male intact that long -- 6 months is typical. I can understand a year but I'll never have a male intact longer than absolutely necessary ever again -- I have some pretty firm beliefs that it's a bit mean to leave them intact, and allow them all the 'feelings' and desires that we won't let them act on. And the longer they are intact, the greater the eventual risk of cancer. I know everyone's got their opinion, but two years seems rather excessive to me. The growth plates are closed well before age one and that's truly when any discussion usually centers on.
You have to wait for like usually 3 weeks minimum *beyond* heat before you can spay her. The vets like to wait for the tissues to return to normal (and make sure there is no phantom pregnancy) before they spay -- it reduces the risk of infection.
There are simply no hard and fast rules -- my first dog was a little female who literally got pregnant and DELIVERD pups before she was 6 months old!! That means she went into first heat around 4 months. But if you take a poll of human females on when they 'started' you're going to get as many answers as girls you poll. From 7-8 to 13-15 -- it's a wide range. And just like we all fluctuate as to 'duration' so will a dog.
However, I would surely have the vet look at her a.s.a.p. after you think the heat is done and he'll probably be able to tell you closer than you might think -- since this has been such a challenge you want to be sure nothing accidentally happened before you realized she WAS in heat. If the vet is at all in doubt he may want to spay her early.
Good luck -- and oh yeah, a spay IS a total hysterectomy. Part of the point is to remove the organs that would be likely to get cancer -- why leave her with the negatives and not the positive!!