German Shepherd Ear Taping
by: Debbie Ray
The German Shepherd ear taping process - helping those
stubborn GSD puppy ears up.
German Shepherd ear taping is something that many GSD
puppy owners do not take seriously until it is much too
late. German Shepherd puppy ears can come up on their own
anytime between 8 weeks and 6 months. Puppy ear taping is
often an important procedure in the development of the GSD
puppy ear set.
If the GSD puppy ears are not up by 4 months I tell my
puppy customers to get very interested in their German
Shepherd pups ears and the whole German Shepherd ear taping
process. One suggestion: help stimulate your GSD puppy to
use their ear muscles to help bring their ears up faster
naturally, not through touch of that tender ear tissue but
by making interesting noises, etc. to your GSD puppy that
cause the puppy to use those maturing ears.
It is not yet time to panic, however, it is time to sit
up and take notice. When the German Shepherd puppy ears are
taped after 7 or 8 months old it has very little chance of
working. German Shepherd ear taping is an important process
that does not need to be done with all German Shepherd
puppies, but some GSD puppies do need the extra help.
First of all, it is very important to make sure that your
GSD puppy is in good health. Make sure that the German
Shepherd puppy is kept on the proper schedule of wormings
and vaccinations. It is also very important to make sure the
GSD puppy is on a good quality food. If you are unsure,
check with your local vet or German Shepherd breeder for
suggestions on a diet that would be appropriate for your GSD
puppy.
It is not uncommon for the German Shepherd puppy ears not
to be up until 3 1/2 to 5 months of age. It is also quite
common for a GSD puppy who has his/her ears up one day to
see them fall down again the next day - especially when
going through the teething process and for this cycle to
repeat as the German Shepherd puppy matures.
The process of teething in general takes valuable calcium
from the German Shepherd puppies developing ear structure to
those developing teeth and that is one good explanation for
the whole process of GSD puppy ears being up one day, and
then down the next.
It is very common for GSD pups to have ears that tilt and
flop this way and that as they gain strength to stand on
their own. The German Shepherd ears may take all matter of
shapes (1 up, 1 down; 1 this way, 1 that way) until they
come completely up. Do not panic when this happens to your
German Shepherd puppy. It is completely normal. If you do
have questions about the German Shepherd ear taping process,
feel free to contact your German Shepherd breeder or the
local GSD breed club in your area or your veterinarian.
Instructions on German Shepherd ear taping follow (it
doesn't hurt to have a helper):
1) Buy the large pink spongy perm rollers (Goody's ® is
one brand) from Wal-mart, etc. for the German Shepherd ear
taping process. Take out the hard plastic clip out of the
middle of each roller and discard. You only need to keep the
spongy pink foam roller part. 2 inch pipe insulation tubing,
Grey, I believe, from Home Depot works as well if you can't
find the pink foam rollers. You will have to cut this to
length, while the pink rollers are already the correct
length.
2) At your local drug store purchase the thin white
surgical tape (the kind that's paper thin and tears easily).
The 3M Micropore tape, 2" wide works well. NEVER EVER even
consider using any tape such as duct tape, electrical tape
or the like for German Shepherd ear taping. If you don't
have the right kind of tape it will do more damage on the
GSD pups ears than good if you have to take the tape out for
some reason if you use the wrong type of tape in the first
place.
Also, purchase Skin Bond to use with the surgical tape
and get one UNsharpened pencil to use in the German Shepherd
ear taping process.
3) Insert the pencil (unsharpened end) inside the pink
foam roller about an inch or so to make it easier to hold.
Next, put the Skin Bond on the pink foam roller about 3/4s
of the way around the roller, so it is well covered but not
oozing or dripping off the roller in any way. You do not
want the glue to drip off the roller into your pups ear
canal when ear taping your GSD puppies ears. You do not want
to get the glue on your hands either while in the middle of
this process. That is where the pencil comes in.
4) While holding the pencil end, wrap the GSD puppies ear
around the glued foam roller and then tape them into a
fairly tight roll (but not too tight), in an upright
position. Remove the pencil from the sponge roller.
Place the roller inside the German Shepherd's ear flap
itself fairly deep, leaving about a two finger space opening
above the German Shepherd pups head and the bottom of the
roller inside the ear flap. Do not completely block the ear
canal with the roller when ear taping the German Shepherd
puppy. The GSD puppy will still need to hear with the roller
inside its ear flaps.
Optional: Take a popsicle stick and attach it to the top
part of both of the GSD puppy ears in a horizontal position.
The German Shepherd puppy will tear the tape or stick off
the ears several times. The key to this step is to continue
retaping the ears using the popsicle stick as it gets torn
down. Sooner or later the GSD puppy will forget about the
tape all together and leave it alone.
5) Distract the GSD puppy with food or by playing ball,
etc. for about five minutes until the glue stops itching and
is well set. The roller will fall out on it's own in about a
week or so if not taken out by you or your German Shepherd
puppy. Continue the re-taping process until the German
Shepherd puppy ears stand on their own.
Important: If the German Shepherd puppy ears are not up
by 7 or 8 months of age they are probably not going to come
up. When the GSD ears do not stand on their own there are
ear implants that can be surgically added. I have no
experience with this personally but if you are unlucky
enough to have a German Shepherd whose ears will not stand
on their own, this is an option. Check with your vet or GSD
breeder with any questions you may have concerning German
Shepherd ear taping.
Downed GSD ears are not the end of the world, however,
erect ears are a part of the German Shepherd Dog breed
standard. Upright ears are not only healthier overall for
the dog but more so, they are handsome and again, part of
the breed standard and the way the German Shepherd was bred
to look.
| About The Author
Debbie Ray, a lifelong dog lover and
German Shepherd owner, has been a German Shepherd
breeder for over to 15 years. For more information
and articles covering other German Shepherd related
topics, feel free to visit:
http://www.total-german-shepherd.com.
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