Inside the Night a First-Time Dalmatian Mother Rewrote Expectations With 18…

By the time the final puppy crawled toward Nellie’s front paw, the room had gone strangely still.

For nearly 14 hours, the small whelping room had been filled with movement: towels being changed, collars being sorted, tiny bodies being checked, soft newborn cries rising under the steady glow of a heat lamp. But in that last moment, after the count had been checked again and again, even the experienced hands in the room slowed down.

There were 18 puppies.

Not eight. Not ten. Not even the already surprising fifteen that had made everyone think the delivery was finally over.

Eighteen.

Nellie, a 3-year-old Dalmatian giving birth for the first time, had delivered 10 males and 8 females after a labor that stretched across the day. Her breeder, Louise Clement, had spent more than three decades working with Dalmatians, but this was not the kind of birth she could fold neatly into experience.

She had seen large litters before. She understood the rhythm of a difficult delivery. She knew how to help a mother dog through exhaustion without crowding her, when to step in, when to stay quiet, and when to trust instinct.

But Nellie kept going.

The first puppy arrived in the early morning of April 2020, shortly after 6:10 a.m. At that point, nothing felt extraordinary yet. Nellie was healthy, strong, and calm. Her body worked with the determined focus of an animal following instructions older than language.

A puppy arrived. It was checked, weighed, dried, and placed safely near its mother.

Then another came.

Then another.

For a breeder, the early hours of a delivery are careful rather than dramatic. There are towels to replace, notes to take, puppies to monitor, and a mother to watch closely. Each newborn has to be handled gently but quickly. Each one needs to breathe well, stay warm, and be identified so no detail is lost in the blur of the moment.

That was where the colored collars came in.

A small pack of collars had been set aside for organization, the kind of ordinary tool that usually makes a litter easier to manage. Red, blue, yellow, green, and other bright bands waited near the scale, ready to help distinguish one newborn from another.

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