I got mine at about 8mos, and he had both full rows of teeth. At about a year, he began loosing the row of his baby teeth.
Start when they are around 4 weeks or they have teeth.
Looking on eBay classifieds, Teacup Yorkies range in price from $300 to $1800. So, depending on which one you want and what price, you would have to earn from $37.50 a week to $225.00 a week for 8 weeks in order to afford one in 2 months.
No, "Teacups" are not an actual size recognized by the registrations rather a size breeders put on them to give potential buyers a good idea that these dogs will be very small by Yorkie standards. I have found people have different ideas of what a "teacup" is so I would double the weight at 12 weeks to give you an idea of the adult size. Pet stores don't carry "teacups" because they don't weigh enough at the age they want to sell them. If you want a really small pup your best bet will be internet. I sell Yorkie's and would consider mine to be "teacup" since my girls weigh between 3-5lbs. You will pay considerably more for a "teacup" than you will a regular 6-7lb Yorkie.
A yorkie is usually in heat for three weeks.
Type your answer here... well actually dogs do have teeth when they are born
No. Their milk teeth start to erupt at about 2-3 weeks after birth, and are slowly replaced by permanent dentition from 8.5-9.5 weeks of age onwards.
About 12 weeks
My chi is exactly 10 months and she is 6 lbs. I was told she was a teacup, but i dont think she is at that weight.. I hear a teacup chi get as big as 5 lbs..
We wean our small breed puppies at 5 weeks, by 5 weeks of taking care of puppies the moms are sooooo ready to be done taking care of puppies! As long as they have some teeth 5 weeks is good, just make sure that they are eating, if they are "teacup" pups they nurse up to around 8 weeks.
Puppies usually start loosing their baby teeth around four months of age. You will start seeing baby teeth on the floor, couch, in their bed etc. Their new adult teeth will come in quickly within two weeks.
They start coming in by 3 weeks and by 6 weeks they should all be cut through.
A dog that is 19 pounds at 9 weeks old isn't a Teacup Yorkie, it's a mastiff or St. Bernard or some other extremely large breed. I'm assuming you meant 1.9 lbs, which doesn't help us much, since it's not really possible to predict with any degree of accuracy exactly how big any given dog will get. Teacup Yorkies are generally 3 pounds or less fully grown, though, so I'm still having some doubts about what kind of dog you've actually got.