The greatest kind!
Yes. uhhh...no my friend.... 2 yellows will only have yellows and/or dudleys if the parents are chocolate factored.... why? because the parents are both yellow labs, they carry the ee alleles, therefore, they both can only pass on "e" to their offspring making all the offspring "ee" (yellow labs)....in order to be a black lab, they have to have at least 1 "B" and one "E" which the yellow labs do not have, so you'd have to bred a yellow with a chocolate or black lab to be able to get some black pups....hope this helps
1: Maltese 2: Yorkie 3: Golden Receiver 4: Border Collies 5: Beagle 6: Yorkshire Terrier 7: Black Lab 8: Yellow Lab 9: Chocolate Lab 10: German Shepard
the oldest fullbred yellow lab is now 15 and 7 and old and his name was jewels (he was put to sleep on November 1, 2008) My fullbred yellow lab "Rueger" from Salem, Oregon had to be put down 12 days shy of his 17th birthday on December 21st, 2011. (16 years 353 days old.)
Most of the time it doesn't matter what color the parents are they can have all colors. With yellow on yellow you will get predominantly yellow, and same with the "lemon" lab also.
Smooth fox terrier?
i recomend at least 2 years because they are all devoloped
Between 1-14 but you are more likely to get between 4-10.
I got my lab pup from a breeder who bred a yellow lab and a black lab.The mum was the yellow lab and the dad was a black Lab .My pup is a male and he takes after the dad so he is a black lab he is still considered a pedigree and he is registered in the kennel club. So yes it is perfectly fine to breed labs if they are a different colour they will still be pedigree pups if the mum and dad are full Labs and the pups will be perfectly healthy.
Under special circumstances it is possible - if the black female had the recessive gene for the yellow color and is bred to a yellow male with all-yellow gene background she could have at least some yellow pups in the litter.
Breeding them or trying to decide which to own or what they eat or...?
they are dirty
Contrary to popular belief, any color combination of Lab parents can produce any color offspring (two yellow parents can produce black & chocolate pups, for example), so there's just no way to know. In a large litter, there could be some pups of each color. Chocolate is the least common variation, though, so it's possible for a chocolate parent to produce only black and yellow pups.
A lab could have 4 maybe even 12. No one knows but averger is 6-8. You could have an ultrasound to see how many pups are on the way.
yellow lab is cuter and better
A yellow lab is a kind, loving, happy, caring, sweet dog who just loves to have fun. Take a yellow lab swimming with a toy and you will have a very happy yellow lab! I know this because I have a yellow lab. cw: The yellow lab will typically pay attention to it owner; if the owner is happy, the dog will be happy, but if worried, the dog frets, too.
Labrador mom gives birth to all lab pups not one Rottweiler because Rottweiler is a different breed from Labrador.........!
it can be yellow but it also h the possibity of ending up black or brown. but it will most probably end up yellow.