If you have to ask this question here then the answer is never. Unless your lab is both papered by the AKC and a titled champion there is no reason for him to breed.
If he is a purebred show or field champion then he should be at least two years old and should have completed all his genetic testing.
Yes, that is very normal.
Any month is a good time to do business, no matter when you were born
there is no need to freeze chocolate chips. if real chocolate melts in the cupboard it will bloom, this is where the cocoa butter comes to the surface. it looks white and has been mastaken for mold. it is still good to eat or bake with.
If you want your stud to have more experience and produce more puppies, then yes. But only if he gets along with them both! Good luck!
Good for what? It's not especially good for you. There is some evidence that chocolate itself may have some health benefits, but by the time you load it up with milkfat and sugar (as is done in milk chocolate) they're pretty negligible.
Because they needed sugar and then they would have a good time
Not usually. Stud duty distracts a race horse from competition.
NO! I had my cartilage peirced and i left the stud in for a full month before taking it out, and it still closed up in the middle of the night, two weeks is NOT enough time.
Stud bulls are the most important animals in the herd as 50 percent of their genetic material will be passed on to all calves. Stud bulls must have excellent characteristics that are proven over time, such as higher birth and yearling weights, a lack of meanness, and good health.
It is up to Ganz to decide. It isn't known whether or not it will become POTM any time soon
Any time in the month of December is a good time for a Holiday Party.
I only waited a week because the rings were too big to eat with, but, I've had no problems, lips heal very fast, you should be okay as long as you don't change it out all the time. If you put the stud in, leave it in for about a month