(VIDEO) A Tiny Baby Pug Is Called Over for Dinner. How He Goes About Eating? ADORABLE!

hungry pug

It's meal time for the most adorable tiny baby Pug, and he just called over for dinner! He sure is hungry, but he's still trying to get the hang of how to eat his doggie food. From the looks of things, he's doing a good job!

This adorable bundle of fluff is named Winston, and he's the most adorable little thing! As you watch his scurry over to his bowl full of yummy food you can't help but go “Aww!”

When he reached his yummy meal how he goes about eating his food will make you smile. This darling little pup needs to learn how to keep his food in his bowl, but once he masters that he should be good to go! LOL!

Even if his parents don't like the mess this little one is making, the Pug could care less. He just wants his food, and he's a happy boy! This cutie will warm your heart as you watch him munch away on his meal — watch how he eats on the video!

After the break, watch how Winston the Pug goes about eating his doggie food. He's such a cute one, that Winston! 

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30 thoughts on “(VIDEO) A Tiny Baby Pug Is Called Over for Dinner. How He Goes About Eating? ADORABLE!

  1. Bradford and Maude BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth 2014, 14:288

    Fetal response to maternal hunger and
    satiation – novel finding from a qualitative
    descriptive study of maternal perception
    of fetal movements
    Billie Bradford* and Robyn Maude
    Abstract
    Background: Maternal perception of decreased fetal movements is a specific indicator of fetal compromise,
    notably in the context of poor fetal growth. There is currently no agreed numerical definition of decreased fetal
    movements, with the subjective perception of a decrease on the part of the mother being the most significant
    definition clinically. Both qualitative and quantitative aspects of fetal activity may be important in identifying the
    compromised fetus.Yet, how pregnant women perceive and describe fetal activity is under-investigated by
    qualitative means. The aim of this study was to explore normal fetal activity, through first-hand descriptive accounts
    by pregnant women.
    Methods: Using qualitative descriptive methodology, interviews were conducted with 19 low-risk women
    experiencing their first pregnancy, at two timepoints in their third trimester. Interview transcripts were later analysed
    using qualitative content analysis and patterns of fetal activity identified were then considered along-side the
    characteristics of the women and their birth outcomes.
    Results: This paper focuses on a novel finding; the description by pregnant women of fetal behaviour indicative of
    hunger and satiation. Full findings will be presented in later papers. Most participants (74% 14 of 19) indicated
    mealtimes were a time of increased fetal activity. Eight participants provided detailed descriptions of increased
    activity around meals, with seven (37% 7 of 19) of these specifying increased fetal activity prior to meals or in the
    context of their own hunger. These movements were interpreted as a fetal demand for food often prompting the
    mother to eat. Interestingly, the women who described increased fetal activity in the context of hunger
    subsequently gave birth to smaller infants (mean difference 364 gm) than those who did not describe a fetal
    response to hunger.
    Conclusions: Food seeking behaviour may have a pre-birth origin. Maternal-fetal interaction around mealtimes
    could constitute an endocrine mediated communication, in the interests of maintaining optimal intrauterine
    conditions. Further research is warranted to explore this phenomenon and the potential influence of feeding on
    the temporal organisation of fetal activity in relation to growth.
    Keywords: Fetal development, Fetal movement, Maternal-fetal exchange, Hunger

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