Nursery
You enter a burrow just barely large enough for you to squeeze through the entrance, revealing a vast open area caved out of the packed Earth. Its warm, but not humid, with assorted furs and mosses over the ground making it soft and spongy to tread upon. The circumference is lined with various nests, consisting mainly of rabbit fluff and feathers felted together into a loose matt and in them, nursing mothers lay resting.Into the far wall another entrance is dug, this time larger, where weaned puppies are free to make and tend to their own beds.
The burrow is illuminated by an isolated fire -tended to by the pack fire keeper- in its own room, kept in a pit below floor level. A discrete chimney releases the smoke through the surface of the burrow and a rock wall is cemented in the wide entrance to the room, keeping wandering youths at bay. Reflective items are pushed into the rounded walls of the room as to guide the light into the rest of the den.
It is the fathers/breeding males' job to tend to the rest of the burrow, ensuring that suitable food is supplied and that the area is kept clean. Mothers don't leave until their litter is weaned.